Thursday, October 14, 2010
Thinking Green
by Dick Rothschild
What lies behind that innocent face greeting you in the bathroom mirror every morning? A not so innocent human being who is responsible for emitting over a thousand pounds of Carbon Dioxide a year. Multiply that by all the faces gazing in the mirror each morning and you have a staggering statistic – far too large – if we are going to reduce pollution and dependence on foreign oil and mitigate climate change.
Hold on now – I am not about to propose that you turn down your thermostat this winter to the point at which icicles form on your nose or that you purchase an all-electric car which can’t even get you to Provincetown and back on a fully charged battery.
What I have in mind are two painless ways you can cut your CO2 count by as much as 20%.
1. The first is to stop receiving catalogs. Ridding yourself of 10 unwanted catalogs can eliminate 154 pounds of carbon dioxide per year, more than 15% of the 1000 pounds the average person accounts for.
Here’s how. From your browser, go to Catalog Choice, http://www.catalogchoice.org.
This free service enables you to stop receiving those catalogs, phone books, coupons and solicitations you don’t want. On the site you sign up for an account. Then having torn off the backs of the catalogs you no longer want to receive, you type in the mailing information printed on each and Catalog Choice will do the rest. Soon you will start to notice that you are receiving fewer catalogs. While the service is not perfect (because a few companies are slow to respond or ignore opt-out requests) it works surprisingly well. Over 1,200,000 people are already using Catalog Choice which, in turn, is in contact with over 3,000 catalog producing companies.
2. The second idea is to go on a paper diet. Before you make a paper copy of something on your computer, ask yourself, “Do I really need to print this?” You’ll find that in most cases saving it in a file on your computer will suffice. As for those documents of which you really need hard copies, consider printing them on both sides of the paper. That will reduce your copy paper consumption by nearly 50%. Here is how.
Printing Second Page on Back Side of Paper
1. Open a two-page file in Microsoft Word, Excel etc.
2. Click on the Office Button (round symbol in the upper left hand corner of the menu bar).
3. On the screen which appears, click on PRINT.
4. In the print window click on CURRENT PAGE.
5. At the bottom of the screen click on OK.
6. When the first printed page emerges from the printer place it back in the printer with the printed side up and the words facing you.
7. Click on the round symbol in upper left hand corner of menu bar.
8. On the screen which appears, click on PRINT.
9. In the print window click on PAGES and then in the window next to it type the number 2.
10. At the bottom of the screen, click on OK.
Printing Multiple Pages on Both Sides of Paper
1. Open a multiple page file in Microsoft Word, Excel etc.
2. Click on the Office Button in the upper left hand corner of menu bar.
3. On the screen which appears click on PRINT.
4. In the print window click on ALL and below it click on ODD PAGES.
5. At the bottom of the screen, click on OK.
6. When the odd pages emerge from the printer place them back in the printer in 1-3-5 etc. order, printed side up with and the words facing you.
7. Click on the round symbol in upper left hand corner of menu bar.
8. On the screen which appears click on PRINT.
9. In the print window click on ALL and below it on EVEN PAGES.
10. At the bottom of the screen, click on OK.
Now that you have mastered printing on both sides of the paper you can go back to reading your favorite newspaper, The Times, the Globe, the Clipper or the Patriot Ledger – hopefully the paperless online edition.
10/10/10
Last Friday, October 8, the members of Sustainable Duxbury took part in the 350.org Global Work Day by helping the department of public works plant four linden and maple trees that Sustainable Duxbury donated to the Tarkiln Community center. These trees will be a welcome addition to the farmers market held at the center and will provide shade while taking carbon out of the air for years to come. By taking part in this global work day Sustainable Duxbury joined over 7,000 other work parties being held in 188 countries around the globe where people are rolling up their sleeves and putting their money and efforts into fighting global warming. The 10/10/10 Global Work Day gave millions of people the opportunity to say to politicians “we are getting to work to stop global warming how about you”. Planting trees is one small way we can work to bring atmospheric carbon back down to 350 parts per million (ppm). This is the number agreed upon at last year’s global summit in Copenhagen as the upper limit at which mankind can preserve a planet similar to the one on which civilization developed, and to which life on earth has adapted. Today that number is 290 ppm and climbing. For more information please visit www.350.org or www.sustainableduxbury.org
Wednesday, October 13, 2010
Minutes from October 6, 2010
ATTENDING: Jim Savicki, Janis Owens, Mike Gillis, Judi Vose, Anne Baird, George Baird, Dick Rothschild, Carol Langford, Makae McClintock, Mike Wilson, and Susan Fontaine.
Topics Discussed:
1. 10/10/10 Event at Tarkiln Community Center — Janis Owens:
Friday 10/8/10 at 8 AM Sustainable Duxbury will present 4 trees (2 Maples and 2 Lindens for $1,200) to the town as one of the over 600 Green Work Parties sponsored by 350.org in over 180 countries. The trees are to be planted at the Tarkiln Community Center. Members of Sustainable Duxbury are invited to attend the presentation and following photo-op. Janis O. and Jim S. will bring Sustainable Duxbury and 350.org information pamphlets and banners.
Janis Owens is researching a plaque to commemorate our gift. We discussed type of plaque and what it should say. The possibilities are bronze/brass or stone. Please send suggestions about material and wording to Jim S. and Janis O.
2. Annual MCAN Conference, Worcester, Sunday 10/24 – Jim S.
We agreed to pay for four members to attend MCAN. Jim S., Janis O., and Susan F. plan to attend. Anyone else interested please contact Jim S. or Janis O.
3. Bottled Water in Schools, progress report – Jim S
Jim S. met with the new Superintendent of Schools to give him a “Dux Water” water bottle and to discuss our proposal to replace bottled water from a vending machine at the High School with a device (paid for by us) that would enable students to fill their own water bottles. If our proposal is implemented, then we would ensure metal water bottles are available for students to purchase from either us or a school group (e.g. sports team). The money from the vending machine does not fund any school group as far as we know.
Jim S. passed out information on a possible device, the Hydration Station. It is expensive ($2,000), and uses a silver filter that costs $42 and must be replaced every 6-9 months. For information see http://www.hawsco.com/hydration-station. We believe that a filter is necessary to meet flavor and health needs of the students and their parents.
4. Sustainable Duxbury blog, Janis Owens
Janis gave a demo of how to use our new blog. The easiest way to read the blog is to go to our home web page (search for “sustainable duxbury” in your browser or use the name http://sustainableduxbury.org) and click on the link to the blog which is near the top. The next easiest way is to type the name of the blog (www.sustainableduxbury.blogspot.com) into the url text area near the top of your browser window. Anyone who has a google account can post comments about blog entries. To open a google account, go to www.google.com, click on register for new account, and follow the instructions. (Google does not send unrequested email so don’t worry about extra email.)
Jim S. and Janis O. are using the blog to post meeting minutes, articles written by members, information about events, and other environmental news.
5. 501C3 – George Baird
We agree that is a good idea for us to file for 501C3 status so that donations will be tax deductible and purchases will be tax free, and that it is better for us to file independently of Sustainable South Shore. George got a quote from a lawyer for ~$2,000 to file the paperwork for us. Jim S., Dick R., and George B. will see if we can file the paperwork ourselves or get a lawyer to file for us pro bono. Once we are a 501C3 we will need to file an annual report.
6. Quarterly meeting of SSSh, 10/26, 7 PM, First Parish Church, Norwell – Jim S.
Jim S. is the new Vice President of SSSh (congratulations Jim) and will be attending the meeting.
Wednesday, October 6, 2010
10/10/10 Event
This Friday, October 8, at 8:00 AM.
Please join all of us for some planting! Four trees will be going in this Friday. This event is to join others around the world (183 countries at last count) in the 350.org event: 10/10/10.
To quote 350.org:
With your help, 10/10/10 is going to be the biggest day of practical action to cut carbon that the world has ever seen.
We're calling it "A Day to Celebrate Climate Solutions"--together we'll get to work in our communities on projects that can cut carbon and build the clean energy future.
But we won't stop there--we'll be using the day to pressure our leaders to Get To Work themselves by passing strong climate policies promoting clean energy and reducing emissions.
Thousands of people around the world have already registered their plans, including bike repair workshoppers in San Francisco, school insulating teams in London, waste-land-to-veggies-gardeners in New Zealand, and solar panel installers in Kenya.
Well, Duxbury is planting trees so come and be part of this historic event.
Friday, October 1, 2010
10/10/10
For information on 350.org and the other events taking place that day go to their website and check it out. As they say: On that day, all over the world, people will be working for the environment. On 10/10/10, we will celebrate climate solutions and send our politicians a clear message: "We're getting to work—what about you?"
Bill McKibben and a few others begain this group just a few years ago. Here is some information on who 350.org is:
350.org is an international grassroots campaign that aims to mobilize a global climate movement united by a common call to action. By spreading an understanding of the science and a shared vision for a fair policy, we will ensure that the world creates bold and equitable solutions to the climate crisis. 350.org is an independent and not-for-profit project.
What is 350? 350 is the number that leading scientists say is the safe upper limit for carbon dioxide in our atmosphere. Scientists measure carbon dioxide in "parts per million" (ppm), so 350ppm is the number humanity needs to get below as soon as possible to avoid runaway climate change. To get there, we need a different kind of PPM-a "people powered movement" that is made of people like you in every corner of the planet.
Please stay tuned and join us in planting some trees to help our environment.