Launching a first-of-its-kind Civic Assembly in Deschutes County, Oregon, USA 🇺🇸
12,750 invitation letters have been mailed to residents in our first project to institutionalise a Citizens' Assembly in the US
Last week, with official support from city and county governments in Central Oregon, more than 12,750 letters were sent to residents inviting them to be in the lottery for a Civic Assembly on Youth Homelessness.
Youth homelessness in Deschutes County has risen dramatically since 2020. The issue for this assembly was chosen in discussions with local leaders from across the community.
Thanks to the tireless efforts of DemocracyNext Oregon Program Lead Josh Burgess, as well as a broad array of partners including Healthy Democracy, the lead operators of the lottery and assembly process, this marks the first step to organising an assembly that will take place in the fall. The assembly will meet for 4.5 days of deliberation, on 14-15 Sept, and 4-6 October; assembly members will receive a stipend of the equivalent of $15 per hour; childcare and transportation costs will be covered if needed.
After a lottery process to generate a randomised miniature-representation of Deschutes County from those who respond to the letters, thirty people will be given the time and resources to study the issue of youth homelessness, deliberate, and to present policy recommendations to local decision-makers.
“We’ve all seen the impacts of homelessness on Central Oregon and around the country. Our local governments and service organizations continue to work extraordinarily hard to find solutions,” said Burgess. “Too often, other regions delegate the task of helping homeless youth to a small group of leaders and fail to draw on the rich expertise and diversity of the whole community. The Deschutes County Civic Assembly gives us the chance to involve residents from all walks of life in prioritizing policies and resources, bringing us together around solutions that will be more legitimate and sustainable.”
“We’ve already seen a long history of success using the Civic Assembly model in the US – including a wave of Citizens’ Juries in the 1970s, Oregon’s very own Citizens’ Initiative Review, and recent local Assemblies in Oregon and California,” said Linn Davis, Program Co-Director at Healthy Democracy. “When we bring new voices into public decision making and empower people with the right process, these processes produce political breakthroughs that we rarely see in traditional public engagement.”
Deschutes County Commissioner Tony DeBone added, “I support this Civic Assembly project that provides the opportunity for my fellow community members to learn about a topic and then provide guidance from the group's super intelligence that comes from working together.”
The County Commission voted unanimously on June 24 to endorse the Civic Assembly as an innovative way to involve community members in preventing and ending youth homelessness. The process is supported by the Bend City Council as well.
This assembly is an initial pilot of the Central Oregon Civic Action Project (COCAP), a first-of-its-kind collaboration between Deschutes County, the City of Bend, the Regional Housing Council, Oregon State University – Cascades, and the nonprofits Healthy Democracy and DemocracyNext, supported by Ford Family Foundation, Brooks Resources, Omidyar Network, Porticus, Quadrivium, and the Rockefeller Foundation. We are collaborating with the MIT Center for Constructive Communication on the tech-enhanced aspects of the assembly. If the pilot is successful, this assembly can serve as an example for future COCAP assemblies to tackle other issues of public concern.
COCAP will hold a Civic Lottery event on August 1 at 6 p.m. at the Downtown Bend Public Library. All members of the public are invited to join for a conversation with local leaders and to witness the random selection of the assembly members.
At DemocracyNext, we hope that COCAP can help to kickstart a wider dialogue around Citizens’ Assemblies in the United States, known worldwide for its democratic traditions but deeply riven by polarisation, cynicism, and disfunction. Homelessness is an issue faced not just by Deschutes County but by cities and regions around the country; moreover, the county is a “purple” area with a substantial mix of liberal, conservative, and independent voters who need to be able to dialogue and work together.
The Civic Assembly has already received media coverage in The Source Weekly, Bend Bulletin, and KBHD radio. Ahead of the assembly’s fall meetings, we’re working to elevate this to the national level as an example of a constructive approach to policy development that gets beyond partisan divides.
Needless to say, we’re excited to get this off the ground! To learn more, visit the COCAP website at http://cocap.us.
What’s on our radar
🇪🇸 Our flagship Assembling an Assembly Guide has now been fully translated into Spanish as well as Basque — a big thanks to our friends at Deliberativa and Red Delib for these translations! Go check it out and please share with your Spanish-speaking friends. French and Japanese are on the way.
📆 Coming up on July 16: two of our International Advisory Council members, Jon Alexander and Audrey Tang, will be in conversation on the question, What can we learn from Taiwan to inspire a deep renewal of UK democracy? Don’t miss it.
🔬 Listen to Claudia Chwalisz speak with Toby Wardman on the Science for Policy podcast about how new democratic approaches can “strengthen or change the roles of science, evidence and expertise in deliberation.”
🤝 In a new study by a group of German researchers, initial results show that Citizens' Assemblies have a "sizeable positive effect on political trust, political efficacy and political participation among participants." Learn more.
🗽 “I have never seen the government act like this…” In a new post, the Civic Engagement Commission of New York City takes stock of their participatory budgeting process, which included assemblies in multiple boroughs.
🗣️ "My first measure would be to transform the Senate into a permanent Citizens' Chamber with Members chosen by sortition." Our Advisory Council member David Van Reybrouck spoke to La Libre about recent Belgian elections and made a powerful call for greater sortition—read the interview here.
🌡️ DemNext Founder/CEO Claudia Chwalisz joined the Knowledge Network on Climate Assemblies (KNOCA) in arecent panel discussion, wherein KNOCA chair Graham Smith presented the main insights from a recent report looking at global trends in the development of climate-focused assemblies.
🇬🇧 The UK election has resulted in a landslide majority for the Labour party. However, the incoming government should not forget that just a few weeks ago, a YouGov poll showed “a lack of trust in British politicians is the biggest reason non-voters are choosing not to vote,” and that among reform possibilities for the House of Lords chamber, a “rolling citizens’ assembly” was most favorable.
The Sortition Foundation recently launched the 858 Project, so named becuase it’s been 858 years since King Henry II introduced juries to the legal system. Now, they say, “it’s time to put ordinary people at the helm in politics too. Let’s replace the House of Lords with a House of Citizens.”
Sign their petition and learn more here. They’re calling on newly-elected PM Keir Starmer to follow through on previous pledges by Labour to reform the Lords.
🗳️ “An election is a device for maximising conflict and minimising democracy,” writes Guardian columnist George Monbiot in a provocatively-worded column urging a greater role for sortition and Citizens’ Assemblies.
As always, thanks for reading DemocracyNext’s newsletter! Subscribe and spread the word if you find our work valuable.