By Anna Von Reitz
Coordinators are volunteers. They are American State Nationals.
They are members of their State Assembly.
Just because there were, at the beginning, few volunteers, this resulted in a situation where there was only one Coordinator responsible for organizing an entire State Assembly.
This in turn gave some deeply indoctrinated people the idea that the Coordinator (seeing as there was only one) was "the" Executive Officer or CEO that they are familiar with in the Corporate System.
This is not the case.
The Coordinator is not a CEO. They don't have any special "authority" other than they have access, on behalf of their Assembly, to ask questions and get answers from the Federation of States, regarding the assembling process, the pillars of the Assembly structure, and the functions of the Assembly.
The Federation acts in an advisory and protective capacity during the assembling process.
Each Assembly has people who are entrusted with the duty of helping their State Assembly get organized -- these Coordinators act as local contact people and organizers for the people in their State.
Whether there is one Coordinator or two dozen Coordinators the job is the same. Get questions answered, share the information, educate people in your State, help assemble functions and coordinate activities of the State Assembly.
The Coordinators are supposed to work together, share information, divide up work responsibilities, and most of all, provide care and answers to their fellow State Nationals and the State Citizens.
Every State is different. Every State has a separate history and climate and issues. So there is no set standard concerning the number of Coordinators. As a practical matter, larger States need more help, but some larger States function fine with only one Coordinator.
There is an entire section in the How to Build an Assembly guide about Coordinators and their important and often thankless job.
Anyone who has any questions about the Coordinator's job, responsibilities, political status, membership in the Assembly, etc., is directed to this written resource first and may contact the Federation for any other questions that aren't covered.
Coordinators are vetted by the Federation with regard to past criminal records and go through a basic training regimen before being recognized as Coordinators.
It is not the job of the Federation to assemble the States. The States and the people living in each State are responsible for that. The role of the Federation is to provide guidance and support and ensure that each Assembly gets properly and lawfully organized.
Granna
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