Bob Fulkerson, 45, has been head of the Progressive Leadership Alliance of Nevada for some 11 years. He co-founded the group with Jan Gilbert in 1994. His name is associated with just about any cause that can be thought of as โ€œliberalโ€ in Northern Nevada. Among too many interests to list, heโ€™s on the Washoe County Growth Management Task Force, and heโ€™s a part-time teacher of yoga. Heโ€™s the son of a favorite local artist, Mary Lee Fulkerson, attended Reno High School, and has a daughter whoโ€™s a sophomore at Whitman College. Recently, he won the 2005 Leadership for a Changing World award. PLAN can be reached at 348-7557.

How did the award come about?

Tim Hay, the former consumer advocate [for the State of Nevada] nominated me. We had worked together when he was in [Richard] Bryanโ€™s governorโ€™s office. I was at Citizen Alert back then working on โ€ฆ [musical interlude]. Sorry, that was my cell phone.

Rockin’. What song was that?

โ€œAll Along the Watchtower.โ€ Dylan. Yeah. Starts out, โ€œThere must be some kinda way outa here.โ€

We were on Tim Hay.

Tim nominated me. This Leadership for a Changing World award sends out e-mails far and wide, and we were talking last year, and he asked if he could nominate me. I said, โ€œAbsolutely.โ€ It was a pretty rigorous application process, and they narrowed it down from like a thousand nominees to like a couple hundred. And we had to submit essays, and then out of that, they did site visits to like 29 semi-finalists. And out of 29, they narrowed it down to 17.

Itโ€™s $100,000, right?

Itโ€™s $100,000 to PLAN and $15,000 for an individual-learning account for me, which Iโ€™m going to use to travel a little bit. Iโ€™m going to Costa Rica to learn Spanish for almost a month. And then Iโ€™m going down to Bolivia and to Chile. In Bolivia, Iโ€™m going to learn some of their amazing grassroots techniques to fight water profiteers and privateers in a place called Cochabomba, which is where the cutting edge work is being done against private-water corporations. And down in Chile, Iโ€™m going to work on human rights stuff.

So whatโ€™s PLAN going to do with the rest of the money?

Well, our budget is $600,000 per year. Weโ€™ll be able to keep the doors open two extra months. I mean, itโ€™s great, but itโ€™s not as if itโ€™s an endowment or anything. We have eight people on our staff in Reno, Las Vegas and Carson City. Weโ€™re a big alligator to feed, and we have a lot of bills to pay. One of our top priorities is to fight the anti-tax people, for next year.

It seems like the countdown has started toward next Novemberโ€™s elections. How active are you guys going to be?

Weโ€™re going to be very active fighting Sharron Angleโ€™s Proposition 13 and fighting Bob Beersโ€™ even stupider idea of the taxpayersโ€™ bill of rights. Both of them are out of the Grover Norquist playbook, and their goal is to shrink government to the size of a bathtub. If people want to fight fires or educate their kids or fight crime from out of a bathtub, they should vote for these stupid things. โ€ฆ I think a lot of that [anti-tax posturing] was thrown out the window last Tuesday when Grover Norquist and the anti-taxers got their hats handed to them by the voters in Colorado by beating back the anti-tax initiative there. Thatโ€™s not to mention the governor races [in New Jersey and Virginia].

What else is on your mind?

One thing is how inspired I am by the people I work with. Weโ€™ve got a number of volunteers, students and retired people who are volunteering with PLAN. I work also with an incredibly talented, dedicated staff as well as an all-volunteer board of directors who are putting their hearts and souls into making Nevada a more humane place to live. Theyโ€™re the reasons that I can kind of look so good winning this award. Itโ€™s really because of them.

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