This week the Cortland Community will be involved in several sustainability activities. Here is the schedule. All Activities are FREE and OPEN to the public!
Sunday April 18th at 3:00
Public Forum: Gas Drilling Impacts on Drinking Water Dusty Horwitt, Senior Counsel for the Environmental Working Group and author of “Drilling Around the Law”
3:00 to 4:00pm at the Beard Building (9 Main Street)
Organized by Gas Drilling Awareness for Cortland County (GDACC)
April 4th through 28th
Earth Stewards Coalition: Artists Respond to Gas Drilling in the Marcellus Shale
SUNY Cortland Memorial Library
More than forty artists from across the country are featured at an exhibit that encourages viewers to explore their thoughts and feelings about the potential for high volume hydrofracture drilling for natural gas being permitted in New York State.
Tuesday April 20th at 7:00
Showing of “Food Inc.” the Academy Award nominated documentary film
This film will be followed by a local foods panel discussion. Panelists include: Chris Applegate (Virgil Farmers Market), Lisa Lickona (East End Farmers Market), Kathie Arnold (Organic Dairy Farmer and Chair of the Cortland County Local Agricultural Promotions Subcommittee), Elaine Norris (Homer Community Gardens and Master Gardner), Sean Duffy (Rising Moon, Setting Sun CSA), and Jeremy Sherman (Organic Dairy and Produce Farmer).
7:00 pm in Brown Auditorium in Old Main on the SUNY Cortland Campus
Wednesday April 21st
Sustainability Conference All Day on the SUNY Cortland Campus
All Concurrent Sessions will be held in Bowers Hall Rooms 146, 155, and 161
First Concurrent Session (9:00 - 10:00 am)
1. A Culture of Sustainability in an Academic Department
Lynn Anderson, Professor and Chair, RPLS Department
Eddie Hill, Assistant Professor, RPLS Department
Amy Shellman, Assistant Professor, RPLS Department
Sharon Todd, Associate Professor, RPLS Department
2. Green Parenting: Baby Steps Toward a Green Planet
Aaron Zipp, Instructor and International Coordinator, Sport Management Department
Sarah Zipp, Instructor, Sport ManagementDepartment
Second Concurrent Session (10:30 - 11:30 am)
1. Energy Conservation Measures for the Campus
Nasrin Parvizi, Associate Vice President for Facilities Management
Jeffrey Lallas, Director of Facilities Planning, Design and Construction
Timothy Slack, Director of Physical Plant
Lisa Kahle, Director of Academic Computing and Classroom Media Services
2. A Consumer Society’s Effects on the Environment
Alyssa Neely, student in Social Philosophy
Krystle Caggiano, student in Social Philosophy
3. Cortland Community Sustainability Efforts
Members of Cortland community groups working on sustainability projects in the town and county
FREE Sustainable Lunch (12:00 - 1:00 pm)
Talk by Bill McNamara, Director of ASC Dining Services
Jacobus Lounge (Brockway Hall) (Note: Lunch is limited to the first 80 attendees.)
Third Concurrent Session (1:30 - 2:30 pm)
1. Formula For A Successful Bike Share Program
Lindsey Brown, Graduate Assistant for the Community Bike Project
Lynn Anderson, Professor and Chair in the RPLS Department
Eddie Hill, Assistant Professor in the RPLS Department
2. Can a World of More than Seven Billion Persons Sustain the Eating of Meat?
Scott Anderson, Associate Professor and Chair, Geography and GIS Department
Andrew Fitz-Gibbon, Associate Professor, Philosophy Department
Lisi Krall, Professor, Economics Department
3. Student Actions for Sustainability
C-SAVE (Cortland Students Advocating for a Valuable Environment)
Green Reps Program
NYPIRG (New York Public Research Interest Group)
Fourth Concurrent Session (3:00 - 4:00 pm)
1. Renewable energy for homes, businesses, and schools
Melissa Kemp, Halco Renewable Energy
Duncan Cooper, Renovus Energy
2. Urban Forestry and Tree Campus USA
Steven Broyles, Professor, Biological Sciences Department
3. The Environmental Impacts of Tobacco
Katelyn Upcraft, Public Health Educator with the Onondaga County Health Department
Keynote Address (7:00 - 8:30 pm)
Dr. Arjun Makhijani, President of the Institute for Energy and Environmental Research
“Carbon Free - Nuclear Free: A Roadmap for U.S. Energy Policy”
Sperry Hall 105 on the SUNY Cortland Campus
Thursday April 22nd (40th Anniversary of Earth Day)
Sandwich Seminar (12:00 - 1:00 pm)
“The Cortland County Relocalization and Resilience Initiative: Building Community Sustainability”
Beth Klein, Professor of Science Education and Chair of the Community Forum Sustainability Track, and
Brice Smith, Associate Professor and Chair of Physics and Co-Chair of the Community Forum Sustainability Track
Jacobus Lounge (Brockway Hall on the SUNY Cortland Campus)
Saturday April 24th 10:00 am - 2:00 pm
Cortland Blooms
Cortland County Gymnasium (46 Greenbush Street)
Interactive family festival featuring exhibits on topics such as wildlife, recycling, composting, backyard gardening, alternative energy, and health and safety. Sponsored by Leadership Cortland, Cornell Cooperative Extension, Cortland County Soil and Water Conservation District and the Local Agricultural Promotion Committee.
Showing posts with label transition towns. Show all posts
Showing posts with label transition towns. Show all posts
Saturday, April 17, 2010
Monday, April 27, 2009
North Country Sustainable Energy Fair
On Saturday, my husband and I trekked up to Canton, NY (in our Prius) for our third annual trip to the North Country Sustainable Energy Fair. This conference, hosted at SUNY Canton, has been going on for 14 years. It offers great exhibits and wonderful workshops and presentations in lots of topics including renewable energy, alternative transportation, homesteading, peak oil, bio-diesel, transition towns, alternative housing, climate change, etc.
Last year we were pleased to be able to meet keynote speaker Richard Heinberg. Heinberg is the author of 8 books including Powerdown and Peak Everything and is senior fellow of the Post Carbon Institute.
This year the conference included a presentation by noted peak oil blogger and author Sharon Astyk. Sharon conducted a presentation about the need for 100 million farmers based on her recent book with Aaron Newton called A Nation of Farmers: Defeating the Food Crisis on American Soil. I’m in the process of reading her book now. I find it informational and I enjoy the somewhat sarcastic tone. Sharon and her family live in the northern Catskills and are homesteading as much as possible.
Interestingly, at all sessions I attended this year, each presenter early in their presentation had a graphic or slide about Peak Oil. And each time they arrived at the slide asked if anyone in the audience didn’t understand Peak Oil. Each time, everyone – yes EVERYONE indicated they had a pretty good understanding. This is a significant change from even 2 years ago. Word does seem to be getting out, and many people are at different stages of working toward solutions to a post carbon world.
Last year we were pleased to be able to meet keynote speaker Richard Heinberg. Heinberg is the author of 8 books including Powerdown and Peak Everything and is senior fellow of the Post Carbon Institute.
This year the conference included a presentation by noted peak oil blogger and author Sharon Astyk. Sharon conducted a presentation about the need for 100 million farmers based on her recent book with Aaron Newton called A Nation of Farmers: Defeating the Food Crisis on American Soil. I’m in the process of reading her book now. I find it informational and I enjoy the somewhat sarcastic tone. Sharon and her family live in the northern Catskills and are homesteading as much as possible.
Interestingly, at all sessions I attended this year, each presenter early in their presentation had a graphic or slide about Peak Oil. And each time they arrived at the slide asked if anyone in the audience didn’t understand Peak Oil. Each time, everyone – yes EVERYONE indicated they had a pretty good understanding. This is a significant change from even 2 years ago. Word does seem to be getting out, and many people are at different stages of working toward solutions to a post carbon world.
Sunday, March 8, 2009
Sustainable Cortland: We're on Our Way!
There is a strong feeling of positive momentum in Cortland County. Great local people are working on improving the quality, quantity, and accessibility of local foods and are working with area children to develop school gardens. Others are looking at improving the access and convenience of the county public transportation system and working on a renewable energy plan. While still others are trying to improve the local economy and quality of life in the area with green projects such as the river trail. All these are exciting, and also fall into line with a movement that was started about 3 years ago in the UK called Transition Towns.
The Transition Initiative is “Tackling Climate Change and Peak Oil. Bringing the Head, Heart and Hands of Communities together to make the transition to life beyond oil.” The movement is spreading worldwide and quickly in the US. Already, Transition Towns US has developed an online social networking system for each state. Several Cortland area individuals have already joined to begin communicating with each other and those elsewhere in New York.
It is my hope that using this network and support system that Cortland and the surrounding area can become an official Transition Town. The process we will need to go through is outlined on the Transition Town websites based on what has worked well in several towns in England. I will be finding out if it will be possible to bring a Transition Town trainer to the Cortland area to get us started. If anyone is interested, please either contact me directly, or go ahead and join the Transition Town Network for NY and connect with me there by joining the Sustainable Cortland group.
Regardless if we become an official “Transition Town” or not, it appears that we are moving toward a comprehensive sustainable vision and framework for Cortland County. And that is something I plan to continue to help move forward.
The Transition Initiative is “Tackling Climate Change and Peak Oil. Bringing the Head, Heart and Hands of Communities together to make the transition to life beyond oil.” The movement is spreading worldwide and quickly in the US. Already, Transition Towns US has developed an online social networking system for each state. Several Cortland area individuals have already joined to begin communicating with each other and those elsewhere in New York.
It is my hope that using this network and support system that Cortland and the surrounding area can become an official Transition Town. The process we will need to go through is outlined on the Transition Town websites based on what has worked well in several towns in England. I will be finding out if it will be possible to bring a Transition Town trainer to the Cortland area to get us started. If anyone is interested, please either contact me directly, or go ahead and join the Transition Town Network for NY and connect with me there by joining the Sustainable Cortland group.
Regardless if we become an official “Transition Town” or not, it appears that we are moving toward a comprehensive sustainable vision and framework for Cortland County. And that is something I plan to continue to help move forward.
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