California names 2008 Governor’s Environmental and Economic Leadership Award winners
November 26th, 2008 · 1 Comment
Green Right Now
California this week honored 21 companies and organizations with the Governor’s Environmental and Economic Leadership Awards, the state’s highest prize for contributions to environmental issues.
The Governor’s Environmental and Economic Leadership Awards program was established in 1993. Recipients are selected by a large panel of evaluators and the Secretaries of Cal/EPA, the Resources Agency, Business, Transportation and Housing Agency, the Department of Food and Agriculture, the State and Consumer Services Agency, and the Governor’s Office. It honors projects in nine categories.
Here are the 2008 award winners in each category with comments from the California EPA:
Tags: · Alameda County Juvenile Justice Center, Bank of America, California, Cayucos Land Conservancy, Codding Enterprises, Contra Costa Water District, Dixon Ridge Farms, Ferry Building, Fetzer Vineyards, Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company, Golden Gate Audubon Society, Kunde Family Estate, Marin Sanitary Service, Marrone Organic Innovations, Orange County Department of Education, Rent-a-Green Box, San Mateo County, Treasure Island Development Authority, University of California - Irvine, Valley Clean Air Now
Growing tomatoes by the Rose Garden?
November 21st, 2008 · 1 Comment
By John DeFore
The world is scrutinizing every shred of news from the Obama camp these days, trying to guess who’ll have an office in the West Wing. But a group of gardeners based in Maine are more focused on what’s going to happen just outside the White House — on the lawn, in fact.
Eat the View is the name of a petition encouraging the Obamas to plant an organic garden on the White House lawn, using the produce both for the residents of 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. and to feed the hungry at area food pantries.
Tags: · Barak Obama, Local Food, Michelle Obama, organic garden, White House
A Greener America: The next four years, the next first steps
November 5th, 2008 · No Comments
The cork is off the champagne on the presidential election - and many environmentalists who’ve felt stifled by the Bush Administration’s indifference, hostility or lukewarm interest in ecological issues, including global warming, are giddy with new possibilities.
Frances Beinecke, head of the non-profit Natural Resources Defense Council, sounded buoyant in an address on the NRDC website: “Barack Obama’s election is a huge win for everyone exhausted from playing defense. Count us among them. It rekindles our hope that environmental protection may be restored to its rightful place as a treasured American value.”
Gene Karpinski, head of the League of Conservation Voters, was no less ebullient. “America embraced change today. And the planet will be better for it,” he announced.
Karpinski noted that, along with Obama, the nation also elected some environmental-minded senators, such as cousins Mark Udall (D-Colo.) and Tom Udall (D-N.M.), from a family with a long conservation history.
Tags: · Barak Obama, Climate Change, environment, Green Initiatives, Green jobs
EPA Green Power winner profile: Dr. Jan Hamrin
October 26th, 2008 · No Comments
From the Environmental Protection Agency
The 2008 Green Power Leadership Awards were presented in conjunction with the National Renewable Energy Marketing Conference, held October 26-29 in Denver, Colorado.
Green Power Pioneer Award
Over the past 30 years, Dr. Jan Hamrin has created a legacy of environmental and economic success. As founder of the nonprofit Center for Resource Solutions, Jan created the nationally known Green-e brand and certification programs for renewable energy, which provide consumer protection in evolving markets. The Green-e logo has become a premium mark of distinction among both buyers and sellers of renewable energy products because it builds upon a stringent set of standards to ensure that consumers who choose to pay a premium price for renewable energy are, in fact, getting a premium product.
Jan managed solar programs for the California Energy Commission in the late 1970s and later founded and led the Independent Energy Producers Association, pulling together renewable power and clean energy interests to affect policy and establish markets for non-utility power in the 1980s and 1990s.
Tags: · Center for Resource Solutions, Dr. Jan Hamrin, EPA
Green collar jobs: solving environmental and economic troubles?
October 17th, 2008 · 1 Comment
Rick Hunter, a St. Louis homebuilder, says he’s always been interested in green construction, but in the past decade has become a true believer that green is the future of building. For him and his three-year-old company, Sage Homebuilders, a green collar job is the whole package.
“We’re small and growing quickly,” says Hunter, a co-founder of the 12-employee company. “It’s fun to see
how many people want to be part of this movement. People are getting excited about green collar jobs. They’re meaningful. They make people happier in their jobs and make people feel better about what they’re doing. And you can earn a living.”
In St. Louis, Hunter says, green collar jobs are “absolutely the trend, particularly in green construction.” Sage Homebuilders uses green products in new construction and renovation projects, focusing on upgraded energy systems (like the solar panels pictured on this “Near Zero” energy-saving home).
As the country struggles with an economic downturn and job uncertainty, talk of green collar jobs is becoming a larger part of the national dialogue. Late last month, a national rally Green Jobs Now: A Day to Build the New Economy prompted events in 48 states. The rally, sponsored by Green for All, 1Sky and Al Gore’s WE campaign, focused on the dual cause of social justice and a green economy with events ranging from block parties to solution fairs.
Tags: · Alternative Energy, American Solar Energy Society, Green For All, Green jobs, Natural Resources Defense Council, Renewable Energy Policy Project, The Center for American Progress, The Green Collar Economy, Van Jones
Redwood tree-sitters come down
October 1st, 2008 · No Comments
By John DeFore
Once upon a time, the only humans who lived in trees were such fictional folks as Tarzan and the hero of
Italo Calvino’s charming romance The Baron in the Trees. That was before the “tree-sitting” phenomenon, in which activists climb into trees threatened by development and refuse to come down.
The population of real-life tree dwellers shrank this month as the last two participants in a 20-year-old protest agreed to leave their perch in Northern California redwoods.
As the story was reported locally, the protest ended after bankruptcy put the Pacific Lumber Company under new ownership. Humboldt Redwood Co., which took the company over, committed to a sustainable-harvest policy that the Associated Press says “promised to spare any redwood that sprouted before 1800 with a diameter of at least 4 feet. It also pledged to avoid clear-cutting, a practice that the timber giant aggressively practiced under its previous owner, Maxxam Inc.”
Humboldt president and chief forester Michael Jani trekked out to the occupied trees himself to make the promise explicit, and the activists are taking him at his word. Last week, the final tree-sitters in Humboldt County gave up their temporary homes, including a 300-foot tree at least 1,500 years old where 22-year-old Billy Stoetzer had lived (in a hammock shelter) for almost a year.
Organizers tell reporters that they’ll keep an eye on the area to ensure that promises are kept. Since Humboldt Redwood is owned in large part by the owners of The Gap, they’d have plenty of opportunities for high-profile protest if things were to change.
For more information about old growth redwood forests, see this National Park Service webpage.
(Photo: National Park Service.)
Tags: · California, Humboldt Redwood Company, National Parks, Old Growth Forests, Redwoods, Tree Sitters
The "Go Green Initiative" helps teachers, parents and kids green their campus
September 12th, 2008 · No Comments
It’s back to the books for kids across America and going green in the classroom has never been so easy. With the help of a popular program called the Go Green Initiative, teachers have quick and simple access online to all the tools and resources needed to green a classroom, an entire school, or even a school-district.
Serving as the charter and flagship school for the Go Green Initiative, Walnut Grove Elementary School, in Pleasanton, Calif., first found out about the program in 2002 when Jill Buck, a mother of three, and PTA president, got creative and began asking “What else could we do to go green?”
“The school was doing some gardening, composting and recycling, but I wanted to do more, so I sat down at my kitchen table and started writing up the initiative,” said Ms. Buck (pictured left). “That was in 2002, and since then the program has just grown and grown: we’re now operating in all 50 states in the US, we’re in 13 countries, and on 4 continents; our website gets over 2 million hits a month; it’s an amazing program. Schools are finding us on the Internet and simply by word of mouth.”
Walnut Grove’s principal, Bill Radulovich, comments, “It all started here on my campus, as Jill (Buck) was my PTA president. As the charter school for this program, she first starting designing ideas to partner with waste management to help us with recycling waste, and that grew into networking and working with the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) funds that are distributed to different programs.
“Where once we had cardboard boxes to hold are recycling items, we now have huge 55-gallon gobblers, these huge barrels with slots that are really cool. She helped us gain more methods in the form of recycling and reusing and how to be more efficient overall.”
Tags: · Composting, Go Green Initiative, Green Schools, Jill Buck, Pleasanton, Recycle & Reuse
Hot, Flat And Crowded — Friedman Book Argues For Green Revolution
September 10th, 2008 · No Comments
In his new tome Hot, Flat and Crowded: Why We Need a Green Revolution - And How It Can Renew America (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2008) Thomas Friedman pulls no punches on his concerns for the country’s future. The title — Hot, Flat and Crowded — refers to the planet’s global warming crisis, the rise of the middle class throughout the world and over population — and he says to counter that, “green” must become the new “red, white and blue”.
Tags: · Green Books, Hot Flat and Crowded, Thomas Friedman
From Planet To Plate: Slow Food Nation Celebration In San Francisco
August 27th, 2008 · No Comments
This coming Labor
Day Weekend, San Francisco will celebrate the intersection of taste, sustainability and social justice that is the Slow Food movement. Non-profit educational organization Slow Food USA is throwing a four-day party they’re calling Slow Food Nation.
SFN’s Executive Director Anya Fernald hopes the debut event, expected to draw some 50,000 people, will reach out beyond the obvious coalition of foodies, health-nuts and environmentalists to, “build momentum and demand for an American food system that is safer, healthier and more socially just.” Highlights of the festival, which runs Friday through Monday, will include the:
- “Slow Food Rocks” concert, serving up not only Gnarls Barkley and the New Pornographers but gourmet beer and locally-grown and locally-produced food;
- 50,000 square feet of “taste pavilions” for which nationally-recognized regional food experts have hand-picked authentic gastronomic specialities from every state;
Tags: · Alice Waters, Carlo Petrini, Michael Pollan, Organic Food, San Francisco, Slow Food, Slow Food Nation, Wendell Barry
If Not Climate Security, Then Maybe Clean Energy Tax Credits?
June 9th, 2008 · No Comments
By Barbara Kessler
While some global warming activists despaired over Congress’ failure to launch the Lieberman-Warner Climate Security Act last week, the We Campaign (founded by Al Gore and comrades to promote action against global warming) forged ahead.
Tags: · Lieberman-Warner Climate Security Act, We campaign
Worried About Wolves And "Worrying" Wolves
May 12th, 2008 · No Comments
By Barbara Kessler
Wonder how the gray wolves are faring since they were “delisted” from protection under the Endangered Species Act? One of the three Rocky Mountain states with a significant gray wolf population, Idaho, is having meetings to determine the rules for the hunting of the wolves this fall.
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Healthy Child Healthy World Winner Showcases A Green, Non-Toxic House
April 28th, 2008 · No Comments
On a quiet street in the tree-covered city of Rollingwood, a suburb of Austin, Texas, sits a house designed to epitomize everything technology and modern design can do to make a home environmentally friendly and safe for families with children.
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