Archive for the 'Uncategorized' Category

27
Oct
09

before Halloween comes National Weatherization Day

That’s right folks, get excited! Before you don your costumes, before you eat candy til your belly hurts, before you go out pumpkin smashing, do something weatherization-related for the good of the Earth. Friday, Oct. 30 … coming to a community near you … “celebrate the positive potential of residential weatherization and our green economic recovery.” Oh Sierra Club, what a push! But really, I support weatherization and green jobs, and so should you! Even if it means adding another fake holiday to the e-card list.

On National Weatherization Day, cities will be hosting events to highlight services and organizations that help people to make their homes more energy efficient. Across the country, federal recovery funds are helping people weatherize their homes for winter, creating jobs and reducing energy waste.

National Weatherization Day is also an opportunity to showcase an emerging home renovation industry that could create hundreds of thousands of good, family-supporting green jobs. Weatherization Day events will highlight solution-based programs and efforts to implement city-wide home makeovers, as well as urge the Obama administration to continue to champion a green economic recovery.

The folks at the Sierra Club are so stoked about this holiday, they’ve gone and created some Web stuff for you to spread the word.

Celebrate Weatherization Day:

Spread the word about energy efficiency by writing a letter to your local newspaper. We make it so easy you don’t even have to lick a stamp!

Share this Halloween Efficiency Flyer (PDF) with your neighbors!

Is there a weatherization activity near you? Tell us [Sierra Club] about it!

Even New Jersey is on the train – so you should be, too.

More useful links:

Home Performance Tips:
Cool Cities Home Audit Checklist
DOE Energy Savers Tips<!–
B.E.S.T. Weatherization Tips
doityourself.com How To
Pacific Power Weatherization Tips –>

For More Information:
Sierra Club Green Home

Blue Green Alliance partners are leading the effort to rebuild America:
Building a Clean Energy Workforce
Laborers Weatherization Training Video

15
Oct
09

climate change issues a la Blog Action Day

In honor of Blog Action Day, I am back. And I want to talk about climate change.

Today I read this post on Grist that really underscores just how bad things are getting for us. But what spoke to me most was that amid the deterioration, experts continue to speak to the public in calm, even boring tones. Where is the passion? the fervor? the

All the latest science shows climate change is accelerating at an alarming rate. But all we do is explain the sometimes minute details of how we know this. Except science also shows that the simple steps we encourage the public to take — recycling, walking more, unplugging electronics — can’t help much. Just cutting greenhouse-gas emissions isn’t enough anymore. We need real, major overhauls. We need global shifts in energy practices. We need multinational resource protection. We need worldwide, permanent changes.

Thus far, the Grist article notes, the climate change story has been largely data-driven or promoted through what essentially are gimmicks to get us to change a light bulb – everyone loves the polar bear and frankly you are heartless if you don’t. But the real stories matter, too! The stories about “coastal insalination rendering vast swaths of farmland useless, houses plunging into the sea as permafrost melts, even wildfires threatening the City of the Angels, to name just a very few” are the ones that we need to hear. They may be happening far away or under the radar, but they are happening. We are losing entire species of underwater creatures! We are sweating in October! These things are all interconnected. And worsening.

Adam Sacks in this Grist article says:

We climate activists are the ones who aren’t saying what needs to be said. Our silence is not the lack of words, it is the absence of an essence in urgent human relationships, an essence with power to break the bonds of unthinkable thoughts: Passion.

He goes on to quote an excerpt from a moving speech out of American history that is filled with exactly that – passion. Our ancestors found passion when it mattered, yet we are barely mustering up enough passion to continue the equal rights fight today. But I see passion in everyone trying out for So You Think You Can Dance and American Idol. So we are still passionate people … ha. Where is our passion for our PLANET? For the FUTURE OF EVERYTHING AS WE KNOW IT?

Check out Sacks’ call for passion – and pass it on!

Today we are addressing the end of the world we know, quite possibly the extinction of homo sapiens and most other species on earth, and we can do little more than cite statistics? Surely an unravelled web of life, miserable ends for countless creatures great and small, and mass death of billions of human beings, mostly innocent, should call for “scorching irony,” at the very least.

Where are our fire, thunder, ridicule, blasting reproach, withering sarcasm, stern rebuke?  Why are we so polite? Why are we so obedient?  What are we thinking?  What aren’t we thinking?  What are we doing?  What aren’t we doing?  When do we start?
I have a proposition for you.  Try your hand at a letter—to an editor, or to a friend, or to a lover, or to a child—availing yourself of all the passion you can muster as we hasten blindly toward world’s end…

… When do we start?  Now’s the time.

Quill and ink (or keyboard) in hand, summon your muse and write for our lives!

Ok, admittedly this is a little insane-sounding and over the top. But I don’t want to face the problems that are on the way for our children and say I did nothing to lessen the blow. Blog Action Day is certainly a start, but let’s keep the conversation going!

06
Sep
09

Students prefer eco-friendly colleges – what a generation!

Two-thirds of college applicants say a school’s green record would influence their enrollment decision, according to a Princeton Review survey [PDF]. To determine how eco-friendly colleges are, prospective students should check out these lists:

Grist also summarized its take on Sierra’s picks in this article.

Sierra’s top 10:

Boulder ranks No. 1 - surprised?

Boulder ranks No. 1 - surprised?

My undergrad alma mater – UCSD - is 33rd, and my grad school – Northwestern University - didn’t even make the list! I suppose I am actually not shocked, considering the water waste I witnessed and complained about this summer. For those of you not from the West, Californians are used to conserving water. But outside the state, and particularly near the lovely, hydrating Great Lakes, people do not have such sensitivity. My fellow students and I spent many mornings trying to outrun rogue sprinklers doing nothing more than cleaning concrete and blocking building entrances. One friend likened the challenge to Super Mario Bros. Not to mention the consistent leaking from hose connections!

I hope Northestern and Medill feel some shame at being left off this list (and earning an abismal C+ on the Green Report Card 2009 – by your standards, Medill, doesn’t that put you on academic, er environmental, probation?). Perhaps Northwestern’s own multidisciplinary sustainability fellowship should do something about this.

How did your school fare? I am hoping better than Northwestern …

28
Jul
09

Cash for clunkers, or my plan to save the auto industry

So many of you have heard about this government program that offers you money back for trading in your old car for a newer, more gas efficient model. The Sierra Club explains it briefly:

Just over a month ago, President Obama signed into law the Car Allowance Rebate System (CARS), aka “Cash for Clunkers.” Between now and November 1, $1 billion in federal funding is available to help sell new vehicles. That means you can get a $3,500 to $4,500 credit toward replacing your old gas guzzler with a newer, more-efficient model.

Yes, this in theory is great. However, why not put that money toward improving the cars people already drive? I know, I know, our auto industry is in trouble. But I have one solution. Yes, it’s off the top of my head, and yes, it has no cost benefit analysis attached, but I still think it’s worth sharing. I put this to you, auto companies. Why not partner with an organization like Lovecraft and help transition “clunkers” into perfectly healthy, uber efficient vegetable oil-guzzling roadsters? $3,500 is more than enough. I say this creates jobs AND a new market for veggie oil outlets …Bah, I know why. Because auto companies, like oil companies, need us to remain dependent on them. They can’t have us running all willy nilly using waste to get around town.

On a more serious note, I am curious: Do the carbon emissions savings from improving gas efficiency outweigh the waste (not to mention now wasted energy) that those “clunkers” become after dealerships take them in? I am sure they are recycled. But the energy used to make them in the first place was already spent. So is using more energy to turn them into parts for something else really saving the planet? Maybe that is a silly paradox, but it’s worth pondering. There is a math problem in there somewhere. If 10 people get rid of 10 working Hummers and each of them buy a Prius, then the energy spent is 10 X the energy used to make the Hummer + 10 X the energy used to recycle the Hummer + 10 X the energy used to make the Prius. Compare that to the amount of energy spent per Hummer across the next, say, 10 years each Hummer would be driven … maybe it evens out, maybe it doesnt? Food for thought. Or energy for thought. Your thoughts?

06
Jul
09

NYC volunteers help public housing residents recycle

The New York Times published a feature about a group of brave and lovely women who are going door to door in Morningside Heights teaching people living in public housing to recycle. It is amazing to me that so many buildings in so many urban cities do not have recycling programs, considering the large number of residents, the abundance of trash and the potential economic savings.

The typical neighborhood environmentalist is often pictured as young and affluent, the kind of person who can afford a hybrid car and screen-printed hemp fabrics. But at General Grant Houses, a sprawling public housing development off West 125th Street in Manhattan, the eco-conscious are mainly people like Ms. Allen and Sarah Martin, who as leaders of the residents’ association fret as much about backed-up pipes as they do about recycling.

Proselytizing on the issue in housing projects is an enormous challenge but crucial, environmentalists say, given the incentive to cut back on energy and garbage disposal costs and a housing authority’s power to impose recycling rules building by building.

In New York, the incentive may be greatest of all. Only 17 percent of the city’s household waste makes it into recycling bins, and New York has the largest public housing system in the country, with 2,600 buildings, 174,000 apartments and more than 400,000 residents in five boroughs.

Those residents are really the ones who suffer the most from air pollution and other health issues stemming from an overflow of garbage and exhaust from garbage trucks.

“If we could reduce the amount of garbage in our community, it would reduce the diesel in the air,” said Ms. Martin, 72, a former medical assistant and school food preparation manager who wears hoop earrings under a baseball cap.

These women are invaluable to the community and the Earth – teaching residents how to recycle is something the city would just never take on, no matter how necessary such education is. The city, however, is taking steps in other ways.

On other environmental fronts, efforts are under way by the city housing authority to make the apartment units more energy-efficient, using federal stimulus money to replace old boilers, water heaters and appliances. More than two dozen resident “green committees” have also been formed to help with projects like planting trees and recruiting workers for green jobs.

The General Grant Houses recycling program has transformed into a pilot program, backed by city and state financing and the city housing authority plans to expand it to other residential projects.

In the five buildings that are already recycling, the ladies report that each now produces at least 10 fewer bags of trash a day and residents no longer leave mousetraps or car tires in recycling bins (which they did when the city instituted recycling without an education program).

The two women also organize collections of electronic waste, from computers to TV sets, and lead workshops on topics like nontoxic cleaning products. Next on their agenda is finding a way to pay a stipend to resident monitors who will make sure that only recyclables go into the bins.

While they have to plead with the city to fix broken door locks and drafty windows, Ms. Martin said, “recycling we can control.”

If only more people in more buildings in more cities took the time to encourage this kind of movement – I should be inspired, since my building doesn’t offer any type of recycling whatsoever. Shame on them, shame on me!

23
May
09

May 24 catch PBS national parks preview

Ken Burns — (yes, the very same Ken Burns that the “Ken Burns effect” on iMovie is named after — made this crazy documentary about how national parks became national parks in the US (and why we should protect them). It took SIX YEARS to make, so it better be good. From the preview, I can tell at the very least it will be amazing views and beautiful cinematography. So if you love Yosemite, Zion, the Mall, or any other park that likely played a pivotal backdrop to some major event in your life (re: marriage proposal, inauguration, psychedelic trip) check out the half-hour preview on Sunday – the full thing doesn’t air until September.

http://www.pbs.org/nationalparks/

I found this tidbit with a bit behind-the-scenes action, too: