Category Archives: Uncategorized

Sad Day for Women’s Health

Even though three states three district courts and a Court of Appeal declared a nationwide ban on a procedure known as partial birth abortion, the US supreme court upheld the ban.

This amounted to the first restriction imposed on abortion rights since women won the right to terminate pregnancies in 1973. The 5-4 vote in favour of the ban was seen as a victory for President George W Bush and his social conservative allies in one of the most divisive debates in America.

The ACLU and the National Abortion Federation (NAF) have criticized the decision.
“Today’s decision has placed politics above protecting women’s health,” said Vicki Saporta, President and CEO of NAF.  “This ruling is a set back for all Americans who believe politicians should not legislate medical decision-making.  The decision disregards the opinion of leading doctors and medical organizations that oppose the ban because it is harmful to women’s health.”

Utah Planned Parenthood:
The breadth of this decision invites all kinds of interference in the doctor-patient relationship and opens the floodgates for Utah’s politicians to further limit access to abortion and reproductive health care.  This decision shows utter disregard for women’s health and safety and makes paramount the ideology of politicians and pays no heed to the expertise of medical professionals.

I will be providing more updates, commentary and actions as they occur….

Income Tax: Where It Is Actually Spent–WAR

Now that Income Tax Season is over, I thought I’d post the War Resisters League Pie Chart of how our taxes are really spent:

Where Your Income Tax Money Really Goes FY 2008

Total Outlays (Federal Funds): $2,387 billion
MILITARY: 51% and $1,228 billion
NON-MILITARY: 49% and $1,159 billion

FY2008 federal piechart

HOW THESE FIGURES WERE DETERMINED

Current military” includes Dept. of Defense ($585 billion), the military portion from other departments ($122 billion), and an unbudgetted estimate of supplemental appropriations ($20 billion). “Past military” represents veterans’ benefits plus 80% of the interest on the debt.*

The Government Deception

The pie chart below is the government view of the budget. This is a distortion of how our income tax dollars are spent because it includes Trust Funds (e.g., Social Security), and the expenses of past military spending are not distinguished from nonmilitary spending. For a more accurate representation of how your Federal income tax dollar is really spent, see the large chart (top).

the government's deceptive pie chart

Source:Washington Post , Feb. 6, 2007,
from Office of Management and Budget

These figures are from an analysis of detailed tables in the “Analytical Perspectives” book of the Budget of the United States Government, Fiscal Year 2008. The figures are federal funds, which do not include trust funds — such as Social Security — that are raised and spent separately from income taxes. What you pay (or don’t pay) by April 17, 2007, goes to the federal funds portion of the budget. The government practice of combining trust and federal funds began during the Vietnam War, thus making the human needs portion of the budget seem larger and the military portion smaller.

*Analysts differ on how much of the debt stems from the military; other groups estimate 50% to 60%. We use 80% because we believe if there had been no military spending most (if not all) of the national debt would have been eliminated. For further explanation, please see box at bottom of page.

MORE WAR MONEY

Cost of the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars
(billions of dollars)

spending on war

U.S. Gov’t Accounting Office report, “Global War on Terrorism,” 7/18/06, www.gao.gov/new.items/d06885t.pdf (thru 2006); 2007 & 2008 numbers from current U.S. Budget; *Our FY2008 projected supplemental funding is based on estimates in the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments report by Steven Kosiak, 2/6/07, www.csbaonline.org, and because of the Administration’s past underprojections

Current Military
$727 billion:

• Military Personnel $136 billion
• Operation & Maint. $249 billion
• Procurement $111 billion
• Research & Dev. $70 billion
• Construction $10 billion
• Family Housing $4 billion
• DoD misc. $6 billion
• Retired Pay $52 billion
• DoE nuclear weapons $17 billion
• NASA (50%) $9 billion
• International Security $10 billion
• Homeland Secur. (military) $31 billion
• Exec. Office of President $1 billion
• other military (non-DoD) $1 billion
• plus … anticipated supplemental war spending requests of $20 billion in addition to $141 billion for Iraq and Afghanistan wars already incorporated into figures above

Past Military,
$461 billion:

• Veterans’ Benefits $85 billion
• Interest on national debt $376 billion (80% est. to be created by military spending)

Human Resources
$748 billion:

• Health/Human Services
• Soc. Sec. Administration
• Education Dept.
• Food/Nutrition programs
• Housing & Urban Dev.
• Labor Dept.
• other human resources.

General Government
$295 billion:

• Interest on debt (20%)
• Treasury • Government personnel • Justice Dept.
• State Dept.
• Homeland Security (17%)
• International Affairs
• NASA (50%)
• Judicial
• Legislative
• other general govt.

Physical Resources
$116 billion
:
• Agriculture
• Interior
• Transportation
• Homeland Security (17%)
• HUD
• Commerce
• Energy (non-military)
• Environmental Protection
• Nat. Science Fdtn.
• Army Corps Engineers
• Fed. Comm. Commission
• other physical resources

Green Reading

Earth Day Reading
by The Green Guide Staff

Green Remodeling: Changing the World One Room at a Time by David R. Johnston and Kim Master, LEED AP (New Society Publishers, 2004, $29.95). To purchase this book, visit our online book store.

 

I’ve been dreaming of living in a green home—sleeping on an organic mattress and watching the electric meter run backwards from solar gain—since my days of renting. When I recently became a homeowner, all I wanted to do was infuse my new nest with every eco product I could think of. I became giddy at the thought of VOC-free paints and renewable-material flooring. The good news? Companies are churning out environmentally-friendly products like hotcakes. The bad? Where on earth was I to begin?

David Johnston and Kim Master’s book Green Remodeling was just the right place. Johnston combines his own expertise, stemming from over 30 years in green construction, with Master’s ten-plus years as an environmental and health specialist.

Johnston begins by outlining his personal home renovation in a daily diary of ups, downs and completed success, before providing a room-by-room examination. The book’s final section is jam-packed with valuable information ranging from construction health risks to plumbing and roofing.

Though it’s not a how-to manual, Green Remodeling is an in-depth guide on building construction, exposing energy suckers like antiquated refrigerators and products like vinyl siding whose manufacturing releases dioxins, then divulging a host of healthy alternatives. Want to give your house a face-lift room-by-room? Consult Chapter 6, which breaks down remodeling efforts from the bedroom to the kitchen, including checklists for every nook and cranny. If you’re more interested in exploring topics such as green energy, insulation or plumbing, skip ahead to individual chapters delving into the nuts and bolts of construction.

Whereas some home reno books tend to read like operator’s manuals, Johnston and Master bring a breezy style to the pages, making it not only entertainingly informative, but qualifying it for the bedside table. They take into account the numerous facets in construction, from the emotional wear and tear on homeowners, and the fiscal drain to the enormous resources consumed and refuse created. Not to worry about the last item—85 to 90 percent of construction waste is recyclable, and you’ll find tips on how to dispose.

What tends to be an overwhelmingly chaotic process, making your living environment healthy and green, Johnston and Master simplify through an easy-to-navigate manual, organizing and subdividing topics into concise sections. They devote 20 pages to indoor air quality, covering issues from carbon monoxide to mold and advising how to minimize or eliminate risk. Each page is chockablock with information outlining problems with current building design and how to change for the better.

Some readers may be annoyed that Johnston and Masters leave out products, stores and manufacturer details, but they do include a handy website resource section listing various organizations from non-profits to government agencies, which can steer you in the right direction (The Green Guide included). For the armchair reader, they devote a chapter to finding eco-friendly architects and remodeling contractors to do the dirty work.

If you’ve ever wanted to transform your home into a green getaway, this book will become your best friend. If you think your house could be more sustainable, but not sure how, this book will tell you. Whether you’re a first-time homeowner or the neighborhood handyman, you’ll find in it a trove of valuable tips and practical know-how.

—Kate Harris

How to Pick a Peach: The Search for Flavor from Farm to Table by Russ Parsons (Houghton Mifflin, 2007, $27). To purchase this book, visit our online book store.

 

When he wrote that April is the cruelest month, I can’t help but wonder if T.S. Eliot was into cooking. It’s about this time of year that, despite my inclination for eating seasonally and locally, my favorite farmer’s market begins to bore me. After months of eating potatoes and parsnips, carrots and apples, my enthusiasm for cooking ebbs like a low tide, and I abandon it in silent protest over the lack of color and variety in my produce bin. Most nights in April, I find myself in line at the Chinese take-out down the street, carrying out sacks of artery-clogging sweet-and-sour chicken or over-sauced noodles and berating myself for indirectly funneling profits into the Styrofoam-container industry.

For that very reason, I was happily plucked from the Chinese take-out line and plopped back into my kitchen after reading How to Pick a Peach: The Search for Flavor from Farm to Table by Russ Parsons. Full of creative recipes from a laundry list of notable chefs (Parsons himself is an career food writer and a columnist at the Los Angeles Times), the book had me back in the markets—in April!—seeking out those same crops that had me so bored and whipping up new dishes like roasted beet and orange salad with goat cheese and walnuts and turnip and potato gratin.

Surging interest in locally grown foods has led to a coinciding surge in literature on farm-fresh produce, so a book like Parsons could easily get lost in the shuffle. But How to Pick a Peach is thoughtfully organized and carefully researched, with each chapter focusing on an individual crop or group of crops and detailing its (or their) social and historical background. Particularly helpful for the amateur and professional alike are the chapter conclusions that explain how to choose, store and prepare produce and offer “One Simple Dish” that impatient, bored cooks like myself can tackle with ease. Chapters also contain a subsection on where the featured crop is grown, which segues nicely into regional recipes from across the country, perhaps the book’s most appealing feature. With all the focus on local foods, it’s easy to forget that they aren’t restricted to local recipes. Parson’s recipe for Southern Comfort Soup, one of my favorites, tasted just as good with collard greens hailing from upstate New York as it would have with greens from Georgia, where, he informs us, most collards in American grocery stores are grown.

We don’t all have to buy into Eliot’s lament. Take a page from Parson’s book and inject a little creativity into the cruelest culinary month of your locale. You might just find a way to re-use all those take-out bags.

-Emily Main

RELATED

How to Grow Clean Air

The school in which I work is filled with all sorts of hanging and other plants, thanks to Tom who manages our building.  I was thrilled to see this article in The Green Guide:

How to Grow Clean Air

6:18 pm – April 17, 2007

A new friend (whose wife just had a baby) was recently telling me about all the things they were doing to keep environmental contaminants out of their home. He asked me if I knew which house plants were most effective at reducing indoor air pollutants. I didn’t know the answer off-hand but was curious to find out.

I came upon a wonderful book by Dr. B.C. Wolverton, How to Grow Fresh Air. What I learned is, while plants can’t cure major indoor pollution problems on their own, as noted in a recent Tip of the Week, they are an ideal antidote to the minor contamination introduced into our indoor environments through everyday household products and building materials. Plants produce oxygen, add precious moisture and remove toxins from the air through the tiny openings in their leaves. In fact, as few as 15 houseplants in an average-size home can offer a significant reduction in the number of indoor contaminants.

 

This is not just folklore. In the 70s, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, faced with the task of creating a life-support system for planned moon bases, began extensive studies on a fundamental question—just how does the earth produce and sustain clean air? The answer of course is through the living processes of plants. Now, 20-plus years later, we know a great deal about the cleansing power of house plants. And powerful they are. Just consider the indoor air quality problems many commonly available and beautiful houseplants can help to remedy.

Formaldehyde: The Boston fern (Nephrolepi exalta “Bostoniensis”), Florist’s mums (Chrysanthemum morifolium), the Gerbera daisy (Gerbera jamesonii) and the Dwarf date palm (Phoenix roebelenii) are all highly effective at reducing indoor levels of formaldehyde, a contaminant present in many household items (including particleboard, carpet backings, some grocery bags, facial tissues, paper towels and permanent-press clothing) and released by gas stoves.

Toluene/Xylene: Add an Areca palm (Chrysalidocarpus lutescens), the Moth orchid (Phalenopsis) and the Dwarf date palm to your indoor greenery, all of which are effective at removing xylene and toluene, harmful volatile organic chemicals which can be emitted from gasoline, adhesives, ceiling tiles, computer screens, paints, inks used in photocopiers, stains and varnishes, and upholstery among other common household products and materials.

It’s not just our material things, but our breath contains bioeffluents—such as ethyl alcohol, acetone, methyl alcohol and ethyl acetate—that also contribute to poor indoor air quality, particularly in a crowded classroom. The beautiful peace lily is remarkably effective at addressing these problems.

Other hardworking and beautiful indoor plants include bamboo palm (Chamaedorea), Chinese evergreen (Aglaonema), English Ivy (Hedera helix), the indoor dracaenas (Dracaena “Janet Craig,” D. marginata, D. massangeana and D. warnekii), and the snake plant or mother-in-law’s tongue (Sansevieria trifasciata laurentii).

When choosing houseplants, remember that many (including some of those above) can be toxic if ingested, so be extra careful if you have young children or pets in your home. Staff at the local garden center should be able to advise you on nontoxic choices; contact your local poison-control center for guidance (the phone number is listed in the front of your telephone book).

For a beautiful and authoritative reference to the cleansing power of particular houseplants, order How to Grow Fresh Air (Penguin Books, 1996, $18) from our online book store.

Get more tips and advice on how to reduce or eliminte indoor air pollutants in your home.

© The Green Guide, 2006

How Green Are You?

Test Your Eco IQ

1.  Do you have recycling bins at your house? (my answer=yes)

Good for you! Recycling is probably the easiest thing you can do to go green! It even cuts up 1,000 pounds of annual carbon dioxide emissions that contribute to global warming . Even though you do recycle, you can be even “greener” by choosing products with the least amount of packaging possible and by choosing easily recyclable packaging, like paper or glass; very few municipal recycling programs accept plastics other than those labeled #1 and #2.

2.Have you replaced at least one incandescent bulb in your house with a compact fluorescent light bulb (CFL)? (my answer=yes)

Good for you! Replacing just one 75-watt incandescent bulb with a 19-watt CFL cuts 75 pounds of carbon dioxide emissions per year and up to 750 for the life of the bulb, not to mention the money savings on your energy bill.

3.  If you drink takeout coffee or tea, do you bring your own mug or use a disposable cup from the cafe? (my answer=reusable mug)

Bravo! Reusable mugs are healthier for you and for the planet, leaving trees in forests where they belong and keeping non-degradable polystyrene out of landfills.

4.  Which saves more water, washing dishes by hand or using a dishwasher?(my answer=by hand)

No! Surprisingly, hand washing dishes can actually use up to 50 percent more water than a water-saving, energy-efficient dishwasher. The most efficient dishwashers on the market use only 4 gallons of water, but some conventional models can use as much as 14 gallons. If you’re in the market for a new dishwasher, look for Energy Star-rated appliances. They use at least 41% less energy and water than federal standards require.  This one I wasn’t sure about since I don’t have an electric dishwasher and hadn’t done my research.

5.  How often do you use green cleaning products? (my answer=whenever I can find them)

That’s a good start. Using green cleaners all the time cuts down on your environmental impact, since conventional cleaners are filled with a host of chemicals that produce harmful byproducts during production and harm aquatic life when they wash down the drain. Green cleaners are also healthier; they have fewer volatile organic compounds that can trigger asthma and other respiratory problems, and rarely do they contain chemicals that can poison you or your children or cause serious skin reactions if spilled.

6.  Which do you prefer: bottled water or tap? (my answer=tap)

Good for you! Tap water meets stricter federal and local standards for chemical contaminants, and drinking tap water helps eliminate the waste associated with single-use plastic bottles, only 10 percent of which are recycled each year.

7.  Have you installed aerators on your kitchen and bathroom faucets? (my answer=yes)

Congratulations! Aerators cut water usage from 5 gallons per minute to 2.75 gallons or less. The most efficient models use only 1 gallon; if yours isn’t a 1 gpm model, replace it and save even more water than you already are.

8.  When you go shopping, which do you choose? Paper or Plastic? (my answer=paper)

Trick question! Neither. Bringing your own bag is the more environmentally responsible choice. In the U.S., petroleum-based plastic bags consume about 12 million barrels of oil annually, and many are not recycled, meaning that they end up in trees and waterways where animals mistake them for food. Paper bags consume four times as much energy to produce as plastic bags and they generate 70 percent more air pollution during manufacture.This WAS trick because “neither” wasn’t an option in the answers!

9.  How do you get to work? (my answer=a little of everything)

You’re off to a good start. The less you drive, the less you pollute. An average 12-mile daily commute generates 2,750 pounds of CO2 annually, so cutting your driving by half would eliminate 1,375 pounds.

10. Do you purchase renewable energy through your power utility? (my answer=yes)

Way to go! It may cost a little more than coal power, but a home powered by green energy cuts down on both greenhouse gas and mercury emissions coming from coal plants but it preserves natural environments from destructive mining.

For more information about issues on the quiz and more, please see:
Recycling Now
Are Compact Fluorescents a Fire Hazard?
Water Saving Appliances PR
Rites of Spring (Cleaning)
Consider Its Lifecyle: Bottled Water

 
 
 
 

More on Earth Day

Earth Day is coming up this Sunday, April 22nd.  The Earth Day Network is filled with all sorts of information.
One if its activities this year is the Live and Virtual Education Days – Earth Day on Capitol Hill 2007 in D.C. through April 20 this week.

On April 22, 1970, 20 million Americans took to the streets and parks to demonstrate for a healthy, sustainable environment. Today, with a lack of political will in Washington, Americans must come together again to demand that our elected officials take immediate action on Global Warming.

We demand a greenhouse gas emissions cap — at 1990 levels by 2020, then 80% below 1990 levels by 2050 — and we won’t take no for an answer. To see a full description of our demands, see EDN’s Climate Change Position.

There is all sorts of other information and campaigns for people to participate.  Earth Day Network also has a page on how faith leaders are using the pulpit to preach about climate change.  Here is some information:

Thousands of faith leaders are using Earth Day to preach and teach on global climate change as a moral issue. Ask your clergy to give a sermon on climate change and sign the Earth Day 2007 Pledge.

Earth Day Resources for Communities of Faith:

Earth Day Links for Communities of Faith and Climate Change

Earth Day TV
A panel of religious leaders representing four religious faiths discuss the moral issues of global climate change. Watch Religious and Faith Leaders discuss Climate Change on Earth Day TV

The National Campus Day of Prayer and Reflection on Global Warming, April 20th-22nd, 2007
The National Campus Day of Prayer and Reflection on Global Warming is bringing people of all faiths from the different university communities across the U.S. to consider how their tradition speaks to the pressing issue of global warming, and to act as a springboard religious communities to become involved in action to fight global climate change. The National Campus Day of Prayer and Reflection is sponsored by Stanford Memorial Chapel at Stanford University, and Rockefeller Memorial Chapel and the Religion and the Environment Initiative at the University of Chicago. To link to the National Campus Day of Prayer and Reflection website, click here: http://globalwarmingprayer.wordpress.com/

Interfaith Power and Light
<!–
The Interfaith Power and Light (IPL) program is working nationally to mobilize religious communities to promote renewable energy, energy efficiency and conservation. IPL is working to establish Interfaith Power and Light programs in every state. Interfaith dialogues on Climate Change Solutions will take place in communities across the country this Earth Day. To find an IPL program in your state, go to: http://www.theregenerationproject.org/ipl/index.html
–> The Interfaith Power and Light (IPL): program is working nationally to mobilize religious communities to promote renewable energy, energy efficiency and conservation. Interfaith Power and Light, a program of The Regeneration Project, is working to establish programs in every state. To find an IPL program in your state, go to: http://www.theregenerationproject.org/State.htm

National Council of Churches of Christ – Earth Day Sunday Page
Each year, the National Council of Churches’ Eco-Justice Working Group focuses on a particular environmental theme and highlights a number of ways individuals and congregations can celebrate and protect God’s creation. http://www.nccecojustice.org/Earth%20Day%20Index2.htm

Coalition on the Environment and Jewish Life (COEJL)
Coalition on the Environmental and Jewish Life (COEJL) under the Take Action section of their site lists ways individuals, schools and synagogues can address global warming including a How-To Manual for Greening Local Synagogues, Schools and Offices. There are also Action Alerts on the site. http://www.coejl.org/action/ss_globalw.php

UU Ministry for the Earth
Resource for Unitarian Universalists on environmental issues, particularly global warming – this page has extensive resources on becoming a green sanctuary. http://uuministryforearth.org/index.shtml. Earth Sunday Resources Found here: http://uuministryforearth.org/earthsunday.html.

National Religious Partnership for the Environment (NRPE)
National Religious Partnership for the Environment (NRPE) is an alliance of independent faith groups: the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, the National Council of Churches U.S.A., the Coalition on the Environment and Jewish Life, and the Evangelical Environmental Network that have come together using both common biblical beliefs and their own traditions to offer religious resources for the protection of the Earth. http://www.nrpe.org/.

Interfaith Climate Change Network
A resource for communities of faith interested in global climate change with climate change statements, resources and links. http://protectingcreation.org/.

Climate Crisis Coalition Interfaith Initiative
The Climate Crisis Coalition is working with faith communities to broaden the circle of individuals, organizations and constituencies engaged in the global warming issue. Read the CCC Interfaith Call to Action at: http://www.climatecrisiscoalition.org/mayer-call-to-action.html and find out about their broader campaign at http://www.climatecrisiscoalition.org/.

Interfaith Works
Interfaith Works is a non-profit organization that partners with religious organizations to do good works by integrating environmental stewardship with community outreach. IW works with congregations to help connect their faith, their community and the environment. http://www.interfaithworks.org/.

Evangelical Environment Network
Evangelical Environment Network page on climate change/global warming lists a briefing for religious leaders, climate change as a Christian challenge, and fact sheets on environmental issues. http://www.creationcare.org/resources/climate/.

The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops
The USCCB is an assembly of the Catholic Church hierarchy who work together to unify, coordinate, promote, and carry on Catholic activities in the United States. To read their statement on global climate change of the go to: http://www.usccb.org/sdwp/international/globalclimate.htm#introduction.

Buddhist Peace Fellowship
Buddhist Peace Fellowship’s open-hearted engagement with the world is expressed through expanding programs in the United States and Asia. Through BPF, Buddhists of many different traditions are developing individual and group responses to socially conditioned suffering. www.bpf.org.

Quaker Earthcare Witness
Quaker Earthcare Witness is a spiritually-centered movement of Quakers and like-minded people seeking ways to integrate concern for the environment with Friends’ long-standing testimonies for simplicity, peace, and equality. http://www.quakerearthcare.org.

Indigenous Environmental Network
The Indigenous Environmental Network is a network of Indigenous Peoples empowering Indigenous Nations and communities towards sustainable livelihoods, demanding environmental justice and maintaining the Sacred Fire of their traditions. http://www.ienearth.org/.

Resources on Global Warming

Energy Action Coalition
The Energy Action coalition unites a diversity of organizations in an alliance that supports and strengthens the student and youth clean energy movement in North America. The partners of Energy Action work together to leverage their collective power and create change for a clean, efficient, just and renewable energy future. The work of Energy Action is focused on four strategic areas: campuses, communities, corporate practices, and politics. http://www.energyaction.net/main/

The U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC)
USGBC is the nation’s foremost coalition of leaders from every sector of the building industry working to promote buildings that are environmentally responsible, profitable and healthy places to worship, live and work. Their more than 7,200 member organizations and network of more than 80 regional chapters are united to advance their mission of transforming the building industry to sustainability. http://www.usgbc.org/

Stop Global Warming
An online campaign to educate people about the effects of global warming and mobilize community members to take action. http://www.stopglobalwarming.org/default.asp

Greenpeace International
Greenpeace International detailed information on cost savings of electricity through usage of energy saving devices. http://www.greenpeace.org/international/campaigns/climate-change

Climate Ark-Climate Change
Climate Ark-Climate Change Portal has climate change links to sites dealing with aspects of climate change through policy and programs. There are some international links. http://www.climateark.org/links/Advocacy/

Climate Solutions
Climate Solutions is a site geared for the Northwest. But solutions section is applicable no matter where you live http://www.climatesolutions.org/

Energy Star
Energy Star is a government backed program that educates individuals and businesses about preserving the environment through efficient energy usage. http://energystar.gov/index.cfm?c=about.ab_index

Energy Star page for congregations on using energy efficiently and links of interest http://energystar.gov/index.cfm?c=small_business.sb_congregations

Earth Day

I am on the planning committee for the 16th Earth Jam in Salt Lake City on this year’s Earth Day.  I am helping to organize the children’s area, Kiddie Village.  Here is a photo of a banner I’ve started making for the event:

We will be having all sorts of crafts and children’s activities in this area for families who bring children.  One thing we will want all people to do is to come by and decorate a fabric swatch with their favorite earth day message to be hung around the park, beginning in the children’s area.

Earth Jam will be held on SUNDAY  April 22, 2007, at Liberty Park 700 East 1300 South. This event is free, and open to the public. This is a family festival filled with music, dance, and Earth Day awareness information.

Here is list of the entertainment on the various stages (subject to change)

The Moon Stage
12:00 PM  dj Whimpmeister
1:00 PM    dj RudeGal & dj Avu
2:00 PM    dj Ewok
3:00 PM    dj Derivative
4:00 PM    dj CoDeReD
5:00 PM    dj Mason & Wes Miles
6:00 PM    dj K
7:00 PM    dj Loki sponcered by V2 & Mechanized
8:00 PM    dj Merryl   sposered by Mechanized

The Earth Stage

12:00 N   7 Billion

1:20pm  Gypsy Superstitious

2:40pm  The Crossing

4:00pm  Goddess Sabrina Blackburn

5:20pm  The Polaroids

7:00pm   Blues 66

8:00pm   Jinga Boa

9:00pm   Incindiary Circus

The Satellite Stage
12:00 N    LEAH
     12:40 pm  Galen Young

     1:20 pm    Ben & Garret

     2:00 pm    Consensus of One

     2:40 pm    Emme Packer

     3:20 pm    Buddha Pie 

                     www.myspace.com/buddhapiemusic

     4:00 pm    John Bean

     4:40 pm    Derek Bentivdgna

     5:20 pm    Dwayne

     6:00 pm    Rene

     6:40 pm    House of Cards

     7:20 pm    Timmi Cruz

Carnival of the Green

This week’s Carnival of the Green is being hosted by Common Ground.  There will be lots of information, tips and ideas on greenissues.

Enjoy!

More pics and info on grandparents list

My life has been so busy this year that I have really been a slacker on posting.  I have deleted the grandparents journal to reduce the amount of journals I have.

Here are some pics of my little grand-papoose!   He’s eating cereal now and weighs about 15 1/2 pounds! (He is 4 months old).

The People’s Market

I was really impressed with the organizations doing outreach yesterday a the Step It Up! event. One that really intrigued me was The People’s Market, an alternative to the annual Farmers Market in downtown Salt Lake City. I have usually never attended or pursued being part of the already established market for various reasons.  One of those being that I have always felt that there was somewhat of a non-grassroots, almost “nose-in-the-air” quality to the event.  Not that it isn’t a good thing for the community, just not 100% in my comfort zone.

The People’s Market, on the other hand, seems more of a grassroots effort.  The cost to participate is quite reasonable, and non-profits can participate for FREE.  Additioanlly, it is held in Jordan Park, on the “west side”.  This is a good thing since there is a whole community on that side of Salt Lake that needs more of this type of activity.

Here is information from The People’s Market website, which also has some of its items in spanish:

Our Mission

The People’s Market will help build a more robust food system, small-scale entrepreneurship, and community pride.

Our Goal

The People’s Market is an opportunity for residents, local growers, and city-wide consumers to come together for good food and great bargains on locally produced items.

Our Roots

Originally conceived within a local, community leadership program, the People’s Market is a
true grassroots effort to improve our local quality of life. Get an idea about the development and history of the People’s Market by reading this email log.

They also offer this information and services, including a barter board:

How you can participate

  • Come to the market – meet your neighbors, purchase some fresh foods or locally produced items.
  • Become a vendor – bring something you have produced to the market. Download the Vendor Application.
  • List your service on the Barter Board – If you possess a specialized skill, perform a useful service, or own a unique piece of equipment then you can share it with your neighbors on our services board
  • Volunteer to help organize the market – This grassroots effort needs people like you to help “cultivate” the market. Sign up and make a difference.
  • Spread the Word Download and print this brochure. (Español) or Download a Flyer

For more information about how you can help conatct Kyle LaMalfa at 801-842-1619 or email slcpeoplesmarket@gmail.com


document.write(”);
document.write(‘slcpeoplesmarket@gmail.com’);

I plan to check out this new market, and perhaps even pursue some tabling opportunities.