CalPIRG

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[WWW]CalPIRG is the California Public Interest Research Group.

CalPIRG is a grassroots public interest group that lobbies for issues that they believe are relevant to the general public. They mainly focus on higher education, clean energy, hunger and homelessness, forest protection, and voter registration. They work with other PIRGs nationwide. There are chapters at every UC, except for Merced (although, they have been running Energy Service Corps, a joint program with AmeriCorps, there since 2010.) CALPIRG also has a chapter at USC.

calpirgsticker.jpgPledge Sticker (slightly off-color)

They have an office in 356 MU. The current campus organizer is Rikki Seguin, who graduated from the University of Florida. The previous organizer was Margaret Howe, who graduated from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. For the 2006-2007 school year the organizer was Tara Stafford who graduated from USC. The campus organizers for the 2005-2006 school year were Andy Bemis and Ben Smith. You could often find Ben in a cow suit, or some other costume.

The current Chapter Chair is fourth year Civil Engineering major, CJ Wilson, and the Vice-Chair is Donna Farvard, a second year NPB major. For the 2007-2008 school year, the campus chair was Michael Reagan, who was also the CALPIRG Statewide Board Chair. For the 2006-2007 school year Dallas Cole was campus chair and Michael Reagan was vice-chair. Dan Xie, AimeeMarie Munoz-Lopez, and Karen Park made up the other officers. In 2005-2006 the chairs were AimeeMarie Munoz-Lopez and Garo Manjikian.

Twice a year you'll find them on campus asking you to pledge $10 to them, allowing them to fund their campaigns and hire a professional staff of researchers, lobbyists, and campus organizers. This $10 pledge you make is deducted from your student account every quarter making a total of $30 for the year. You get a bright orange sticker that says, "I pledged CALPIRG." This fund raising may cause people to seek protection from CALPIRG. This funding keeps them on campus, as 20% of UC Davis students must pledge in order for them stay on campus. The staff hired is essential for CALPIRG. Campus organizers and statewide staff members train students on how to run effective grassroots campaign involving students in politics.

If you are lucky enough to have a CALPIRG sticker in your possession you will have the warm, fuzzy feeling that you have done something good for the world. The CALPIRG sticker, if properly placed within an amulet, is also one of the Magic Items of Davis.

Depledging

If you believe that CALPIRG is not representing you properly, then you can go up to CALPIRG's office in 356 MU and ask them to remove you from the pledge list.

Projects, Policies, and Ideas Supported and/or Organized by CalPIRG

Criticism

CalPIRG is mainly criticized for their pushy soliciting during Pledge Week, but there are other criticisms as well. One major criticism of the organization is that they tend to be very partisan on some issues although they are a non-partisan non-profit group (the following bullet points might be too [WWW]libertarian for some):

Comments:

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2008-09-17 21:36:40   I've donated a few times in my life from people who have come up to me and talked to me. Unfortunately, I also gave them my number. Now I've been getting calls almost every day around 6-9:30PM from their 800 number. I answered once and said no and I don't want anymore calls. They still call. This is my punishment for the sin of donating to a cause. There's no way I'm giving another dime to CALPIRG. Their numbers are 800-672-3012 and 800-672-3014. Google these numbers and find many others who are pissed. Getting approached once on the street or at home is one thing, having a computer dial your number at dinner or sleeping time almost every day is harassment. —CoffeeSnobDavis


2008-12-29 12:53:58   Please!! I do i get off their donation list?!?!?! thankz to whom ever in advance! =D —Dreabo0


2009-11-05 07:48:20   I do not really care for how I've seen some CalPIRG members badgering people to pledge. "No" or "I need some time to think about it" are not acceptable answers to some members. And if you are skeptical about renting textbooks, run. —RyanMikulovsky


2011-02-22 21:34:41   Honestly, I originally pledged CalPIRG as a naive freshman who supported their cause. That was until I realized that people weren't kidding that "once you pledge CalPIRG, you're trapped for life". This will be my 3rd consecutive quarter where I have been charged against my will, because of their failure to honor my request to unpledge. Calling the numbers, emailing them, and following up on both won't do a thing. Not only do they not listen, I'm sure they don't take them seriously/are laughing all the way to the bank at our "stupidity".

I was approached today by someone who asked me to pledge CalPIRG. I told them I had unpledged, and he had the most bewildered look, along the lines of "You can do that?". Well, apparently you can't.

But, I refuse to give up. I will update people if I ever succeed at accomplishing this.

EDIT: So back in February, I was fuming about unpledging (or being unable to). Well, 3 months later (an entire quarter, basically?), I have received confirmation that I'm unpledged, and will be receiving a refund check sometime around finals week/early summer.

Good luck, RajanSingh! You'll have to be persistent and call their listed numbers/resort to calling them nonstop if they fail to honor your request (as I did). [5/16/2011] —Jennyfish


2011-03-23 15:36:06   Good luck Jennyfish! I want to depledge also. This organization is useless.. —RajanSingh


2011-11-06 23:46:27   I will still never forget the one guy who harassed me (actually followed me while I walked) for a good 5 minutes. Finally he said "it just gets charged to your student account and your parents probably pay that anyway so why do you care about ten dollars?" To which I delivered a few choice words and said I pay that myself. I don't care how good your cause may be, people like that turn me off pretty much entirely. —OliviaY

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