Benton County Democrats

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Ag and Rural Caucus for July 2024

Posted on July 31, 2024

Ag and Rural Caucus for July

Link to recording: https://us02web.zoom.us/rec/share/j0CRnCT-m72yPpVcOcBXteA4zbsHTvvnn_FiHpRO7QN9sbxmUXThkyqH12eSE7s.9qDiW9nhwEqzpBkL

Link to last evening’s session. 
https://us02web.zoom.us/rec/share/yhhUXGucTw2hoJVfjV09tqdud5_OB9p1lnTircTim5jj0-_yLGiRKt0zEs3ZDrw.B2LbOWahvljlBz3C

Note special session next Thursday. The session on County Incentives is not on our usual schedule.

Policy Advocacy: Wind and Solar

6:30 pm Thursday 18 July
Agrivoltaics
Chad Higgins
, OSU College of Agricultural Sciences

6:30 pm Thursday 25 July
County Incentives


https://us02web.zoom.us/j/85907982157?pwd=MU4vV3E3VGZ5VU02dnhvZjg2b3hKZz09
Paste link into browser.
Getting Counties and Developers to a Table
 
Community Benefits Agreements. This is what we want, isn’t it. Or something like it. We want the counties to sit down and negotiate with developers. On the table would be the total amount of compensation, what part is in kind and what part is cash, and what the benefit profile over time looks like. A shared future should be on the table.

This is tough to do in Washington. A developer has the choice of working with a county and its planning department, or seeking expedited disposition of their application with EFSEC (Washington State Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council) and the governor. EFSEC is not in the business of looking out for counties and their taxpayers. EFSEC does a lot of tasks very thoroughly but EFSEC does not husband county welfare.

A county that has the capacity to evaluate a developer’s proposal is rare enough …then add the developer’s incentive to skip out and go to the state to get a fast and clean response. It is little surprise that counties have no leverage to get developers to the table to negotiate a Community Benefit Agreement.

Now a pinch. It is at least theoretically possible to add to EFSEC things-to-do list. We could enlist EFSEC to host a forum that would bring counties and developers together. The pinch would be to foster negotiations without giving veto rights to either party.

Mike McArthur, Community Renewable Energy Association (Oregon), is uniquely positioned to assess the different ways counties can access developers. He has been a county judge (commissioner), he has led the Oregon Association of Counties, and he now oversees a consortium of counties and developers committed to making wind and solar work for everyone involved.

Our neighbors in Oregon sometimes wish they had our EFSEC to move projects along. And we wish we had the benefits that Oregon counties enjoy from wind and solar development.

Join us tomorrow for a conservation and a mutual search for solutions.

Don
24 July 2024
Tax Shift: A story of Joe and Jill Homeowner living in George.
 
Tax shift can be for real. Windmills and solar panels are taxed as personal property, not real property. Real property can gain in value, personal property disappears in depreciation.

So, imagine a county, George, with a stable tax base generating a predictable revenue stream to George’s government. In comes a major windmill project. The tax base inflates with tax flowing from the new personal property. With Washington’s 1 percent lid on annual increase of property tax revenue, Joe and Jill Homeowners are happy. Their home may be worth a bit more each year but their assessment goes down and they pay less tax. The shiny windmills are paying it for them. At first.

After ten years or so, the windmills depreciate out and are no longer paying Jill and Joe’s tax. And after ten years of George’s budget increasing at 1 percent each year to take advantage of the windfall from the new property – and stay up with inflation – the tax base reverts back to Jill and Joe. This is tax shift.

The punch line is that Jill and Joe Homeowners can end up paying a good deal more tax while the shadows of the blades of the now-depreciated windmills sweep over their back deck.

This is the scenario that Representative Ramel is trying to alter with his substitution of a flat production tax to replace (the state’s) declining personal property tax.

Paul Jewell of the Washington State Association of Counties knows this scenario well. Read his organization’s study of tax shift. He is now organizing assessors, treasurers and commissioners around the state to find solutions. WSAC first documented tax shift. It is now trying to resolve it.

We are all looking for solutions.

Join us this Thursday.
 Don
23 July 2024
A proposal – Tax production instead of property
 
HB 1756, passed last session with bi-partisan support, exempts renewable energy personal property from state property tax.

all qualified personal property owned by an eligible taxpayer and used for the generation of renewable energy is exempt from the state property tax levy.

Is this a give-away to solar and wind developers? No. It replaces property tax with a production tax.

Eligible taxpayers granted a personal property tax exemption under this act are subject to a production excise tax for the privilege of using qualified renewable energy generating systems
 
The whole idea is to funnel money back to local governments.

This bill provides a mechanism for the local government to earn back some of those lost revenues in a time where some of the local communities are struggling to meet the cost of inflation on their budgets.

Is HB 1756 and a production excise tax a solution, even a partial solution, to making counties whole?

Representative Alex Ramel was the primary sponsor of HB 1756. Let’s hear his thoughts.

Join us this Thursday.
 Don
22 July 2024
Money for Counties from Renewable?
 
There is money in solar panels and windmills. There is money for the developer, there is money for the land owner, and there is money for local government.

Money for local government? We in Washington have not seen much of it. Oregonians, on the other hand, welcome renewable energy development precisely because of the financial returns to the counties.

So, what is the story? Thursday we are going to talk about how to return some of the economic “rent” to the counties hosting solar and wind developments.

Our presenters are Mike McArthur, ED of Oregon’s Community Renewable Energy Association, Representative Alex Ramel, LD 40 Bellingham, and Paul Jewell, policy director of the Washington State Association of Counties.

We are going to talk about how to structure licensing of renewable energy facilities so that local communities benefit. Rep. Ramel has authored legislation that helps. Up next.

Join us this Thursday.
 Don
21 July 2024
Sheep and Panels? For Real?
 
Is agrivoltaics for real? Can we actually mix sheep, or vegetables, with solar panels? Chad Higgins, our guest Thursday, will bring us up to date what mixed use is actually installed and what is in the works.

Chad’s day job is with the Department of Biological and Ecological Engineering at Oregon State. His research is “probing the spatial characteristics of atmospheric water vapor”. Chad knows the science, and he knows farming.

Chad inspired the agrivoltaics that feature in the Hop Hill project in the Black Canyon region north of Sunnyside. The project is on hold at the moment. The siting was deemed inconsistent with Benton County’s land use regulations.

The Hop Hill presentation  assigns agrivoltaics a central role. Watch its video for a persuasive message.
BrightNight, the developer behind Hop Hill, was an early advocate of agrivoltaics. It correctly understood the issue of taking ag land out of production, and crafted a plan to offset the effects of installing solar panels.

Go to the project presentations and the video and evaluate BrightNight’s plans. Then join us Thursday to discuss the promise of agrivoltaics.
 Don
14 July 2024
Decades to Recover?
 
 So why are we looking at soil quality and agrivoltaics as our first session?

The answer is simple. It has become a graphic talking point used by opponents of solar.

It goes back to last August. Kelly McLain, WSDA,  wrote to EFSEC that the Carriger project just outside Goldendale was on prime agricultural land and that soft soils meant that Carriger would grade and gravel much of the site.

On January 17 Carriger responded saying that the farm ground was not all that good. Besides, Carriger argued,  “the Project’s solar arrays will generally follow existing contours within the MPE, requiring minimal grading…[and] only three percent of the project site would be “new, impervious surfaces”.

Then came the headlines – McLain’s response a week later: “The impacts of the project include ground compaction, gravel additions to meet footing requirements, a long length of time for the project, and reduced opportunity for tillage, photosynthesis, irrigation, grazing, etc. throughout the life of the project… it may take decades for the agricultural viability issues to be remediated.”

This is what made farmers shake their heads, and opponents cheer their new ally.

Chad Higgins will lay out “the rest of story”. Join us.

7 July
Largest Solar Farm in the State
 
 Pre-pandemic, Ormand Hilderbrand and I attended the opening ceremony of the solar installation at Lind…Avista’s Adams Nielson Solar Farm. It was a grand affair with Governor Inslee, Congressman Newhouse, and Senator Schoessler in attendance. It was the largest solar farm in the state at that time, at about 200 acres. Times change.

Our thinking in attending was to assess the ground preparation for the solar panels. Ormand had experience in Sherman County in Oregon of bad performance by the solar developer. There was excess ground leveling and a general desert under the panels. We wanted to see what was happening in Lind.

Lind was different. The ground, taken out of CRP, was undisturbed and the development impact appeared minimal. This was before much attention was paid to soil consequences of solar development. It was a naïve installation.

So, what does it look like today? I visited the site last week and took a photo from the Lind Cemetery, which is surrounded by the solar farm.

Don
2 July 2024
The pre-existing CRP is on the left; panels on right, and cemetery in foreground
July Shift from Briefing to Advocacy
 
Our Policy Briefings shed light on issues affecting rural communities around the state. The idea is to provide you information…the advocacy is up to you. (Of course, there is an advocacy nudge from the topics we choose to cover.)

This July is different. We will have two Policy Advocacy meetings where we advocate a position. This position is in favor of wind and solar installations.

The first Policy Advocacy session is about solar arrays and soil quality, and the consequences of solar installations for agricultural production. 

The second session is about the economic incentives for counties to promote wind and solar installations.

This shift to advocacy for July follows the unfortunate politicization of wind and solar in central and eastern Washington. It does not have to be this way. We have a model in central Oregon  where conservative counties are cheerleaders for wind and solar because of the revenue generated to build local public infrastructure. One goal is to have Washington commissioners to sit down with their Oregon counterparts, compare notes, and discuss what is required for Washington counties to profit from development.


Don
29 June 2024

Our Better Practices roundtable is on the first Thursday of each month at 6:30 pm.. Use the link above for 2024.

Our Policy Series is on the third Thursday of each month at 6:30 pm. Use the link above for 2024. 


Copyright © 2024 Ag and Rural Caucus, All rights reserved.
Ag and Rural Caucus of State Democratic Central Committee
Our mailing address is:
Ag and Rural Caucus
2921 Mud Creek Rd
Waitsburg, WA 99361

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Thank you for showing up today! Your presence matters. Your voice matters. Together, we stand! #ICEOutForGood #NonviolentAction #solidarity #indivisibletricitieswa Indivisible Tri-Cities WA ... See MoreSee Less

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A life was lost, and we refuse to remain silent.📍 Columbia Center Blvd🗓️ Saturday, January 10⏰ 11:00 AM – 1:00 PM✅ Dress warmly. Wear black. Remember this is a nonviolent event, and we expect all participants to seek to de-escalate any potential confrontation with those who disagree with our values, and to act lawfully.✊🖤 ICE OUT FOR GOOD 🖤✊This Saturday, our community is coming together to speak out, stand in solidarity, and demand accountability. A life was lost, and we refuse to remain silent.📍 Columbia Center Blvd🗓️ Saturday, January 10⏰ 11:00 AM – 1:00 PMA core principle behind all Indivisible Tri-Cities events is a commitment to nonviolent action and no civil disobedience. We expect all participants to seek to de-escalate any potential confrontation with those who disagree with our values, and to act lawfully at these events. Weapons of any kind, including those legally permitted, should not be brought to events. All events should be held in public spaces or on public property.Dress warmly and wear black in remembrance. ❄️🖤Your presence matters. Your voice matters. Together, we stand. 💪🌎#IceOutForGood #NonViolentAction #Solidarity #Indivisibletricitieswa ... See MoreSee Less

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Well said John Duresky for Congress! ... See MoreSee Less

Why did a federal immigration enforcement operation end with a woman dead, and why are communities still being given vague answers instead of real accountability? YESTERDAY: ICE officers were involved in an immigration enforcement operation in south Minneapolis that ended with a civilian woman fatally shot during a roadside encounter. Federal officials described the shooting as self-defense, while local leaders, witnesses, and family members disputed that account and called for an independent investigation. THIS MORNING: A community is grieving and demanding answers. Eyewitness accounts and available video raise serious questions about whether deadly force was necessary. Federal authorities have offered limited detail and no independent review. This is not a partisan question. It is a question of accountability. Public safety matters. Law enforcement matters. But when the federal government uses deadly force, it must explain, clearly, publicly, and credibly, why. In WA-04, people live in small towns. They know their neighbors. They expect government power to be exercised carefully, and that when something goes wrong, leaders do not close ranks. They tell the truth. We should never be asked to choose between public safety and civil liberties. A serious government protects both. Here is what I will do differently as your Congressman: Demand full, public investigations when federal enforcement actions result in preventable loss of life, unlawful arrests, or violence Push for independent oversight of federal agencies operating in our communities Insist that use-of-force standards are clear, constitutional, and enforced — not justified after the fact with press releases and silence Accountability is not anti-law-enforcement. ICE officers were involved in an immigration enforcement operation in south Minneapolis that ended with a civilian woman being fatally shot during a roadside encounter. Federal officials described the shooting as self-defense, while local leaders, witnesses, and family members disputed that account and called for an independent investigation. https://johnduresky4congress.com/

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Our hearts break for the friends and loved ones of Renee Nicole Good 💔 We know what we saw and we stand with you Minnesota!WA Democratic Party Chair, Shasti Conrad, released the following statement: ... See MoreSee Less

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Party Calendar

January 2026

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1
2
  • FredMeyer Pickup Order Time

    FredMeyer Pickup Order Time

    January 2, 2026  10:00 AM - 11:00 AM
    101 Wellsian Way Richland, WA 99352

    See more details

•
3
  • No One Is Above the Law: Monthly Hermiston Visibility Rally

    No One Is Above the Law: Monthly Hermiston Visibility Rally

    January 3, 2026  11:00 AM - 1:00 PM
    East Highland Avenue & South Highway 395 Hermiston, OR 97838

    Join local community members in Hermiston for our No One Is Above the Law visibility action!
    On the first Saturday of each month join folks in fighting for accountability, democracy, and justice — reminding our neighbors that the rule of law applies to everyone.

    Bring your signs, your voice, and your energy for an hour of peaceful sign-waving and community visibility.
    📅 When: 1st Saturday of every month at 11:00 AM | 📍 Where: Corner of Hwy 395 & Highland (by Safeway), Hermiston, OR

    See more details

  • No War

    No War

    January 3, 2026  5:00 PM - 6:00 PM
    Columbia Center Blvd Kennewick

    Well, waking up to an invasion in Venezuela gets your heart pumping and a desire to say NO TO WAR!

    The local Tri-Cities for Palestine is holding a rally TODAY and TOMORROW at 5pm. IF you want to get out on the streets. Indivisible will not be there as a group, but know many want to get out! Join them!!

    The Benton County Democrats are not part of planning or activity of this rally. Please attend at your own risk.

    See more details

• •
4
  • No War

    No War

    January 4, 2026  5:00 PM - 6:00 PM
    Columbia Center Blvd Kennewick

    Well, waking up to an invasion in Venezuela gets your heart pumping and a desire to say NO TO WAR!

    The local Tri-Cities for Palestine is holding a rally TODAY and TOMORROW at 5pm. IF you want to get out on the streets. Indivisible will not be there as a group, but know many want to get out! Join them!!

    The Benton County Democrats are not part of planning or activity of this rally. Please attend at your own risk.

    See more details

•
5
  • Posters for Progress!

    Posters for Progress!

    January 5, 2026  6:00 PM - 7:30 PM
    Hermiston First United Methodist Church 191 E Gladys Ave Hermiston, OR 97838

    Join local community organizers for Signs of Progress — a relaxed evening of creativity, connection, and collective action!
    There will be sign making, postcard writing, and conversation about the issues that matter most to us. Whether you’re passionate about local causes or just love good company and community spirit, there’s a place for you at the table.

    See more details

•
6
  • Tri-cities Protest Tuesday

    Tri-cities Protest Tuesday

    January 6, 2026  3:30 PM - 4:30 PM
    John Dam Plaza, 815 George Washington Way, Richland, WA 99352, USA

    "Protest Tuesday" at John Dam Plaza on GWay in Richland from 3:30pm to 4:30PM. Bring your own sign or flag or one will be provided. Join our stalwarts and protest whatever is bothering you most that day.
    If possible, also bring a donation for the Food Bank.
    https://www.facebook.com/events/999996418325987/999996484992647/

    See more details

  • Richland City Council

    Richland City Council

    January 6, 2026  7:30 PM - 8:30 PM
    Richland City Hall, 505 Swift Blvd, Richland, WA 99352, USA

    See more details

• •
7
8
  • Indivisible TC - Founder Hour, Thurs

    Indivisible TC - Founder Hour, Thurs

    January 8, 2026  12:00 PM - 1:00 PM
    The Zoom link can be found in the most recent Indivisible TC Do Something Email Newsletter.

    This is a Zoom meeting. The link to the meeting is provided in the weekly Do-Something email. When you join the organization at this link: https://www.indivisibletricitieswa.org/join-us , you will receive this newsletter.

    Join in and ask questions, get updates or just say hi! These are held every Thursday at 12pm and occasional weekends.

    See more details

•
9
  • FredMeyer Pickup Order Time

    FredMeyer Pickup Order Time

    January 9, 2026  10:00 AM - 11:00 AM
    101 Wellsian Way Richland, WA 99352

    See more details

  • Tri-City Democrats - Friday, January 9, 6:00 PM

    Tri-City Democrats - Friday, January 9, 6:00 PM

    January 9, 2026  6:00 PM - 8:00 PM
    Round Table Pizza3201 W Court St, Pasco

    Let’s join together for our first gathering of 2026. This month we'll meet at the Round Table Pizza on Court Street in Pasco. January 9 at 6pm. Come gather with like-minded folks and share some fellowship, food and beverages. As is our normal practice, Tri-City Democrats will order several pizzas to share. We'll have the donation box available for those who care to financially support the group. Some of our generous members are likely to purchase pitchers of beer to share. If you want the salad bar or soft drinks, you are on your own for those items.

    At this writing, we do not have a planned program, but we will have 'Hate Has no Home Here' signs available. We are coming up on election time for the group - at our January meeting we'll plan to hold elections for our officers for 2026. Please let us know if you are interested in serving on the board!

    For full details, including the address, and to RSVP see: 

    https://www.meetup.com/tri-city-democrats/events/312748334/

    See more details

• •
10
  • Ice Out for Good

    Ice Out for Good

    January 10, 2026  11:00 AM - 1:00 PM
    Columbia Center Blvd, in front of the mall, parking near JC Penny’s

    A broad coalition of groups across the country is calling for a coordinated Ice Out For Good Weekend of Action on Saturday, January 10th and Sunday, January 11th to demand accountability, honor the life lost, and make visible the human cost of ICE’s actions.

    See more details

•
11
  • Sunnyside WA Street Rally and Protest against ICE and corporations that assist them!

    Sunnyside WA Street Rally and Protest against ICE and corporations that assist them!

    January 11, 2026  12:00 PM - 1:00 PM
    https://www.mobilize.us/indivisible/event/880996/

    This a local Indivisible event!

    We will meet on the sidewalk in front of Sunnyside Walmart at 12pm.✊🏼Sunday, January 11, there will be a protest in front of Walmart in Sunnyside from 12-2pm! Community, bring your 'No ICE' signs, your flags, and your voices! 📣 We are tired of shopping at their stores and them not protecting or supporting their customers! We don’t want ICE in their parking lots! 🧊🚫 Please share… See you there 🙏🏼

    See more details

•
12
  • Posters for Progress!

    Posters for Progress!

    January 12, 2026  6:00 PM - 7:30 PM
    Hermiston First United Methodist Church 191 E Gladys Ave Hermiston, OR 97838

    Join local community organizers for Signs of Progress — a relaxed evening of creativity, connection, and collective action!
    There will be sign making, postcard writing, and conversation about the issues that matter most to us. Whether you’re passionate about local causes or just love good company and community spirit, there’s a place for you at the table.

    See more details

  • Benton County Executive Board

    Benton County Executive Board

    January 12, 2026  6:30 PM - 8:30 PM
    Richland Public Library, 955 Northgate Dr, Richland, WA 99352, USA

    See more details

• •
13
  • Tri-cities Protest Tuesday

    Tri-cities Protest Tuesday

    January 13, 2026  3:30 PM - 4:30 PM
    John Dam Plaza, 815 George Washington Way, Richland, WA 99352, USA

    "Protest Tuesday" at John Dam Plaza on GWay in Richland from 3:30pm to 4:30PM. Bring your own sign or flag or one will be provided. Join our stalwarts and protest whatever is bothering you most that day.
    If possible, also bring a donation for the Food Bank.
    https://www.facebook.com/events/999996418325987/999996484992647/

    See more details

  • Kennewick City Council Workshop

    Kennewick City Council Workshop

    January 13, 2026  6:30 PM - 8:00 PM

    See more details

• •
14
15
  • Indivisible TC - Founder Hour, Thurs

    Indivisible TC - Founder Hour, Thurs

    January 15, 2026  12:00 PM - 1:00 PM
    The Zoom link can be found in the most recent Indivisible TC Do Something Email Newsletter.

    This is a Zoom meeting. The link to the meeting is provided in the weekly Do-Something email. When you join the organization at this link: https://www.indivisibletricitieswa.org/join-us , you will receive this newsletter.

    Join in and ask questions, get updates or just say hi! These are held every Thursday at 12pm and occasional weekends.

    See more details

  • Franklin County Democratic Central Committee (FCDCC) Full Membership Meeting

    Franklin County Democratic Central Committee (FCDCC) Full Membership Meeting

    January 15, 2026  5:30 PM - 8:30 PM
    Location: Library, 1320 W Hopkins Street, Pasco Virtual Option (Zoom): https://us02web.zoom.us/j/9144488289?pwd=OENYNWRxR1VtQkVFT1RsMU13RlZLUT09

    Please join us for our first general meeting of 2026! The January general meeting will happen on Thursday, the 15th. We will have our usual potluck at 5:30pm and with the meeting starting at 6pm. Our meeting will be both in person at the Pasco MCL Branch Library (1320 W. Hopkins) and on zoom. 

    https://us02web.zoom.us/j/9144488289?pwd=OENYNWRxR1VtQkVFT1RsMU13RlZLUT09

    See more details

• •
16
17
  • Indivisible Tri-cities Working Meeting

    Indivisible Tri-cities Working Meeting

    January 17, 2026  11:00 AM - 12:30 PM
    Mid-Columbia Library (Union) 1620 S Union St Kennewick, WA 99338

    Join us to get the year rolling! We will be planning for the coming year, join together in community, and have a little fun!

    See more details

•
18
19
  • A Taste of Afghanistan

    A Taste of Afghanistan

    January 19, 2026  6:00 PM - 8:00 PM
    B5 Learning Center 715 S Jean Street Kennewick, WA 99336

    Join B5 for a meal prepared by our Afghan friends on Monday, January 19. It will be an evening of delicious food, community, and an opportunity to learn about Afghan culture. We hope you join us as we create a community of open hearts, helping hands, and supportive systems where we all thrive.
    https://thriveatb5.networkforgood.com/events/95545-a-taste-of-afghanistan

    See more details

  • Posters for Progress!

    Posters for Progress!

    January 19, 2026  6:00 PM - 7:30 PM
    Hermiston First United Methodist Church 191 E Gladys Ave Hermiston, OR 97838

    Join local community organizers for Signs of Progress — a relaxed evening of creativity, connection, and collective action!
    There will be sign making, postcard writing, and conversation about the issues that matter most to us. Whether you’re passionate about local causes or just love good company and community spirit, there’s a place for you at the table.

    See more details

• •
20
  • Tri-cities Protest Tuesday

    Tri-cities Protest Tuesday

    January 20, 2026  3:30 PM - 4:30 PM
    John Dam Plaza, 815 George Washington Way, Richland, WA 99352, USA

    "Protest Tuesday" at John Dam Plaza on GWay in Richland from 3:30pm to 4:30PM. Bring your own sign or flag or one will be provided. Join our stalwarts and protest whatever is bothering you most that day.
    If possible, also bring a donation for the Food Bank.
    https://www.facebook.com/events/999996418325987/999996484992647/

    See more details

  • Richland City Council

    Richland City Council

    January 20, 2026  7:30 PM - 8:30 PM
    Richland City Hall, 505 Swift Blvd, Richland, WA 99352, USA

    See more details

• •
21
22
  • Indivisible TC - Founder Hour, Thurs

    Indivisible TC - Founder Hour, Thurs

    January 22, 2026  12:00 PM - 1:00 PM
    The Zoom link can be found in the most recent Indivisible TC Do Something Email Newsletter.

    This is a Zoom meeting. The link to the meeting is provided in the weekly Do-Something email. When you join the organization at this link: https://www.indivisibletricitieswa.org/join-us , you will receive this newsletter.

    Join in and ask questions, get updates or just say hi! These are held every Thursday at 12pm and occasional weekends.

    See more details

  • BCDCC General Public Meeting

    BCDCC General Public Meeting

    January 22, 2026  6:30 PM - 8:30 PM
    Meeting details will be provided over email from the Benton County Democrats Chair.

    See more details

• •
23
24
  • Stitch & Story Circle with Indivisible Tri-Cities

    Stitch & Story Circle with Indivisible Tri-Cities

    January 24, 2026  10:00 AM - 12:00 PM
    Richland Public Library Doris Roberts Gallery 955 Northgate Richland, WA

    You’re invited to our next Stitch & Story Circle with Indivisible Tri-Cities!

    Join us for a cozy, welcoming morning of book discussion, community conversation, and knitting or crafting if you’d like.

    See more details

•
25
26
  • Posters for Progress!

    Posters for Progress!

    January 26, 2026  6:00 PM - 7:30 PM
    Hermiston First United Methodist Church 191 E Gladys Ave Hermiston, OR 97838

    Join local community organizers for Signs of Progress — a relaxed evening of creativity, connection, and collective action!
    There will be sign making, postcard writing, and conversation about the issues that matter most to us. Whether you’re passionate about local causes or just love good company and community spirit, there’s a place for you at the table.

    See more details

•
27
  • Tri-cities Protest Tuesday

    Tri-cities Protest Tuesday

    January 27, 2026  3:30 PM - 4:30 PM
    John Dam Plaza, 815 George Washington Way, Richland, WA 99352, USA

    "Protest Tuesday" at John Dam Plaza on GWay in Richland from 3:30pm to 4:30PM. Bring your own sign or flag or one will be provided. Join our stalwarts and protest whatever is bothering you most that day.
    If possible, also bring a donation for the Food Bank.
    https://www.facebook.com/events/999996418325987/999996484992647/

    See more details

  • Tech Time: Building a List in VoteBuilder

    Tech Time: Building a List in VoteBuilder

    January 27, 2026  4:00 PM - 5:00 PM
    https://www.mobilize.us/ndtc/event/874848/

    Join the National Democratic Training Committee on Tuesday, January 27th from 7-8 pm ET for our free virtual live training: Tech Time: Building a List in VoteBuilder.

    This session is designed to teach you the technical skills needed to effectively use VoteBuilder for list-building. Unlike our other virtual live trainings, this session focuses more on demonstrating hands-on, hard skills rather than high-level theory and strategy. If you already have access VoteBuilder, there will be opportunities to follow along and practice throughout the session.

    See more details

  • Richland City Council Workshop

    Richland City Council Workshop

    January 27, 2026  6:00 PM - 8:00 PM
    Richland City Hall, 505 Swift Blvd, Richland, WA 99352, USA

    See more details

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  • Indivisible TC - Founder Hour, Thurs

    Indivisible TC - Founder Hour, Thurs

    January 29, 2026  12:00 PM - 1:00 PM
    The Zoom link can be found in the most recent Indivisible TC Do Something Email Newsletter.

    This is a Zoom meeting. The link to the meeting is provided in the weekly Do-Something email. When you join the organization at this link: https://www.indivisibletricitieswa.org/join-us , you will receive this newsletter.

    Join in and ask questions, get updates or just say hi! These are held every Thursday at 12pm and occasional weekends.

    See more details

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  • National Day of Action and Walkout

    National Day of Action and Walkout

    January 30, 2026  1:50 PM - 5:00 PM
    John Dam Plaza Knight @ George Washington Way Richland, WA

    On January 20, I pledge to walk out on fascism and walk toward a Free America.
    I refuse to accept raids, purges, surveillance, and fear as the new normal. I will help block the routines of power, support my community, and take action with courage and care.

    Join us for 5 minutes or an hour or more.

    See more details

  • Benton-Franklin Democrats Precinct Committee Officer Training

    Benton-Franklin Democrats Precinct Committee Officer Training

    January 30, 2026  5:00 PM - 8:00 PM
    IBEW Local 77, 7025 W Grandridge Blvd, Kennewick WA.

    Plan to attend. Mark your calendar for Precinct Committee Officer Training January 30, 2026, 5 PM to 8PM at IBEW Local 77, 7025 W Grandridge Blvd, Kennewick WA.

    More details coming.

    See more details

  • Precinct Committee Officer Training

    Precinct Committee Officer Training

    January 30, 2026  5:00 PM - 8:00 PM
    IBEW Local 77, 7025 W Grandridge Blvd, Kennewick, WA 99336, USA

    See more details

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