IMPACT Chicago dates its beginnings from when the first course was offered in August 1987.
Founding the Self-Empowerment Group, August 1986-November 1988
Founding the Self-Empowerment Group, August 1986-November 1988
Key people and groups:
Joe Connelly—Founder of Self-Empowerment Group
- Joe heard about Model Mugging from friends in California and read an article in Black Belt Magazine.
- Negotiated with Matt Thomas of Model Mugging and the Personal Empowerment Center and met the requirement of having a business plan, identifying two candidates for instructor training (Joe and Lonna Brooks), and having an outreach person (Connie Conroy)
- Provided funds for the first instructor candidates and for the fledging organization
Business Advisory Group:
Norm Axelrod, Dennis Detzel, Elliot Rubenstein, and Dennis Conroy
Norm Axelrod, Dennis Detzel, Elliot Rubenstein, and Dennis Conroy
Board of Directors:
President: Lonna Brooks, Vice-President Joe Connelly, Members Dennis Conroy and Laurie Haight
Others: After August 1987: Dianne Costanzo
(first certified lead instructor), Theo Pintzuk, and Carole Isaacs; After July 1988: Martha Thompson
Main Activities in Founding
Negotiated with Matt Thomas and
Personal Empowerment Center
Sent people for training
Offered first class August 1987 at
Hillcrest Community Center, 13 women
Offered 4 other courses
Total of 50 women trained during the
founding period
Key Decisions
Established a
nonprofit rather than for profit
Didn’t sign a
royalty agreement with Matt Thomas
Main issue
How to create an
effective, efficient organization with a commitment to offering programs to as
many women as possible?
Building the
Self-Empowerment Group, November 1988-November 1990
Key People and Groups
Martha Thompson—coordinated
the creation of an infrastructure to support programming and coordinated the
instructor team
Core Group of
Volunteers: Martha (coordinator), Susan Andrews, Dianne Costanzo, Debborah
Harp, Anne Mason, Theo Pintzuk, Becky Yane
Long Range Planning
Committee: Martha (coordinator), Joe Connelly, Dianne Costanzo, Anne Mason,
Theo Pintzuk, Becky Yane
Interim Board (all
the people above) plus Linda Jedrzejek
Main
Activities
Building an
instructor team—regular meetings, in-service training, ongoing instructor training
Building a
volunteer organization
Offering a regular
and expanded schedule
21 basics courses,
over 200 women trained
Review course
Defense against an
armed assailant (DAAR) instructor training in Boston (Joe and Martha)
Training rest of
instructors in DAAR
Offering DAAR
Boundaries
workshop
Key
Decisions
Established the
organization on principles of the program: empowerment and personal growth
Created a joint
committee of volunteers and instructors to lead the organization
Moved to a
membership-based Board of Directors
Main
Issues
How to build an
organization consistent with the principles of the program?
Related: decision-making, division of
labor, accountability, communication, language, and
problem-solving
problem-solving
What kind of
leadership model did we want to support?
Related: recognizing invisible work and
the people who do it; preventing burnout; what role will instructors play; how to transform instructor-student
relationship to a peer relationship?
How do we
determine/evaluate our success?
Focus on process
or product?
Focus on
program/women served or organizational (office, # of paid people, career
lines)?
Notes from a 1990 Interview of Joe Connelly by Martha Thompson and her organizational notes.
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