Salt Lake City is world headquarters of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints - within the city proper just less than half now calls itself Mormon – statewide the figure is about 62%. The Church is now embarking on a massive redevelopment project in downtown Salt Lake City's core, with mixed use (offices, mall shopping, residential, a grocery store). The Church has extensive corporate holdings, primarily in agribusiness, media, insurance, travel, and real estate. Here in Utah, the Church holds a tremendous amount of influence over local culture and public policy formation.
ALLY OR OBSTACLE?
The Church could potentially be seen as an obstacle, or on the opposing side, of relocalization efforts – as it moves slowly in big decisions, avoids overtly political issues, etc. On the positive side, the Church has opposed local storage of nuclear waste; it has planned for disaster; it can mobilize members quickly; it cares about the poor; and was founded on principles of self-sufficient intentional community (even if it has substantially shifted away from this). Post Carbon Salt Lake could do outreach to environmentally-minded people, already receptive to relocalization concepts, but to ultimately have a broad impact, we may need to do serious outreach to the Church and/or its members. We would need to figure out the best way to do this, perhaps by exploring this with Mormons who become involved with our group, or are willing to dialogue with our group. It seems important for us to believe that the Church will eventually be swayable on these matters, especially if appealed to from certain angles. Seeing the Church as an obstacle to our efforts would not be a helpful perception. The “buy local” movement thinks campaigns in Utah, Maine, and Vermont have an advantage in the cohesive mind-sets of their constituents.
PAST AND FUTURE
Historically, the Mormons' pioneer roots were a combination of self-sufficiency and communal interdependence within their tight-knit communities. Today, they extend aid (food, clothing, other help) to church members in need, operating perhaps the largest private welfare system in the nation. They are also encouraged to store a one or two-year supply of food for emergencies. Here in Salt Lake, the Church maintains a 19 million lb storage of wheat as a reserve, in case there is a time of need. In an emergency situation, their members can be quickly mobilized (as occurred in 1983, when Salt Lake's downtown flooded.) The “Latter Day Saints” believe we are approaching end times, a period marked by chaos and turmoil – culminating in the millennial rule of Jesus Christ – although they do not think these times are upon us yet, and choose not to dwell on this. Many Christian denominations believe that followers of Jesus will be raptured (taken up to heaven) as the end-times unfold; that they will be removed as things really start to unravel here on Earth. The Mormons believe they will be here through the whole thing along with everyone else, thus, their emphasis on preparedness for hard times. They also believe Christ will return to for a 1000 year rule on Earth, ruling from both Jerusalem, and also from “Zion” (in the U.S.). Many Mormons see U.S. politics as a stage on which the ultimate divine drama will be played out, with a Mormon (perhaps as president) will play a leading role.
THE PRESENT
Modern-day Mormons live the average American life in terms of materialism, consumption, and being pro-growth/development/capitalism - more so, if one considers their high birth rate. An integral part of their religious beliefs encourages them to have many children, thus Utah's high population growth rate (although members’ birth rates have been dropping in recent years.) Church members are encouraged to stay out of debt, yet Utah has one of the highest bankruptcy rates. Politically, Mormons are mostly conservative - Utah is one of the most Republican states in the nation. (One certainly hopes Peak Oil will become a bi-partisan issue - but it currently remains ignored by both parties.) Mormons mostly have control of the governorship, state legislature, and most federal representatives. The religion's organizational structure is a male-led hierarchy, and Mormons tend to trust authority. The Church President is seen as the modern-day prophet whose edicts are to be obeyed. A pre-election poll showed most Utahns highly supportive of the Iraq War and President Bush (around 60% for both).
IMPOSSIBLE TO PREDICT
Mormons and Mormon leadership might resist facing any notion of resource depletion, since it comes head-to-head with their beliefs in having large families. Although the Church responded quickly in mobilizing members to respond to the 1983 flood in Salt Lake City, it usually changes slowly with deeper, fundamental issues. If Church hierarchy understood the implications of Peak Oil regarding the poor, and the possibility of resource wars, it might begin to exhort followers to conserve energy. These are all varying factors that may play a role in a Salt Lake and Utah Peak Oil future - in a city and state where Mormons play a prominent role in determining policy and formation of its communities. It is impossible to predict the Church’s response once the realities of Peak Oil become impossible to ignore.
Thanks to my Mormon friends willing to offer their responses and insights to this piece. I would invite the further thoughts of others through this forum.
April 10th, 2007
Willing to discuss this at length
I am also LDS, living in Utah County (Provo). I would certainly like to discuss this and bounce ideas off of other members of the group. I don't have time now to start, but I will be signing back on later (probably by the end of the week) to start.
-Matt
February 5th, 2007
Ask for their help, not their conversion
Maybe we could begin by playing to the historical strengths of the church, Pat and I have been looking into emergence preparedness, and the most complete information we have found has been from the LDS church. So rather then trying to engage the church directly with peak-oil education, might we be more effective by asking them for help by sharing their self-reliance expertise in our community educational outreach. Once we have some relationship by a common cause, they may begin to hear our other concerns as ones we really have in common.
Thomas Tilton
Salt Lake City
April 5th, 2007
Mormon Prepardness
I am LDS. Living in a small Mormon town of Snowflake AZ. I just moved there from Phoenix. Very interesting. Food storage and disaster preparedness have been a part of my family since my grandmother went food-storage crazy in the 70's. I inherited the wheat that she started storing in the 80's. When I moved to Snowflake last year I unloaded nearly 1200 lbs of wheat! I have since expanded my food supply and probably have about 9 months of food for my family.
The LDS church is not aware of Peak Oil at all. They are very conservative and mirror a lot of standard Republican political beliefs. So conservation is not very high on their list. But having a year supply is still considered a very important thing to do. Mostly it is seen as an economic insurance policy, but others see it as a backup in case of wide spread problems. Ever so often people get scared and buy a lot of stuff. Some people take it very seriously and have a good supply, but most people probably only have a couple of months worth of the basics.
The good thing is that the LDS church has a cannery operation that makes it easy to get bulk grains canned. Just next door to my house in Snowflake there is a dry canner where retired seniors volunteer and will help you can bulk food. The selection is limited but the quality is high and the price is affordable. They LDS church is really trying to make it easy as possible to get a year supply.
Just last week the Church announced a new year supply and emergency program. Very simple, they want to focus on having a short term (3-month) supply of what you use every day, water, some cash (rainy-day fund), and a long term year-supply of staples. I think they are trying to simplify the preparedness program as much as possible. This is on top of the long standing advice not to into unnecessary debt and live within a budget.
As for coordinating with LDS members, I think this would be a very good thing. The best place to start would be to contact an LDS church member in your area and tell them you want to participate in their year-supply/emergency preparation. They should be able to refer you to a local specialist that deals in this, and they can direct you properly.
January 26th, 2007
Politicians/Church Leaders
Have you invited local and state politicians to your meetings? Have any attended? Are there any currently supported initiatives at the state and local level that move towards the goals outlined by your group?