Sierra Club

A brief overview of your interest group (be sure to put its name in bold in the first sentence) and the scope of the article goes here.

The following list of sections should serve as a loose guideline for developing the body of your article. The works cited in references 2-5 are all fake; their purpose is to serve as a formatting model for your own citations.

History
This section should describe the interest group's founding and development. It would probably be a good idea to divide it into chronological subsections, for example:

Founding
Naturalist John Muir founded the Sierra Club in 1892. During the club's first 60 years membership was mostly limited to residents of California. With most of Sierra Club's activites limited to promoting outdoor activity. The Club's first goal was to preserve the Sierra Nevada Mountain Chain. Their success led them to jumpstart a number of other campaigns to preserve dozens of natinal treasures. Muir was vigilant in trying to spar wilderness from the effects of human activites. He belived people could learn more by lviing in nature, while practicing quiet observation. Muir's nautralist ideals laid the foundation for the Sierra Club to evnetually delve into the public arena of due process. As in 1952 David Brower took over as director, helping make the club more agressive politcally. ref>John Q. Sample, Why and How Interest Group X Was Founded. City: Publisher, 2015.

Current objectives and activities
Sierra Club has a policy of always supporting pro environmental incumbents for reelection. Sierra Club is aiming to stop the construction of coal factories, en route to shutting down coal factories that are currently up and running. They feel that doing so can help spare our mountains, waters, and lands from the ill effects that are a direct result of the extraction of coal reserves. The Sierra Club members are working to help usher in a new era of clean energy. Their efforts pressure government officials to adopt programs implementing wind, solar, and other clean energy sources. The Sierra Club also promotes the rebuilding of American homes and buildings. Their reasoning is greener buildings will reduce global warming emissions and lower utility bills. Among the club's more ambitious goals is proposed plan to use electranets. An electranet is an energy internet that links homes to a smart grid powered by clean energy. The electranet can reduce electricity consumption through a national transmission network that supports large-scale renewable energy and local energy generation that frees homes and businesses to produce their own energy. By taking these steps the club feels America could provide work, make out of date structures more efficient, and modernize our energy grid. They also promote making legislation that provides incentives for businesses and homes to cap their energy costs. The Sierra Club has indentified two goals it hopes to attain in the next four years. They want to work with Congress and President Obama to pass federal legislation curbing U.S. greenhouse gas emissions 80% by 2050. The club also hopes to create the domestic conditions needed for the U.S. to lead in negotiating and implementing an international climate treaty sufficient to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to levels called for by climate scientists.

Organizational structure
Sierra Club is comprised of over 700,000 members. Its headquarters is located in San Francisco. It also operates with a large Washington staff and field staff. The club's board of directors is comprised of 15 members. People currently holding the positions are as follows, " Allison Chin, President, Robin Mann, Vice President, Rafael Reyes, Secretary, Joni Bosh, Treasurer, David Karpf, Fifth Officer, Lane E. Boldman, Robbie Cox, Jeremy Doochin, Michael Dorsey, Larry Fahn, Barbara Frank, Sanjay Ranchod, David A. Scott, Chris Warshaw, and Nathan Wyeth." The club has 64 chapters all across the United States, ranging from Alaska to Wyoming. Sierra Club has 28 fields offices throughout the country, along with an office stationed in Ontario, Canada. .

Achievements
This section should recount the group's major achievements, including but not limited to legislative and/or legal victories.

Public perception and controversies
In developing this final section, be especially careful about maintaining a neutral stance and tone. Your aim should be to document the public's perception of your group and/or any controversies in which it is or has been embroiled without weighing in with your own opinion about them.