Tag Archives: environment

Green Building

One of the visions of my school community is to eventually build a green school. We want to make sure we do it right, so we are continuing to lease property so as to take our time to carefully plan an environmentally responsible school building.

Today’s Salt Lake Tribune reports that Salt Lake City Mayor Rocky Anderson has amended his executive order on green building.

This means that buildings such as police and fire facilities and public safety buildings will have to adhere to more strict environmental standards. New city-owned buildings larger than 10,000 square feetwill be required to meet these standards.

Anderson recognizes that it is more expensive up front to build green building, but in the long run it saves energy costs and lessens the negative impacts on our environment.

Anderson is pursuing the implementation of more environmentally responsible standards for privately owned businesses as well as for providing incentives for single-family constructed homes.

S.B. 70 – Envirocare….continued

Green Jenni attended the hearing and has a post on this morning’s hearing on S.B. 70, the Envirocare bill that I posted on earlier today.

This evening HEAL Utah has sent out this letter:
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Thank you to everyone who was able to come to the hearing this morning at the Capitol on such short notice. The vote was close, but Senate Bill 70 passed out of the committee by a vote of 3-2 and will now move on to the Senate for a full vote.

As you know, SB 70 rewrites state law to make it easier for nuclear and hazardous waste dumps to expand or develop in Utah by taking away the need for gubernatorial approval. The bill effectively removes power from the Governor and gives it to Envirocare.

In an effort to remove the public from the process, this bill has been on a fast-track and will most likely be voted on THIS WEEK. We need a lot of help to defeat this legislation in the Senate. If you have any time at all this week, your involvement could stop an effort to make it easier for nuclear and toxic waste to be dumped in Utah. This is truly urgent. Can you help with any of the following?
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HEAL Utah has issued the statement below urging citizens to attend the hearing TODAY on S.B. 70 (Sen. Stephenson), which, if passed, would allow Envirocare to double the size of its radioactive waste dump. The hearing will be heard by the Senate Natural Resources Committee at 9am in room 015 of the West Wing (bottom floor of the new west wing addition to the capitol.
Citizens are also urged to email their representatives (Email addreses are listed towards the end of this post.).

As I posted a few days ago, it has been discovered that Sen. Stephenson is a registered lobbyist for the group Utah Taxpayers Association, which ironically includes amongst Envirocare its members.

Corporate interests continue to be the focus of some legislators, influenced heavily by the corporations themselves, at the expense of our environment and health and well-being of our citizens. Citizens need to send a strong message to our representatives that we are tired of Utah being used as a dumping ground, we are tired of our legislators not representing the desires of their consituents, we are tired of our legislators continually proposing bills that clearly represent conflicts of interest and we are tired of our lives and those of our children’s and beyond being sacrificed for greed and the interests of the elite few.

Message from HEAL:
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Envirocare and Stephenson: Conflict of Interest????

I thought something was fishy.

Sen. Howard Stephenson (R-Draper), who introduced the bill (S.B. 70) that would change state law to make it easier for Envirocare to double the size of its radioactive waste dump, is under fire by a lawyers group that has called for an ethics investigation on Stephenson.

The group, Trial-lawyers Representing Utah’s Environment (TRUE), would need 3 state senators to write letters requesting the inquiry before the Senate Ethics Committee could initiate an investigation.

According to the Salt Lake Tribuen article, Stephenson is president and registered lobbyist of the Utah Taxpayers Association, a group of which Envirocare is a member.
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Toll Roads

There is talk on The Hill of building a road in the western part of the Salt Lake Valley so that folks could bypass part of the I-15 corridor from I-80. This road would be a toll road.

I am against this, just as I am against the building of the Legacy Highway. We do not “need” more roads. When I drive at night, I cannot see the lines on our freeways – how sad! Where is the road maintenance money spent?

I think the idea of toll roads might be a good one – for existing roads. This would potentially decrease the amount of automobile drivers on our roads and drive up the demand for mass transportation. There are lots of possibilities.

Here is what we need:
– Better road maintenance of existing infrastructure
– Increased funding for increased mass transportation
– Long range goals for mass transportation, including high speed rail lines
– incentives for people who use mass transportation
– fee based parking lots at all rail stations

It puzzles me as to why our legislators continue to advocate funding for more roads. This only creates more development and more opportunities for more cars to be on the road. Our state is regressing in the area of environmental sustainability with regards to transportation.

No more roads!

Envirocare benefits from Legislation–voice your opposition at TODAY’S press conference

Envirocare owns a low-level toxic waste dump in Utah’s west desert. They have been trying for awhile to be approved to accept higher levels of waste. The health of Utah’s environment continues to be at risk for declining in quality.

This came in from HEAL Utah:

In the Utah state senate today, Sen. Howard Stephenson (R-Draper) introduced a bill (S.B. 70) that would change state law to make it easier for Envirocare to double the size of its radioactive waste dump. Current law requires a company like Envirocare to get regulatory, legislative, and gubernatorial approval before expanding. S.B. 70 would rewrite the law to allow the legislature to override the Governor’s veto.

This bill is very dangerous. The decision to expand or develop nuclear and toxic waste dumps cannot be undone. Once nuclear and toxic waste is brought into Utah, the effects on our health, environment, and state will last for hundreds to thousands of years. Gov. Huntsman, looking after the interests of all Utahns, has already said “N-O” to Envirocare’s expansion. Envirocare is now using their tremendous influence in the legislature to rewrite the law so they can bypass the governor and entrench Utah as the nation’s nuclear waste dump.
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Climate News

Since I have become a member of the GPUS Eco Action Committee, I have been getting lot of informaiton and articles on ecological and environmental issues. I am really getting an education.

Yesterday the article below, by Ted Glick, came across my desk. Ted gives an overview of where we are with the climate crisis issue and what lies ahead. He calls upon everyone to become educated and involved, beginning at a personal level.

A Victory in Montreal, But. . .
By Ted Glick

“The Earth’s climate is nearing, but has not passed, a tipping point beyond which it will be impossible to avoid climate change with far-ranging undesirable consequences. These include not only the loss of the Arctic as we know it, with all that implies for wildlife and indigenous peoples, but losses on a much vaster scale due to rising seas. . . The Earth’s history suggests that with warming of two to three degrees, the new sea level will include not only most of the ice from Greenland and West Antarctica, but a portion of East Antarctica, raising the sea level by twenty-five meters, or eighty feet.” James Hansen, NASA scientist, as quoted in 1/12/06 N.Y. Review of Books
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GPUS Ecoaction Committee

I and another Green Party of Utah member are priveleged to have been accepted for membership on the newly approved GPUS EcoAction Committee.
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UTA proposes route **cuts** while touting environmental responsibiltiy

I found out yesterday that the Utah Transit Authority is proposing cuts to midday routes so as to implement an express route from the South (Salt Lake)Valley for commuters. This has a lot of people, including me, upset.

Our valley is becoming more and more unfriendly to public bus riders and, by virtue of UTA’s actions, making mass transportion more unaccessible to the poor.
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Carnival of the Green #8

This week’s Carnival of the Green is being hosted by Suhit Anantula, Suhit is a native from India doing graduate studies in Australia. This blog not only posts his articles, but also is a docking point for the listing of all his other blogs, including World is Green, a weblog on rural India that concentrates on the “bottom of the pyramid”, green environment and economic development.