Climate Art for Congress

 
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A SCIENCE, ART, AND CIVICS PROJECT FOR STUDENTS AT ALL GRADE LEVELS

Background

Some students may want to read this background section with a parent or teacher.

It’s difficult to consider another crisis — the climate crisis — in the midst of Covid. But it’s also imperative. Legislation passed in response to the virus can either greatly worsen, or greatly improve, our prospects for climate progress. Legislation can either support clean energy and climate justice initiatives, or it can instead provide bailout money and other relief to fossil fuel companies, which have been aggressively seeking to exploit the Covid crisis. The latter has already happened! We need to prevent it from happening again. Fossil fuels must be left in the ground for a climate safe future.

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Our goal is for students from each state and the five major U.S. territories—Puerto Rico, Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Northern Mariana Islands, and American Samoa—to create illustrated notes for us to send to their representatives in the House and the Senate. More than 500 notes have already been sent.

More Covid relief and stimulus legislation is coming up. Your notes will ask representatives to focus those bills on the equitable transition to a clean energy economy—in other words, to focus on the fundamental right of all young people to a livable future. More than 100 economists, including Nobel Prize winner Joseph Stiglitz and other globally renowned economists, have attested to the necessity of an equitable green stimulus to bring our economy back following the pandemic.

Young people can’t vote, but they have agency and a huge stake in what’s happening. Across the globe, we’ve seen students take a transformative leadership role on climate over the last two years. With this initiative, we seek to provide an additional pathway for that leadership for students in the U.S.

The Covid crisis has caused profound loss and suffering, and will leave us with a very different world. Rather than compounding these terrible human costs by hindering action on climate, which would cause even greater human trauma, we must insist on ambitious and egalitarian climate policy now to improve our future.

Help move us all in the right direction by following the steps below!

READY TO SPEAK OUT?

4 Easy Steps

Below is a series of steps that will allow you to voice your demand for a climate-safe, livable future with Members of Congress as they pass legislation in response to Covid.

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STEP 1: Learn about climate science

Learn about climate change and why we must act now. Here’s a fantastic website from the team at the Alliance for Climate Education that has a series of short videos to explore: Our Climate Our Future. Here’s another fantastic website from NASA with a variety of resources and activities: Climate Kids.

(Check out our earlier blog posts to explore some connections between the coronavirus and the climate crisis.)

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STEP 2a: Who represents you in Congress?

Identify your Member of the House of Representatives and your Senators on this website.

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STEP 2b: Find out where they stand on climate

With a parent’s help (for younger students), research your elected officials’ positions and actions on climate. For example:

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STEP 3a: Voice your opinion!

Write a short handwritten note expressing your views to your Members of Congress. Here’s a sample—not a script! Your note can be shorter than this. It’s what you think that matters.

  • The coronavirus crisis is truly awful, but it doesn’t cancel or even slow down climate change. The crisis we’ll be living with for many years to come is the climate crisis — which experts say will cause more pandemics like Covid, among many other harms. If we take serious action now, we can reduce those harms. A livable future is a fundamental right. We all deserve it, regardless of where we live, how much money we have, our race and gender, or our age. For me, it’s even more important because young people have a longer future. Please make climate progress and climate justice key factors in your work on Covid legislation.

IMPORTANT: If possible, please use a sheet of blank, unlined paper. This helps ensure a strong image quality for your work!

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STEP 3b: Use your creativity to make an impact

Create an illustration on the rest of the paper. How are you feeling these days? What makes you feel hope or concern for the future? Make art about either of these questions or anything else related to climate change.

STEP 3c: Show us your work so we can display it and send it to Congress!

Send us your illustrated note by filling out this form.

For best image quality, we recommend doing a color scan of your letter. “Genius Scan” is a free smartphone app that works beautifully. We will color print your note and mail it to your Member of Congress and both of your Senators (or any one of them you choose).

Please note that for privacy purposes, we will only display your first name, last initial, and state or territory of residence.

If you have any questions, please email us at climateart@climatemuseum.org.

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STEP 4: You’re a published artist! Spread the word!

Check out the gallery on our website and find your note!

We will feature selected notes across our digital platforms, including our landing page, so that your work can inspire your peers!

Please tell your friends, classmates, and teachers and share this work on social media to spread the word. Make sure to tag @climatemuseum and use the hashtag #ClimateArtForCongress.

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Thank you for joining this community of positive action! Keep your eye out for a certificate from us to express our gratitude.

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Miranda Massie