Facebook Politics Comes to Pepper Pike
BY Nancy Scola | Thursday, October 7 2010
I wondered, can online politics be local? In a comment, Jill Zimon, recently-elected member of the Pepper Pike (OH) City Council, says, yes, absolutely:
[A]s a local candidate last year in a town with about 5000 registered voters in NE Ohio, I absolutely used Facebook, as well as other online tools, to supplement face to face and phone contact. And I've not seen a disintegration in following - what I did was convert the contacts to an email list populated with people who love getting updates, something that no council member (I was elected to city council in 11/09) had ever done, by snailmail or otherwise. The pages for my campaign still exist on FB but I have to say that my general personal FB page and wall are followed by constituents too.
I'd agree that we just don't know a whole lot yet, but frankly, I have found Facebook, in conjunction with my other connecting activities, to be a great way for me to keep up on locals and vice versa. Because we're a small city, information that goes around the schools or the school district, related to individuals or businesses that have personal or other successes - they are often "reported" first on Facebook - long before a weekly local paper comes out and because local, too small for the metro paper to cover (the Plain Dealer).
There certainly seems to be plenty of room for actual practitioners of online politics to join the pundits in offering insight in the great Gladwellian social change debate.