Abe Scarr
Student Empowerment Training (SET) Project, Director
“I began canvassing after I graduated from college in
2002. I was politically motivated and engaged in my community in both
high school and college, but had never worked on a campaign that made
an impact on the scale I wanted. When I graduated, I knew I wanted to
work as an activist but had no idea how. Canvassing changed all of
that. For the first time, I could see concrete results from my actions
both on a daily basis and over the course of a campaign. As a
developing activist, I especially appreciated the challenge of
canvassing: every day I was forced to push myself to perform, and to
develop and hone my communication skills. Canvassing opened up the
doors for a career in organizing. Six months after I started, I was
hired as a campus organizer with the student PIRGs, where I worked for
two years, returning over three summers to direct canvass offices. Now
I direct my own project, working with student governments all over the
country, teaching student leaders skills and organizing techniques that
help them be more effective advocates for students. I use the skills I
learned canvassing every day.” -Abe Scarr Abe is now
the Project Director for the Student Empowerment Training Project,
which works with student governments and state student associations
across the country, a position he began in August 2005. Over the
course of his first year with the SET Project, Abe launched and
organized three regional conferences, training hundreds of students in
organizing and campaign skills, hired and trained field organizers to
run field campaigns for the Minnesota State University Student
Association and the California State Student Association, worked
closely with students in South Carolina working to institutionalize the
South Carolina State Student Association, and raised enough money to
hire 5 additional staff to work with the SET Project over the 2006/2007
school year. Abe launched his public interest career as a Fund
canvasser in October 2002, in Washington DC, working on Greenpeace
renewable energy campaign and helping to launch the first U.S. PIRG
street canvass. In April of 2003, he started working with the Student
PIRGs as a campus organizer. Abe worked with students on the North
Shore of Massachusetts to help pass tough new legislation to clean up
Massachusetts coal burning power plants, including the Salem Harbor
power plant. Between 2003 and 2005, he directed Fund canvass offices in
Washington DC, Chicago, Milwaukee, and Manhattan.
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Alumni Profiles
Jon Goldin-Dubois, Common Cause, Executive Vice President
Cassandra McKee, USAction, Deputy Campaigns Director
Bernadette Del Chiaro, Environment California, Energy Advocate
Elizabeth Ouzts, Environment North Carolina, Executive Director
Abe Scarr, Student Empowerment Training (SET) Project, Director
Eric M. Garcetti, Los Angeles City Council President
E. Christopher Wilder, Valley Medical Center Foundation, Executive Director
Maggie Drummond, GrowSmart Maine, Advocacy Director
Seth Kilbourne, Equality California, Political and Policy Director
Ben Prochazka, Save Darfur Coalition, Campaign Manager
Susannah Lindberg-Randolph, Clean Water Action, Florida Program Coordinator
Phillip D. Radford, Greenpeace, Executive Director
Carrie Doyle, Colorado Conservation Voters, Executive Director
Jerry Hauser, The Management Center, CEO
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