Almost 50 Years of
Putting People First
Iowa Citizens for Community Improvement was born, rather humbly, in the rectory of St. Joseph’s Catholic Church in Waterloo. We were founded by a handful of clergy who believed that ordinary people, when given the chance, can be a powerful force for justice when we organize for change together.
From four priests in Waterloo to today’s statewide, multi-racial, multi-gendered, multi-generational movement, Iowa CCI’s spirit of justice marches on. That’s thanks to the work of thousands of members like you, across the state, who continue to tackle tough issues and get things done.
The 1970s: Local Organizing
After our founding in 1975, we quickly grew to include Cedar Rapids, Council Bluffs and Des Moines. We built our people-powered organizing around local and neighborhood issues, addressing abandoned housing, use of city funds, and slum landlords who weren’t providing safe living conditions to their tenants.
+ Our 1970s Wins
The 1980s: Urban and Rural Together
In the 1980s, we expanded to Dubuque and Sioux City, and then we quickly went statewide. Our organizing branched out to include farmers and rural residents, who joined their neighbors and friends in Iowa’s cities. We organized on issues that cut across urban-rural divides, and we focused on larger targets: utility monopolies and the big banks. We put people first on issues of high utility rates and farm foreclosures.
+ Our 1980s Wins
The 1990s: Here to Stay
In the 1990s, we made two of the “best decisions we’ve ever made.” We became a dues-paying membership organization, and we bought our own office building. Both moves signaled that Iowa CCI would be around to put people and planet first for the long haul. As our membership grew across the state, we continued to organize on issues affecting both rural and urban Iowans. We fought predatory loans, addressed the drug crisis in Des Moines, and helped rural residents fight corporate-backed factory farms.
+ Our 1990s Wins
The 2000s: Lifting Up a Bold Vision
In the 2000s, CCI’s urban and rural members came together around a common struggle, and we communicated a shared vision for Iowa. We were still working on issues that “hit home” for everyday Iowans, but we also began to articulate a broad vision of economic, environmental, and racial justice, naming corporate power as a driving force behind all of our issues. We started organizing with immigrant Iowans on police and workplace issues, our work on racist redlining pivoted to taking on predatory mortgage lenders, and we put CCI members’ voices squarely on the national level by hosting the 2007 Heartland Presidential Forum with five presidential hopefuls, including future President Barack Obama.
+ Our 2000s Wins
The 2010s: Building the Future We Deserve
In the 2010s, in solidarity with the Standing Rock Sioux tribe, we engaged thousands of affected Iowans in the fight against the Dakota Access Pipeline, and we stopped dozens of factory farms and a slaughterhouse from setting up shop. We fought racial profiling in Des Moines and anti-immigrant policies across the state, including unfair workplace policies that enabled wage theft. We cut the number of Iowa’s predatory payday lenders in half, and we pushed for minimum wage increases in several Iowa towns and cities.
Increasingly, CCI members realized we can’t make the change we want without getting involved in elections. In 2011, members launched Iowa CCI Action Fund (CCI Action), our sister organization with political ambition. CCI Action gave us new organizing tools - allowing us to name names in elections and work to elect smart progressive, accountable people that come from our movements to office. Learn more about CCI Action at this link.
+ Our 2010s Wins
The 2020s (and beyond!)
The 2020s are just beginning, but Iowa CCI members are still working on some of the most pressing issues of our time. People need pandemic relief and much more – including a $15 minimum wage, health care and racial justice for all, fair prices for family farmers, a Green New Deal, and full and fair voting rights for everyone, no exceptions – and Iowa CCI is going to organize until we get it. We have no time to waste.