Tag Archives: environment

Green Guide

November 15, 2006

The Green Guide TO GO is a FREE weekly e-bulletin to inform you of what’s new, what’s news at thegreenguide.com. Just click and go using the links above to not-to-be-missed Green Guide articles, Product Reports, Smart Shopper’s Pocket Guides; “Buyer Bewares”; label reading advice; “You Can Do It” Actions; and fabulously delicious recipes from Amy’s Green Kitchen.

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ACTIVE GAMING

Can video games change the world? Not likely, but a few can point you in the right direction. Here are a few of our Top Product Picks for video and computer games that aim to do a little more than entertain.

LOOKING FOR A REAL TURKEY?

If factory farming and animal cruelty issues have you steering clear of traditional turkey this year, try serving a locally and humanely raised bird, or a meatless alternative. Read on for tips and resources.

CONTROL CULINARY CHAOS

Treat your holiday guests to a hearty meal with careful planning and a little advance preparation. Start with these recipes, including Spiced Carrot and Orange Soup.

FOOD SAFETY FOR THE HOLIDAYS

With a few common-sense tips, you can reduce your risk of foodborne illness this holiday season. Here are a few ways to make sure your meals are prepared safely.

SAVE A TREE, OR TWO OR THREE
The average American uses 50 pounds of tissue paper per year, and that equals a lot of trees. See our Tip of the Week for forest-friendly, recycled tissue options.

 

 

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Preparing for the 2007 Utah Legislative Session

I will be starting to post items on the upcoming Legislative Session. This came across my desk today from HEAL Utah:
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Yumm—pumpkin pie, cranberry sauce, mashed potatoes, turkey and stuffing—Thanksgiving is right around the corner. We are all looking forward to this time of visiting with family and friends, eating good food, and giving thanks. But before you start carving the turkey, come learn how to help prevent your legislators from carving loopholes into our laws that protect public health and the environment.

Join us this Thursday, November 16th at 6:30 to learn how to organize an in-home meeting with your state legislators. An in-home meeting is a chance for you (and your neighbors) to start building a relationship with your state legislators, educate them on nuclear and toxic waste issues facing our state, and counter the influence of highly paid lobbyists working in the backhalls of the State Legislature. In-home meetings are a great way to start a dialogue that will help us earn victories come January.

The evening will consist of:

1) Our political forecast of the upcoming legislative session
2) A briefing on your legislators and their voting records

3) A How-To Guide on hosting or attending an in-home meeting

Remember—Thursday, November 16th from 6:30-8:30pm at HEAL Utah’s offices, 68 S Main St. 4th floor.
Please call (801) 355-5055 or email jessica@healutah.org if you’re interested.

Jessica Kendrick
Field Organizer
HEAL Utah

The Agitator

I’ve started a website called “The Agitator”. Check it out. (Note: It’s still being developed.)

Agitate: to arouse interest in (a cause, for example) by use of the written
or spoken word; debate.

Socially Conscious Gift Giving – in general

Socially Conscious Gift-Giving

Weddings
Continue reading

Alternative Gift Giving

Yesterday I posted a piece on Buy Nothing Day and consumerism.

Some family members have communicated to us that they do not want the traditional gifts this year at Christmas and have made this request.

Consider making a donation to Food for the Poor instead of buying a material gift. We have so much and there are many in Latin America and the Caribbean who have nothing. Food for the Poor has a 96% fundraising efficiency rate, with less than 4% of donations going towards administrative costs.

I will be updating my Café à la Green page to promote alternative ideas for gift giving this season.

Voting on Proposition #3

My dad always advised me to vote “no” on issues and candidates in elections where uncertainty (on my part) prevailed. I’ve taken that advice before and am using it again this year.

This year in Salt Lake County residents will have the opportunity to vote for Proposition 3, which proposes to fund new TRAX lines, roads, and commuter rail with a one-quarter of 1% sales tax increase.

I have thought long and hard about this. In a well-designed website by the Salt Lake Chamber, with well-designed lawn signs being seen all around, ardent proponents of Proposition #3 claim that:
The state of Utah is facing a very real transportation crisis. Utah’s population is increasing at double the national average (it’s like adding a city the size of Draper and Riverton to the state every year), and traffic is growing twice as fast. Traffic congestion on our roads and highways will triple over the next 25 years. By voting for Proposition 3, Utahns will fund the building of more TRAX lines, roadways (including the new Mountain View Corridor), and commuter rail. The exact order and priority of the projects will be decided by local government officials. With Proposition 3’s increased funding, many road and rail projects planned for completion 30 years from now can be finished by 2015.

The website also cleverly and urgently informs readers why it is important to vote on this NOW – without much detail.

There is no question what is needed. The SL Chamber has carefullyoutlined the facts on its website.

But here is my issue: Proposition #3 is too vague. I don’t like voting on issues that are not carefully thought out and do not outline specifically how my tax dollars will be used. SEveral years ago I voted FOR a TRAX line to be built in West Jordan. Other communities have done the same. Bus routes have been cut in my neighborhood. Where are we in the processes of those projects? Before I vote on an initiative, I want to see the precise budget proposal with an itemized list of how funds will be used, along with a timeline.

I am a very vocal and strong advocate of reducing traffic and diverting funds to more bus routes and better mass transportation overall. I would vote for Proposition #3 if as much time and money went into a better outlined proposal as is being spent on ads for its current vague proposal. As it is, while I have not 100% made my decision, I am at this point inclined to vote “no” on Propostion #3 in its current proposed state.

For people who make excuses about not using the train….

It seems that a common response I get about using the train is how much time it takes and that peoples’ family time is more important than spending time on the train, thus the excuse for using their cars to commute.

Today’s Deseret News has a feature on how much time people spend in their cars to commute to and from work.

The study by The Road Information Program (TRIP – a nonprofit organization that studies roads and congestion in several states.) shows that Utah motorists are wasting up to 76 hours and 56 gallons of fuel annually, just sitting in traffic. And depending what roads you use, the numbers go even higher. Traffic congestion costs Utah drivers as much as $1,275 a year in wasted time and fuel.
Over the past few months, TRIP looked at data from state and federal agencies, as well as research and planning groups, to complete the study that lists the 25 most-congested roads in Utah. For each of those roads, the study estimated how much time and money people waste while stuck in traffic.
“Commuters are losing a lot of time and wasting money because of growing traffic congestion,” said Frank Moretti, spokesman for TRIP, a transportation-research group based in Washington, D.C.
Utah County had 14 of the 25 most congested roads, while Salt Lake County had eight of them, according to the study.
The most expensive route to drive is I-15 in Utah County, from Orem’s University Parkway to 1600 North, the study showed. Motorists using that route spend $1,275 each year on traffic delays. Drivers there lose about 76 hours of time annually in traffic and waste about 56 gallons of fuel.

Message from Chief Arvol Looking Horse

Message from Chief Arvol Looking Horse.

Mitakuye (my relative),

I, Chief Arvol Looking Horse, of the Lakota, Dakota, and Nakota Nation, ask
you to understand an Indigenous perspective on what has happened in America,
what we call “Turtle Island.” My words seek to unite the global community
through a message from our sacred ceremonies to unite spiritually, each in our
own ways of beliefs in the Creator.

We have been warned from Ancient Prophecies of these times we live in today,
but have also been given a very important message about a solution to turn
these terrible times around.
Continue reading

UTA examining geothermal energy

UTA looking at hot-water heat to save money

UTA estimates it would cost $15,000 a month to heat the commuter-rail center without the help of heat from the springs. The agency had no exact estimate for how much a geothermal system would save in heating expenses but anticipated it could be thousands of dollars each year.
“We are trying to become a more sustainable organization,” said Grantley Martelly, UTA manager of safety and environmental protection. “One way is through conservation of energy and a reduction in our dependence on fossil fuels. Geothermal energy is one of the things we’re looking at.”
If the study shows that geothermal energy could, indeed, heat UTA’s maintenance center, work would begin to build a geothermal heating system. One type of heating system uses pipes in the ground to draw up water. The water would run through a heat-exchange system, then return into the ground.
The study will show what type of system works best to obtain the energy, Martelly said. The Utah Geological Survey would grant UTA permission to use the hot springs for heating.
“This is basically using energy that is available from the ground that provides or creates no emissions,” said Philip Powlick with the Utah Geological Survey. “It doesn’t deplete a resource and saves the user energy costs.”

This is great and kudos to UTA for pursuing sustainable options for running its operation.

During the past three years, UTA has been working to improve its efficiency in management and environmental practices. In April, the agency became one of the first transit agencies in the world to receive certification from the International Organization of Standardization for its environmental and management standards.

I am told that one of the challenges of geothermal would be the build up of mineral deposits on the heat exchange surfaces. One solution to address this would be to go from a closed piping heat exchanger system to an open trough heat exchanger system using removeable liners.

I am happy to see Utah in the forefront of this issue in mass transportation.

Nuclear Power

This is an interesting piece by Rowan Wolf of Uncommon Thought Journal
Who Gets Nuclear Power?

Who gets nuclear power and who does not? Who decides? The first is the million dollar question. The second seems to be the United States. However the decision making on who can and can not have nuclear power seems almost whimsical.

Now North Korea can’t have nuclear power because they have the stated goal of nuclear weapons. Of course Pakistan, India, and China have both nuclear power and nuclear weapons, but that is OK. In fact, the U.S. has a pact to assist India with its nuclear power.

Iran has civilian nuclear plants and wants to expand them, but it “can’t” because the U.S. (and perhaps others) are saying they will use the material to refine for nuclear weapons. This has meandered on to the point that the U.S. is citing a “deal with U.N. members to punish Iraq.” Actually, there are suggestions once again that the U.S. is preparing to attack Iran. Bush has “sent the message” that the U.S. won’t “live with” a nuclear Korea.”

But quietly the word slips out that Egypt is restarting its nuclear program after shutting down in the wake of Chernobyl. Somewhat surprisingly, the U.S. has offered to help with the effort.

If you are shaking your head, then I agree. What is going on here. On September 20th, the NY Times discusses the Egyptian decision as follows:

“Gamal Mubarak, the son of Egypt’s president, has proposed that his country pursue nuclear energy in a speech to the nation’s political elite, drawing strong applause while raising expectations that Mubarak is being positioned to replace his father as president.

The carefully crafted political speech Tuesday raised the prospect of two potentially embarrassing developments for the White House at a time when the region is awash in crisis: a nuclear program in Egypt, recipient of about $2 billion a year in military and development aid from the United States, and Mubarak succeeding his father, Hosni Mubarak, as president without substantial political challenge.

Simply raising the topic of Egypt’s nuclear ambitions at a time of heightened tensions over Iran’s nuclear activity was received as a calculated effort to raise the younger Mubarak’s profile and to build public support through a show of defiance toward Washington, political analysts and foreign affairs experts said.”

If this was a “defiant” move, then why did the Bush administration embrace it with an offer of assistance? What happened to the idea of a “democratic” Middle East? Egypt doesn’t quite count as a democratic government despite the move in 2005 to have more than one candidate for president (CIA, World Factbook). Perhaps it has something to do with Egypt’s resources (”petroleum, natural gas, iron ore, phosphates, manganese, limestone, gypsum, talc, asbestos, lead, zinc”) and geography (”controls Sinai Peninsula, only land bridge between Africa and remainder of Eastern Hemisphere; controls Suez Canal, a sea link between Indian Ocean and Mediterranean Sea”) (CIA, World Factbook). Or perhaps it is as simple as the Mubaraks (father and son) being seen as “Pro-western” (CRS, 2001) and of “assistance” in the U.S. “war on terrorism.”

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Interesting Tid-bits
According to Terrorism Project, Egypt has two active “terrorist” organizations. “Al-Jihad a.k.a Egyptian Islamic Jihad, Jihad Group, Islamic Jihad” which is suspected to have close links to al Qaeda and operations in “Yemen, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Sudan, Lebanon, and the United Kingdom” and suspected funding from Iran. The other is “Al-Gama’a al-Islamiyya (Islamic Group, IG)” is assumed to be only aimed at the overthrow of the Egyptian government.

Egypt is not on the State Department’s list of State Sponsors of Terrorism. That list only includes Cuba, Iran, North Korea, Sudan, and Syria (Libya and South Yemen have been removed). There are also “havens” and “infestations” of terrorism listed by the Council on Foreign Relations. These include Pakistan, Somalia, Iraq, and the Palestinian Authority. Interestingly, Lebanon is not on any of these lists despite the presence of Hizbullah.

FAS Intelligence Resource Program: Terrorism: Background and Threat Assessments

National Strategy for Combating Terrorism

Version with active link to World Factbook will not publish, so here is the URL https://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/eg.html