Who this is for

Five kinds of people land here. Find which one is you.

Protect My County isn't a single audience. It's a toolkit that serves different people at different moments. The sooner you know which one fits, the faster you can do something useful.

I want to step up.”

01 / 05Rice County, KS

You want to lead a campaign for your county.

A wind farm is being proposed. Or a data center. Or a solar field. Or a pipeline. You read the room. You know somebody has to get organized, and that somebody is going to be you. Protect My County is built for this moment. Your campaign goes live in days, not months, because the tools are already wired up. The work that goes into your county is yours; the rest is already done.

  • A branded campaign page with your colors, your copy, your fact grid
  • Petition delivery wired to your pre-validated county officials
  • Verified community space gated to people who actually live there
  • Per-threat-type concern templates and sample letters to localize, not draft
  • A map presence so neighbors and journalists can find what you're doing
Start a campaign

I'm a resident, what's happening here?.”

02 / 05Wake County, NC

You live here and you want the real picture.

You heard a rumor. You saw a flyer. A neighbor mentioned a hearing. You want to know what is actually being proposed in your county before you decide what to think about it. Search your county. If a campaign already exists, you can read what it has put together, see who is signed on, and add your name. If only a sighting is on the map, you can see who reported it. If nothing is on record yet, your county is on the national map with a place for the next neighbor to add to it.

  • Search your county on the threat map
  • Read your county's campaign page if one exists, with the developer's filings, scale, and effects laid out
  • See sightings other neighbors have submitted
  • Add your name to the petition or join the verified community space
Find your county

I know something but don't want to lead.”

03 / 05Converse County, WY

You know something, but you do not want to lead.

Some of the best information about a project comes from people who would never volunteer to lead a campaign. A surveyor mentioned the parcels they were on. A local business heard from the developer. A note went on next month's agenda. You want to put that on the record without putting your name on it. Anonymous threat reports are how you do that.

  • No account required
  • No name attached to your submission
  • A reviewer checks every submission before it shows publicly, so the map stays accurate
  • Once approved, your county is on the national map and the next neighbor can pick it up
Report what you know

I'm already a member of a campaign.”

04 / 05Humboldt County, CA

You're already part of a campaign and you're coming back.

Sign in and your home county loads. Your community feed, your alerts, your saved posts, your member directory.

  • Sign in routes you to your campaign automatically
  • Notification bell shows what is new since you last visited
  • Member directory and posts are gated to verified residents and landowners
Sign in

I'm not from this county but I want to help.”

05 / 05Okeechobee County, FL

You want to support a county that isn't yours.

Maybe a relative lives there. Maybe you've seen the same developer in your county and want to know what they're up to in others. Maybe you're a journalist or a researcher tracking what is being proposed across the country. Browse the map, read the campaign pages, share with anyone you know in those counties. The platform is open.

  • Public threat map covers every U.S. county
  • Campaign pages are public-readable so you can share with people who live there
  • Communities Winning lists outcome dates and conditions for cross-referencing
Browse the map

Not sure which one is you?

Start with the map.

Look up your county. Whatever's already there will tell you a lot about what step to take next.

Find your county