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House Party for Health Care Host Guide

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Materials and Resources

Need help? Check with your Organizer or Regional Coordinator, or email Support Corps at: healthcareparty@moveon.org

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[Click here for a large-text version of this guide]

Thanks again for being a host! At your House Party for Health Care, you're taking action along with hundreds of groups around the country that have already formed Councils and are taking action in their communities. Together, we’re building local strength all over the nation to help win real reform on health care, clean energy, and more.

This guide will provide you with everything you need to know to run a successful party, step by step. If after reading it, you still can’t find the answer to your question, check with your Field Organizer or Regional Coordinator, or you can email us at councilparty@moveon.org

This guide in divided into three simple sections:     

The whole process is straightforward, but reading through the guide carefully will help you avoid the most common pitfalls. You should also print out this guide, and have a copy on hand for your party.

Before your party

1. Invite friends and co-workers

The best way to invite folks is to send them an invite email and then make a follow-up phone call.

http://pol.moveon.org/event/events/forgot.html?action_id=193

You should also call people to invite them to your party. Think about other events in your life – would you organize a party without picking up the phone? Asking personally is the single best way to get folks to attend your event. So once you’ve sent out invite emails, a follow-up call will help ensure they received and understood the email. (And of course, it’s fine to just call someone to invite them even if you don’t have an email address for them.) This is a vital step in order to have good attendance at your event.

2. Prepare the DVD, political update, and other key parts of your event

 

For this event, you'll need this guide, a DVD of "Sicko," a DVD player, MoveOn Council hand-outs (explaining what a MoveOn Council is), and sign-in sheets (linked at the top right of this page). It's also a great idea to have some butcher paper to write up the party's agenda, so people know what to expect.

You should take some time to decide beforehand which selections of the movie you'll watch. The movie is 2 hours long, so you probably don't want to watch the whole thing -- or you'll leave yourself very little time to do the other important things on the agenda for the party! So take some time to watch the movie ahead of time and decide which parts you can skip through to leave about 60 minutes worth of movie. Example: You could skip the Guantanamo Bay scene, or some of the parts about the health care system in France.

Also, you'll want to prepare a "political update." This is a simple update that you'll share after watching the movie, to bring your party attendees into the loop about what's happening in Washington around the health care reform fight, and what MoveOn is doing about it! Talk to your Field Organizer or Regional Coordinator for an update to help prepare a political update for your party.

Finally, make sure you find out from your Organizer or Regional Coordinator what the next public-facing action is that MoveOn Councils are organizing so you can share that information at the party.

3. Participate in a prep call with an organizer or Regional Coordinator

Before your party, we'll help you get ready on a prep call. Make sure you've talked with your Field Organizer or Regional Coordinator before the party. (If you don't know how to contact your Regional Coordinator or Field Organizer, you can email councilorganizer@moveon.org.

4. Think through the party

As the party host, you should start planning for some of the issues that might come up.   Here are a few examples to get you thinking:

Logistics:

5.  Remind your guests about the party

 

Your guests will expect to hear from you in the 24 hours leading up to the party.  This is critical because it’s by far the best way to help ensure that people show up, so that you can build a strong Council.

You can log in to your host tools page to send an email to everyone who is signed up, reminding them what time you are starting and how to get to your house. You should also give them a reminder call. If they listed their phone numbers, that information will show up on your host tools page.

You also want to remind them to bring any quick and easy snacks to share, and to invite their own friends and family.

6. Final Preparations

Preparation is key. Make sure you’re ready for your house party. Read all your materials, re-read this guide once more, and talk to your organizer or Regional Coordinator with any questions.

At the Party

This section of the Guide will take you step by step through the Party Agenda. But first here are some quick facilitation tips:

Agenda for the Party:

One way of thinking of the agenda for your party is something we call "the four C's": Connect, Context, Commitment, Catapult. Here's what that means in practice:

           

After the Party

1. Sign up your new MoveOn Council!

Sign up your new MoveOn Council, or give this link to the person who agreed to sign up the Party! You can register your new Council and add new members here:

www.moveon.org/council

Once you've set up your new Council page, the easiest way to invite people to join your Council is to go through your host tools page. From there, you can add all your attendees to your Council.

2. Fill out a post-party survey

You will receive a survey in an email the night of the party, and we really hope you will take the time to share your thoughts and experience with us.  This is really important, because it’s the only way we get everyone’s feedback.  We’ll share the national results of our Council Launch Parties with you and all other new Councils.

3. Thank your attendees -- and send in photos/videos from your event

To send attendees an email, just log on to your host tool and send your thank you email from there. Please encourage folks to send in photos and video from the event.

Now is the time to celebrate!  You’ve thrown a successful Council Launch Party, and helped kick off a local campaign to help win real health care reform. Thank you for all your great work!

 

Special Note on finding a venue for your party

• First, please try to find a venue for free. The best location is your own home or someone else's home.

• If you want to hold your event in another location, it's best to find a space that's free of charge and open to the public, that can seat at least 20 people. A library meeting room or community center are perfect. Some restaurants and bars have back rooms that they allow groups to use for free.
• You'll need a place where you have access to a DVD player, or a laptop and projector.
• The ideal venue will allow you to bring potluck food in, or buy it there. Food makes every event better! Look first for resources that are free to all organizations/groups -- like a library community room.
If you must pay for a venue, you must make absolutely certain that you're not getting a special deal that wouldn't be offered to other users of that same space just because you are a MoveOn member. That could be counted as a corporate in-kind contribution to MoveOn, and we are not set up to track or account for that.
If you must pay, we ask that you pay out of pocket. MoveOn has limited resources, so whatever your council can cover on its own helps our campaigns stretch our resources further. If you need to share the expense between multiple people on your council, for legal reasons please *don't* pass the hat -- but you can each write separate checks made out to the vendor for whatever you are paying for. For instance, if the venue costs $100, Joe can write a check for $40, and Jane and John can each write checks for $30, and give them straight to the vendor. The key thing is, members can't collect money from other members.
Always report out-of-pocket expenses. Then, always make sure the individuals who spent money go to http://pol.moveon.org/poweruplaunch/inkind1.html to report these expenses.
If you have a necessary expense that your Council can't cover, talk to your organizer. We have a small budget for venue and other large event-related expenses that you can tap into. This help is available for some limited circumstances.
• You must pay for venue expenses, if you do, from your personal account, not from a business account.
• Note that you can contribute no more than $5,000 to MoveOn PAC in a calendar year, including direct and in-kind contributions combined.

- Can I hold my event at a church, business, or nonprofit organization?

• Events hosted at or by a business, nonprofit, church, or other corporate entities must follow these strict rules:
• They must be held in a space which is given out FREE OF CHARGE to ANYONE -- any group or individuals -- who request it.
• OR, you can rent a space at a private corporate entity like this on your own dime, IF they offer it at that rate to anyone who asks. But you must make sure that they are not offering you the space at a reduced rate -- you must pay the same as anyone else, again so that this doesn't get counted as a corporate donation.
• Note that churches and other 501c3's may have their own concerns about IRS regulations and political activities taking place in their space; you can check with them to see if they have those concerns.

- Can I hold my event at a Democratic or other party headquarters?

• No. That could be an in-kind corporate contribution to MoveOn, and isn't allowed.

- Can I hold my event at a university?

• University spaces ARE allowed if the university would allow any student to use that space free of charge, or if you are renting a publicly-available space.

- What else do I need to know about having my event at a venue outside of my own home?

• You should know that MoveOn is not responsible in any way, shape, or form for what takes place at the venue that you procure, whether you rent it or find a place for free.