RENewsletter | June
26, 2011
The Free environmental newsletter from RochesterEnvironment.com
“Our Environment is changing: Keep up with the
Change.”
[6/19/11 – 6/26/11]
* Got news? | Go to my blog: Environmental Thoughts - Rochester, NY or Tweet me @ http://twitter.com/#!/FrankRrrr On
Twitter, I post local environmental events, news, and commentary as soon as it
happens. If you think this newsletter, which
continually informs our community on our local environmental news, events,
actions, is worthwhile, please encourage others to sign up.
The great conundrum of our
times is that in a time of rapidly occurring Climate
Change and a rapid disintegration of the environment that we need to thrive
and survive, mainstream media still marginalizes environmental concerns. [Check often
for this continually updated list on the possible consequences of Climate
Change in our region--supported by facts.] If there isn’t a quick and
substantial change in how environmental concerns are reported, edited, and
chosen in mainstream media, the public will continue to believe that
environmental concerns are merely special interest matters, issues they can
avoid if they choose. How can we inform the public and monitor our
environment without abridging our Freedoms--in enough time to safe ourselves?
Anything else you're interested in is not going to
happen if you can't breathe the air and drink the water. Don't sit this one
out. Do something. You are by accident of fate alive at an absolutely critical
moment in the history of our planet. -- Carl Sagan
Opening Salvo | NewsLinks | Daily Updates | Events | Environmental Site of the Month
| Take Action |
[Hyperlinks work by CTRL + click to follow a link]
__________________________________________
Opening Salvo: “Active Transportation attitudes in Rochester,
NY”
There is a transformation
occurring on active transportation (mostly walking and bicycling) attitudes in
the Rochester, NY region, but we’re still waiting for the tipping point. The tipping point will occur when both
vehicle drivers and active transportation folks actually share the road,
and obtain ‘complete streets’:
“Instituting
a complete streets policy ensures that transportation planners and engineers
consistently design and operate the entire roadway with all users in mind -
including bicyclists, public transportation vehicles and riders, and
pedestrians of all ages and abilities.” Complete Streets
Many in our region want
active transportation to happen:
Riding
into the future: Bicycle master plans encourage two-wheeled travel around
Rochester “The city wants to make it easier for people … to hop on a bike
rather than in a car. It has begun implementing its Bicycle Master Plan, as
much a mindset as it is a blueprint for creating a bicycle-friendly community.
(June 23, 2011) Democrat
and Chronicle
I believe, as chair of the
Rochester Regional Group of the Sierra Club’s Transportation
Committee, that we here in Rochester can pass the tipping point and have
active transportation become a major component of our transportation
options. You can get a whiff of that
movement from this report:
Bikes in High
Demand this Summer” R Community Bikes' volunteers
are having trouble keeping up with an increase in demand for bikes. The
non-profit is on track to give away 100 more bikes than last year. The group
gave away 1,300 bikes in 2009, 2,400 in 2010 and they're still getting
inundated.” (June 2011) RochesterHomePage
We have an incredible amount
of trails that help close the distance between streets and destinations, making
it easier and safer to walk and bike to important destinations. We have bicycle groups, enthusiasts,
universities, public health departments, and transportation authorities who all
want to make our citizens healthier and reduce the negative effects of our
present transportation system. A major government report emphasizes the
importance of this matter:
“… a factor in rising obesity rates is a sedentary lifestyle
and automobile dependence; 60 percent of Americans do not meet minimum daily
exercise requirements. Making cities more walkable
and bikeable would thus have multiple benefits:
improved personal fitness and weight loss; U.S. Global Change Research Program
98 Global Climate Change Impacts in the United States reduced local air
pollution and associated respiratory illness; and reduced greenhouse gas
emissions.” (Global
Climate Change Impacts in the US (2009) page 97).
However, no amount of
enforcement, education, and engineering can move us beyond the tipping point if
the public, in and out of their cars, doesn’t change its attitudes. What are some of the attitudes blocking our
way to the tipping point?
·
Many environmentalists who do not ride
bicycles themselves fail to grasp the profound implications of our local
transportation, which accounts for the release
of 27% of greenhouse gases, and thus fail to join the movement for active
transportation. Moving a large component
of those who now drive their gas guzzlers for short distances to active
transportation alternatives would accomplish a sizeable quotient of their
goals—combating Climate
Change in our region, improving our air quality, and
making us healthier.
·
Our media reports on the occasional
collisions involving walkers and bicyclists, but won’t take a moment from their
agenda to remind the public that bicyclists have a legal right to be on the
roads—and how to do that safely. Imagine
the change in attitudes that would occur if mainstream media put out 30-second
reminders each day that our streets, which all of us pay for, can be navigated
safely if we all followed the rules.
Believe me, there are organizations that will help the media find things
to fill those 30-second spots.
·
Bicyclist should be more aware of their
profile on and off our streets. When a
bicyclist fails to understand the rules of the road, they frustrate and annoy
drivers by suddenly appearing in places drivers do not expect. Speeding down the sidewalk behind pedestrians
who cannot possibly hear their silent machines often startles those who would
otherwise love to share their space. The
bicycle community should see the big picture, that Climate Change is really
occurring, and their passion should be embraced as a major solution to it.
·
Drivers must respect the right and the
vulnerability of those not (at the moment) in their vehicles. Our vehicles, which are polluting our
atmosphere, are not only costing us a sustainable future, they are absorbing
much of our earnings— car costs, taxes for road and bridge repair and
snowplowing, insurance, car repairs, inspections—you name it. Add on the distractions we enjoy while
driving (radios, texting, cell phones, GPS’s, and that coffee we’re drinking)
to a negative attitude towards someone on a bike or walking, and it makes for
an unsettling environment.
Last weekend, while biking
along the canal, I got talking to a couple who have been bicycling across the
country for seven months about their experiences (Nomads — Benson and Ashleigh's Bicycling
Adventure). Some communities, they
said, were very bicycle-friendly and some that purported to be friendly were
not so much. Attitudes of drivers in
communities they passed through made a big difference in the safety and quality
of their travels. Here’s one of their ideas
about improving community attitudes towards bicycling: in some communities, the bicycling community
takes on the responsibility of policing themselves by reminding each other to
obey the traffic signals. How close are
we to that?
Here’s why there’s so much
hope about our region’s commitment to active transportation. Recently, there was a major conference on how
to make our community a better place to ride and walk: The Greater Rochester
Active Transportation Symposium, check it out: Rochester
Cycling Alliance: Active Transportation Symposium:
Walk,
Bike, Smile, Thrive: a report on the first Greater Rochester Active Transportation
Symposium. By Jon Schull, Ph.D. Interim Director, RIT Center for Student
Innovation, and Scott MacRae, M.D. Professor of Ophthalmology and Visual Science,
Flaum Eye Institute, University of Rochester. Walking and biking is good for your health,
good for your state of mind, and good for Rochester. And it’s about to get
better. more...
Our community leaders, our educators,
our universities, our public health officials, our governmental officials, and
even our grant writers want us to get over the tipping point and become as
bicycle-friendly as the platinum winners of the League of
American Bicyclists * Bicycle Friendly America. We need to remember that this push to
increase bicycles use is not limited to Rochester, as many communities have
successfully taken on their vehicle dominated culture and achieved a synergy of
safe and healthy motion in their communities.
How do we get beyond the
tipping point, where a majority changes their attitudes? Here are some of my recommendations:
·
We go into neighborhoods and talk about bicycle boulevards,
which are now in the City of Rochester’s Bicycle Master Plan.
·
We educate continually about riding
safely in our streets and obeying the rules.
·
We remind bicyclists, pedestrians, and
vehicle drivers that the existing rules can keep us safe if we take a moment to
observe them.
·
Report on those who are not obeying our
laws, thus increasing enforcement’s awareness of specific issues. A cell phone and a license plate number can
deliver a reckless driver a powerful message.
·
Encourage our communities, via
neighborhood associations, to help ensure that they have an active
transportation network, which will probably increase the value of their homes.
·
Remind bicyclists how quiet and fast
they are, so oftentimes their movements startle pedestrians and vehicle
owners. Get the proper lighting, know
the turn signals, wear a helmet, and obey the rules of the road. If you look and act as if you know how to
bicycle through our streets, drivers will be more likely to respect you.
Sure, few of us would
actually give up our vehicles and just walk and bicycle in the Rochester area—though
some do. But I leave you with this
thought: for all that elegant insularity that our cars give us, we are paying a
very high environmental, health, and economic price. We can do something about that; we could be
changing our attitudes and moving
towards a planet that will be sustainable.
FrankRegan@RochesterEnvironment.com (Click on my email for feedback)
__________________________________________
NewsLinks – Environmental
NewsLinks – [Highlights of major environmental stories concerning our
area from the past week]
________________________________________
Updates – Daily Updates –
[Connecting the dots on Rochester’s environment. Find out what’s going on environmentally in our
area—and why you should care? Clicking on -DISCUSSION – will take
you to my blog “Environmental Thoughts, NY, where you can add your comments.]
- 6/25/2011 - Fishing in the Great Lakes,
how’s that working out for you? You’d think that the health of the
fish in our Great Lakes would be a primary concern to the public—even in
these lean budgetary times. Fish in the Great Lakes are changing and
dwindling in population. Climate Change is going to change the fish
populations because of warming waters (some fish like the Brown Trout are
finicky about water temperatures) and many of the lakes invasive species
are going to multiply. Maybe over the span of time, in our lifetimes, or
since the Europeans came to these shores, we’ve not noticed the incredible
changes in a short span of time how the fish in the Great Lakes are changing—not
in a good way. Besides making a living by commercial fishing and sport
fishing, fish are an excellent indicator of the overall health of the
Great Lakes. And, things are not going so well. Read: The
Environment Report: The Shrinking Commercial Fishing Industry
"Today we begin a series called: "Swimming Upstream." It's
about one of Michigan's most valuable natural resources: fish. These
slimy, scaly water dwellers contribute to the ecology of the Great Lakes,
our economy, and, of course, our dinner plate. Other than tribal
fisherman, only about 50 people hold commercial fishing licenses in the
state. Bill Petersen estimates that the number used to be a thousand.
" (June 23, 2011) The
Environment Report: Home
- 6/25/2011 - Great Lakes, dead zone, Climate Change: This catches
our attention today as another Climate Change scenario for our region,
that “But perhaps the most frightening potential scenario is the
possibility for each of the Great Lakes to become a dead zone:” Read on: Because
of climate change, fears of a Great Lakes ‘dead zone’ | WBEZ
"This frightening prediction comes from the University of Michigan’s
David Scavia, quoting data from the Union of Concerned Scientists. Scavia directs the university’s Environmental
Sustainability Institute and teaches courses on the environment and civil
and environmental engineering. When he spoke at the Field Museum last
October he laid out a disturbing list of changes already taking place in
the Great Lakes region as the result of climate change. According to Scavia these changes includes: The last frost in
spring is coming earlier and earlier, while the first frost in fall is
coming later and later. This is extending the growing season but is also
changing what plants and crops can grow in the region. Storms are becoming
more intense, and major weather events are happening more frequently. (Last
week’s storms and the blizzard
of 2010, anyone?) All five Great Lakes have less winter ice cover than
in the past. Less ice in the winter leads to more evaporation in the
summer, which leads to lower overall water levels. " (June 24, 2011) HOME | WBEZ
- 6/25/2011 - Exclusive: Find out the results of the very successful
Greater
Rochester Active Transportation Symposium (GRATS) in April.
Rochester’s leaders, educators, and the public wants
to make our regions more walk and bicycling friendly. Walk,
Bike, Smile, Thrive: a report on the first Greater Rochester Active
Transportation Symposium. Jon Schull, Ph.D. Interim Director, RIT
Center for Student Innovation Scott MacRae, M.D.
Professor of Ophthalmology and Visual Science, Flaum
Eye Institute, University of Rochester Walking and biking is good for your
health, good for your state of mind, and good for Rochester. And its about to get better. Less than a year after the
newly-formed Rochester Cycling Alliance began advocating for comprehensive
bike-friendly planning and development, the City of Rochester has
developed and released a Bicycle Master Plan that will encourage better
bike lanes, neighborhood greenways, and urban trails, and stimulate
similar developments in neighboring municipalities. The Town of Brighton
has just received a planning grant from the federally funded Genesee
Transportation Council to develop a plan for bikeable
and walkable connections between the University
of Rochester, RIT, MCC, and downtown Rochester. more...
- 6/24/2011 - How do you keep them
down at the carbon trough after they’ve seen the Climate Change figures? While
the press is agog over the latest GOP candidates who are doing their
hardest to say nothing on how to solve Climate Change, the laws of physics
march on. And so are our environmental leaders who are calling the rest of
us to highlight an impossibly craven attempt to flaunt the warnings of
Climate Change and build “a proposed pipeline that would bring tar sands
oil, allegedly toxic, from Canada to the United States.” Check it out: Environmental Leaders
Call for Civil Disobedience to Stop the Keystone XL Pipeline by Naomi
Klein, Wendell Berry, Maude Barlow, Bill McKibben and Others, Dear
Friends, This will be a slightly longer letter than common for the
internet age—it’s serious stuff. The short version is we want you to
consider doing something hard: coming to Washington in the hottest and
stickiest weeks of the summer and engaging in civil disobedience that will
likely get you arrested.” (June 23, 2011) Common Dreams At a recent meeting
I had with other folks concerned about Climate Change and the lack of
interest by the public, it reminded me that I am not alone in my
amazement. At this point in time when humanity is clearly faced with the
most incredible crisis of our times, where we are quickly warming up our
atmosphere to record heights, hardly anyone besides a relative few seem to
notice. That’s odd. more...
- 6/24/2011 - Sounds like a worthwhile environmentally useful event:
Renewable Rochester presents our grand opening July 18th – 22nd Long time
solar energy conservationist Shawn Lessord,
along with LEED AP, and home Energystar builder
Dan Viola have joined forces to expand the ever growing renewable energy
industry in Rochester and Monroe County! Come join us in a celebration of
our new Renewable Education Center located at 780 Ridge Road, Webster, NY
14580. You will find ways to reduce your electric usage, save $$$ and be
green for a lifetime!!! · TAX CREDITS, INCENTIVES, AND LOW 4% SOLAR
FINANCING!!! · NEW PRODUCTS IN SOLAR TECHNOLOGY! · SUNPOWER SOLAR ENERGY
DISPLAY · ENERGY MONITORING BY T.E.D. MONITORING · MICRO INVERTER
TECHNOLOGY · LED LIGHTING · OFF GRID SOLAR LIGHTING · OFF-GRID WATER
APPLICATIONS · OFF-GRID SECURITY · SOLAR INSTALLER TOOLS · RENEWABLE
EDUCATION · GEO THERMAL INFORMATION AVAILABLE · JULY 21st THURSDAY- (5-7pm)
AND ECO PAINT SHOP TOUR WITH A STATE OF THE ART ACCUDRAFT BOOTH WHICH IS
ONE OF ONLY A FEW IN THE USA, ALONG WITH WATER BASED AUTO PAINTS! One of
the first Renewable Education Centers in Monroe County, and the Rochester
New York area!! Stop in and find out about the latest in solar energy
technology, energy efficiency, and how incentives and tax credits can help
you install one of these systems!! We hope to see you there! Contact-Shawn
Lessord (585) 576-8092 for details 8AM – 4PM
Monday - Friday (Thursday also 5-7pm) 780 Ridge Road, Webster, NY 14580
(Just look for the elephant in front!!)
- 6/24/2011 - Hydrofracking conference coming up: 2011
Finger Lakes Environment and Development Conference Proactive
Approaches to Managing Impacts of Marcellus Shale Development Thursday,
July 21- Friday, July, 22 at Hobart and William Smith Colleges Geneva, NY
Keynote Speaker John H. Quigley Principal of John H. Quigley LLC,
Strategic Advisor to Citizens for Pennsylvania's Future (PennFuture), and former Acting Secretary of the
Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources Specific
sessions of this conference will focus on: Health Impacts of hydraulic
fracturing Local and state tax implications of hydraulic fracturing
Current status of state regulation of hydraulic fracturing on private and
public lands Lease negotiations and avoiding pitfalls of the oil and gas
lease Proactive steps for municipalities, watershed groups and landowners
20 Speakers! Student Rate and Overnight Accomodations
Available! Learn
More and Register Registration closes July 14th
- 6/23/2011 - Solar panel leasing for
Rochester? We are hearing about some movement in Solar Power
for the Rochester, NY area. Not much, compared with the mad rush to frack for natural gas near our borders and put our water
in jeopardy and kick up more greenhouse gases
into our atmosphere. Because our county won’t give the solar industry the
kind of tax breaks it gives the oil industry (in the billions) we have to
hunt and peck for those breaks that do exist for renewable power, like
solar power, around here. We just caught this message about a limited
program where Solar Liberty’
will install a 25 kW system for no money down and lease it to the organization
for $100 a month (for 15 years) with guaranteed savings over previous
bills.” Nonprofit
Solar Lease And there is a major incentive by NYSERDA to replace
electric hot water systems with solar hot water systems: NYSERDA
- Press Releases - February 17, 2011 “NYSERDA Launches New York
State’s First Solar Thermal Incentive Program to Spur Replacement of
Electric Hot Water Systems with Solar Hot Water Systems 5-Year, $25
Million Program to Help State Move Toward Renewable Energy Goals To help
New York State increase its use of renewable energy, the New York State
Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA) has launched the
state’s first incentive program for solar thermal systems, which produce
hot water from solar power.” New York
State Energy Research and Development Authority According to this
story, solar leasing may be coming to Rochester, NY: Lease
options brighten prospects for solar panel market | The Ithaca Journal |
theithacajournal.com Amid a booming U.S. solar market, more homeowners
are able to lease rooftop panels -- some with no upfront costs -- and pay
only for the power produced. A large provider, SolarCity,
of San Mateo, Calif., announces this week a new lease option in which
customers can "pick their price" in going solar: paying either
nothing upfront with higher monthly fees or more initially and less
monthly. To finance installations in 7,000 to 9,000 homes, Google is
creating a $280 million fund. The biggest limitation is geography. Each
company is offering leases only in certain states that offer financial
incentives and have relatively high utility rates. Among the states,
collectively, are: Arizona, California, Colorado, Delaware, Hawaii,
Massachusetts, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania and
Texas. (June 19, 2011) The
Ithaca Journal | Ithaca news, community, entertainment, yellow pages and
classifieds. Serving Ithaca, New York | theithacajournal.com At all
sounds very grand and I hope we get renewable energy in enough quantities
to do any good towards Climate
Change. This program by the Sierra Club, though only for California at
this point, may be just the ticket: Sierra
Club: Go Solar with the Sierra Club “Join the solar movement with the
Sierra Club. It's good for the planet, good for the Sierra Club, and good
for you. Go solar today!” Here’s a description of the program: Every
Rooftop Matters
- 6/23/2011 - Changing politics to change
Climate Change: One of the issues that should be top priority for the
media as our country ramps up to the madness that is our political season
is to separate the science of Climate Change with the political rhetoric
of Climate Change denial. We have gone too far with the media nonsense
about how extremists dismiss and avoid Climate Change—and not called them
on it. The media should not be taking a back step to the critical
importance of what we need to do to adapt and mitigate the effects of
Climate Change—not pander to a party that has been trying to make Climate
Change a non-issue. Check out this thoughtful essay: Warm
up to climate reality | The Post and Courier, Charleston SC - News,
Sports, Entertainment "The short-term Lowcountry
warming of the past few sweltering days doesn't prove long-term global
warming. But Republicans' rising rejection of the clear consensus on
human-influenced climate change does prove that too many conservatives are
ignoring scientific reality. " (June 23, 2011) The Post and Courier, Charleston SC
- News, Sports, Entertainment When you have nothing else to do with
your life, take a while and read this very comprehensive, official,
readable (lot of charts and graphs) report on how Climate Change is going
to impact the US. Don’t just dismiss this as the ravings of a group you
don’t like, take some time and read about the best assessment of what our
government thinks are coming as a result of Climate Change. It’s not a
polemic, it’s a plan. Regional
Climate Impacts: Northeast "Since 1970, the annual average
temperature in the Northeast has increased by 2°F, with winter
temperatures rising twice this much.150 Warming has resulted in many other
climate-related changes, including: "--from Global
Climate Change Impacts in the US (2009) Then, ask yourself: How are we
going to solve these issues if we put a climate change denier in office?
Despite all the loony fanfare over our elections, politics is not a beauty
contest. Those who we elect are going to have to address the very pressing
issues related to manmade Climate Change whether they believe in the tooth
fairy or not. They will be accountable for protect future generations from
the physics of more greenhouse gases in our atmosphere than we can
tolerate.
- 6/23/2011 - A reminder about the importance of stopping lead
poisoning in Monroe County and what you can do to help that happen.Let's Make Lead History
"In 2010, nearly
300 children were poisoned just in Monroe County.
Lead poisoning damages children’s brains and bones for the rest of their
lives. We can all make a difference. We can make lead history. Throughout this
site you’ll find specific things you can do to protect our entire community.
See how easy it is to have your house or apartment inspected for lead, get your
child tested for exposure to lead, or make your own home safer. "
- 6/22/2011 - Higher emissions
scenarios are a certainty for Climate Change: One of the things that
becomes crystal clear when you read studies about the possible scenarios
that Climate
Change will bring to our Rochester, NY region (or any region for that
matter) is that the higher emissions scenarios are the ones that going to
happen. Not the lower emissions scenarios. Take this study for example: Global
Climate Change Impacts in the US (2009) “The report summarizes the
science and the impacts of climate change on the United States, now and in
the future. It focuses on climate change impacts in different regions of
the U.S. and on various aspects of society and the economy such as energy,
water, agriculture, and health. It’s also a report written in plain
language, with the goal of better informing public and private decision
making at all levels.” United
States Global Change Research Program There are numerous graphs of
what the impacts of Climate Change will be on Water Resources,
Transportation, Ecosystems, Agriculture, Society, Human Health, Energy and
they show what a particular region will look like in at the end of this
century if there is a dramatic change in human behavior (lower emissions
scenarios) and if things go on as they are (higher emission scenarios).
They are computer projections models based on the best information
possible at this time. They are not hysterical Chicken Little ravings from
a group seized by an ever-present threat with the goal of undermining the
existing power structure—as some of the major non-news outlets suggest.
They are government studies based on the work of a lot of experts. more...
- 6/22/2011 - 06/21/2011:
Take action this summer to reduce exposure to asthma triggers
"PHILADELPHIA (June 21, 2011) - - Summer heat is here, and that means
it is more important than ever for people with asthma or other respiratory
ailments to pay close attention to the air quality where they live. Like
the weather, air quality can change from day to day or even hour to hour.
During the summer when ozone levels rise, the number of people with asthma
related symptoms admitted to hospitals and emergency rooms increases.
Asthma rates – especially among children – have increased dramatically.
Asthma affects 25 million people in the United States, including seven
million children. That’s 8 percent of the population. One out of every 10
school aged children is affected. " (June 21, 2011) U.S.
EPA Newsroom - News Releases
- 6/22/2011 - Climate
Change: Public Skeptical, Scientists Sure : NPR
The American public is less
likely to believe in global warming than it was just five years ago.
Yet, paradoxically, scientists are more confident than ever that climate
change is real and caused largely by human activities. Something a bit
strange is happening with public opinion and climate change. Anthony Leiserowitz, who directs the Yale University Project
on Climate Change Communication, delved into this in a
recent poll. He not only asked citizens what they thought of climate
change, he also asked them to estimate how climate scientists feel about
global warming. (June 21, 2011) NPR :
National Public Radio : News & Analysis, World, US, Music & Arts :
NPR
- 6/21/2011 - Update on Lyme disease,
which could be increasing in our region because of Climate Change. :
Secrets of Lyme Disease Revealed "Lyme disease is an
infectious disease caused by several bacteria of the genus Borrelia. It is the most common tick-borne disease in
the world, transmitted from deer ticks throughout the northern hemisphere.
The disease was named after the town of Lyme, Connecticut where a number
of cases were identified in 1975. A new study has now revealed that the
deadly bacteria appears to hide within the lymph
nodes. This finding may explain why some people suffer from repeat
infections of Lyme disease. " (June 20, 2011) Environmental News Network -- Know Your
Environment
- 6/20/2011 - We keep digging deeper in
the hole called Climate Change. They say ‘stop digging’ when you’re in
a hole and trying to get out. But given the human capacity for tenacity,
not digging ourselves in deeper is not so easy to do. Here in the
Rochester, NY region if you look (and yeah, you have to look because
mainstream media isn’t going to lay it out for you) you can see a how the
great big carbon/Climate Change hole we’re in is just going to get deeper.
The more we learn that Climate Change is happening and getting costly Counting
the Cost, the more we ignore the dangers of existing energy sources (Federal
nuclear regulators repeatedly weaken or fail to enforce safety standards -
The Washington Post, Ohio
taking in flood of Pennsylvania brine for disposal | The Columbus Dispatch)
and the more we avoid changing to energy sources that don’t endanger our
lives and heat the planet: Wind
power faces multiple hurdles | Democrat and Chronicle. You can say it
is just human nature to want better yourself by whatever means, like the
coal mine owners vs. the coal mine workers in the film “Harlan County, USA”
but the capacity to avoid something so large and unyielding as Climate
Change has to be on another level of stubbornness for our species. This is
given the incredible capacity to keep our present vehicular traffic no
matter how many deaths per day it causes. (Have you ever checked the local
news and not seen a car, truck, or motorcycle accident?) So, despite the
unavoidable consequences of drilling for oil, mining for coal, and the
fallout from nuclear power plants, we still fight tooth and nail to keep
the businesses in power that put us in jeopardy and avoid making the
changes to avoid a warming planet. The question we must ask ourselves is
this: How long will be go before we switch direction and live sustainably?
Will it be after we have exhausted all other options?
- 6/20/2011 - Climate Change will affect your insurance rates: Around
the world, including the US, Climate Change is going to take its toll on
economies. One way that will happen is that the insurance companies that
back insurance companies will charge more. That will eventually affect
you. See the connections between Climate Change and economies by a news
service not afraid to connect the dots: Counting
the Cost - Al Jazeera English "We look
at the impact of extreme weather conditions and natural disasters on the
world economy. "'
___________________________________________________
Events – Rochester
Environmental Events Calendar – [The most complete listing of all
environmental events around the Rochester, New York area.] If you don’t
see your event, or know of a local environmental event, please send me the
info: FrankRegan@RochesterEnvironment.com
with (EV event) in the subject line.
July 2011
- Thursday, July 21- Friday, July, 22 at Hobart and William Smith
Colleges Geneva, NY
- 2011
Finger Lakes Environment and Development Conference Proactive
Approaches to Managing Impacts of Marcellus Shale Development Thursday,
July 21- Friday, July, 22 at Hobart and William Smith Colleges Geneva, NY
Keynote Speaker John H. Quigley Principal of John H. Quigley LLC,
Strategic Advisor to Citizens for Pennsylvania's Future (PennFuture), and former Acting Secretary of the
Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources Specific
sessions of this conference will focus on: Health Impacts of hydraulic
fracturing Local and state tax implications of hydraulic fracturing
Current status of state regulation of hydraulic fracturing on private and
public lands Lease negotiations and avoiding pitfalls of the oil and gas
lease Proactive steps for municipalities, watershed groups and landowners
20 Speakers! Student Rate and Overnight Accomodations
Available! Learn
More and Register Registration closes July 14th
September 2011
- September 17-18, 2011 - High Falls, Downtown, Rochester, NY
- Greentopia Festival
The Greentopia Festival is Rochester’s and the Finger Lakes celebration
of the green movement sweeping around the globe. The two-day, interactive
fest in historic High Falls will reveal what the region is doing to help
the environment – and envision a greener Rochester of the future. Think
of Greentopia as a walk-through of a totally sustainable Rochester. We’ve
already begun this walk by exploring healthier ways of living, as individuals
and as a community. In social, economic and environmental ways, we’ve
made the decision to go green.
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Action – Take
Action - Often, I receive request to pass on alerts, petitions, Public
Comments on local developments, and environmental items needing action by the
Rochester Community and around the world. I’ll keep Actions posted until their
due date.
- ACTION:
Due Date: Now
- Complete
Streets are green streets: Walking and bicycling are active
transportation options that are now legally available to all, but
there’s a problem. Most of our urban streets aren’t very friendly to
pedestrians and bicyclists because they were built with mostly vehicles
in mind. That’s a problem for the safety of active transportation
and it means that less folks will use active transportation to get to
their jobs, to shop, or just to move about their community. A bill for Complete Streets will change
that” “States, cities and towns are asking their planners and engineers
to build road networks that are safer, more livable, and welcoming to
everyone.” Given that most transportation is for distances less than 6.5
miles from one’s home, that’s too bad. It’s too bad because 27% of our
greenhouse gas (ghg) emissions (according to
the Environmental Protection Agency) come from transportation and so if
more and more folks are engaged in active transportation we would put
less ghg into our atmosphere and the
consequences for Climate Change would be less severe. So, you can affect
that by making sure our streets are inviting to all by making a few
calls: From the Rochester
Cycling Alliance: more...
- ACTION Due Date: Thursday, July 28.
- Make public comment on deer managementDEC Releases Draft Deer Management Plan - NYS Dept. of
Environmental Conservation
The
Plan Will Guide Deer Management for the Next Five Years The New York State
Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) today announced that a
proposed five-year deer management plan is now available for public review
and comment. The deer
management plan is available on the DEC website and DEC will be accepting
public comment on the draft through Thursday, July 28. (June 13, 2011) New York State Department of
Environmental Conservation
- ACTION:
Due Date: now
- Major action on Climate Change by Bill McKibben and 350.org. You
can take part and act locally. Recruiting Local
Businesses | The U.S. Chamber Doesn't Speak For Me "Here’s the
plan: If we can get thousands of small businesses across the country to
declare that “The US Chamber Doesn’t Speak for me,” we can get local and
state chambers of commerce to do the same. By compiling thousands of
declarations, we’ll build a critical mass representing the true voice of
business, and fight back against the millions of dollars of money
pollution that the U.S. Chamber of Commerce is pumping into Washington
DC. " - from 350.org
- Action: Due Date - Now
- ACTION:
Due Date: Until the money runs out.
- There is still time to save energy on this NYSERDA program until
the money for the rebates run out: New York's Great Appliance Swap
Out "The New York State Energy-Efficient Appliance Rebate
Program To qualify, your eligible appliance(s)
must be purchased between February 12th, 2010 and the date available
funding runs out. Welcome to "New York’s Great Appliance Swap
Out" website which will provide all the information you need in
order to participate. This rebate program, administered by the New York
State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA), is available
to residential consumers replacing existing appliances of the same type
with new ENERGY STAR® qualified appliances or High Efficiency ENERGY STAR
appliances. A larger rebate will be granted to consumers who recycle
their discarded appliances. Appliance Rebate Funds Still Available!!! Due
to a large number of rebate reservations that were never claimed, there
are still funds available under New York’s Great Appliance Swap Out!
Applications will be processed on a first-come, first-served basis as
long as funds remain available. " --a program funded by ARRA and
administered by New York State Energy
Research and Development Authority
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Award – Environmental
Site of the Month Award – [On the last Sunday of each month, we present an
environmental award for the Rochester-area environmental web site or blog that
best promotes the need to protect and offers solutions for our area's
environmental issues.]