General

The Black Hour goes GREEN

in

The Black Hour at www.theblackhour.com
The Black Hour Radio Show goes Green April 17, 2009. This episode will focus on the emerging "Green Movement," specifically as it relates to environmental justice and social equity.

Guests include Nehanda Imara, community organizer with Communities for a Better Environment (CBE), rapper Virtuous-who also has worked at People's Grocery, and Bhret Skipper, recycling intern at Berkeley City College.

For more information, visit http://www.theblackhour.com. You can hear past shows at http://www.9thfloorradio.com/theblackhour  or listen online live at 3 p.m. (Pacific) at http://www.9thfloorradio.com.

Sweetwater Earthfest 2009

in

Sweetwater Organic Community Farm in partnership with University of South Florida's Student Environmental Association and Focus the Nation present to you Sweetwater Earthfest 2009, the first local town hall meeting of its kind.

Come join us for the first annual Sweetwater Earth Day Festival entitled “Sweetwater EarthFest: Building a Just, Healthy & Sustainable Tampa Bay” on Saturday April 18, 2009. Free admission, open to the public. Kids, families and adults of all ages welcomed. The goal of this event is to celebrate Earth Day by fostering the creation of a sustainable Tampa bay in terms of social, environmental and economic health. The festival will feature several activities including a community dialogue with a panel of speakers from around the community to mobilize energy, knowledge and action towards local projects improving any aspect of life in the Tampa Bay area. In addition, we will host a community organization expo, sustainable living skill workshops, a green market with eco-friendly products & locally-grown produce, a demonstration project area, community art project, volunteer activities, Q&A session on Florida gardening, nature-based crafts & field day activities for kids and families. Full festival schedule to be posted on our website at www.sweetwater-organic.org. 

Schedule of events (Subject to change)
9 - 11AM: Volunteer at the Farm
10 -11AM: Set up & Meet the Farmer
12 - 1:30: Community Dialogue - Including keynote speaker 
2 - 4PM: Workshops, demonstrations, tabling, and open mic performances
4-5PM: Break down

Green Schools NYC 2009

in

Green Schools NYC 2009

 

OVERVIEW

The Green Schools Alliance (GSA) and Collegiate School will host the first city-wide Green Schools Conference on April 18, 2009. Students, parents, faculty, and administrators from over 150 Public and Independent Schools with reps from government, non-profits, and green companies.

Billy Parish, Co-Founder of the Energy Action Coalition, will deliver the keynote.

 

SPREAD THE WORD!

Invite friends, colleagues, and students from your school and other schools here.

 

PROGRAM

A morning keynote kicks-off a “resource fair,” and buffet lunch, where students, faculty, parents, and administrators  meet green companies, non-profits, and model schools. The resource fair continues through the afternoon, when workshops (detailed below) are offered.

 

EARTH SCREENING

To kick off the day, join us for a special advance screening of Disneynature's first film, EARTH, only in theatres starting Earth Day, April 22. The screening will begin at 10:00am at the AMC Loews 84th Street Theatre. To RSVP, email your name, daytime phone number, school, and the number of people in your party to earthscreening@gmail.com. Disneynature has generously made this event free of charge. 

 

EVENT REGISTRATION 

Register for FREE at www.greenschoolsnyc.com

WORKSHOPS

As we near the date of the event, we will send out an electronic sign-up sheet to registered attendees for a host of technical workshops that will take place in the afternoon.

  • Green Power 101
  • Retrofitting Your Lighting
  • Measuring Your Impact: Carbon Footprints and Energy Benchmarking
  • Sustainable Food: School Lunch and Beyond
  • Student Forum
  • Parent Forum
  • Toxins in Schools
  • Tech Seminar: Tools to Take you to the Next Level
  • Reducing Your Impact: Electricity and Efficiency 

QUESTIONS? INTERESTED IN HAVING A TABLE?

Contact us at greenschoolsnyc@gmail.com

 

The Green Schools Alliance 

South Florida Seizing the Opportunities of the New Economy

in
South Florida’s Energy Future: Seizing the Opportunities of the New Economy – Together
 
Location:     Barry Kaye College of Business (BU 86), Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton campus.
Date:           Saturday, April 18, 2009, 9:30 – 1:00 pm
 
As part of Focus the Nation's nationwide community forum, on Saturday April 18, Florida Atlantic University, Lynn University, Palm Beach Community College, The City of Boca Raton, and prominent members of the local business community will host this year’s town hall meeting for Districts 19 and 22. The gathering is intended to advocate for policy change for a new economy, for the creation of green jobs and the development of common strategies to reduce the local community’s ecological footprint.
 
Focus the Nation brings together the 435 congressional districts throughout the United States to advocate for profound change in policy and action for a clean and just energy future for us, for our children, and for our children’s children.
 
All members of the community are welcome to come and make their voice heard, learn about renewable energy projects in our area, explore green careers and job opportunities, and promote sustainability projects. 
 
Registration is free, but capacity is limited. Our registration form will be posted very soon.
 
For directions, see map: http://uavp.fau.edu/Flashmap/FAUMap.html 

The Public Statement and the Art of Crisis - March 21 @ 4 p.m.

in
 
Saturday, March 21, 2009 @ 4 p.m. - 7 p.m.
The Public Statement and The Art of Crisis
The place of art within a social context at the beginning of the 21st century.

Panel disucssion accompanying exhibition

The Public Statement: Environment, Society & Institutions
by Alexey Steele and Raymond Carrillo

presented by the USC Institute for Genetic Medicine Art Gallery
2250 Alcazar Street, 2nd Floor, Los Angeles, CA 90033

Participating Artists
: Raymond Carrillo and Alexey Steele
Moderator: Dr. Mark Konecny, Associate Director and Curator of the Archives and Library, USC Institute of Modern Russian Culture

Agenda and discussion topics:

- Introduction of participating artists by the moderator
- Presentation on the topic by Raymond and Alexey
- Panel Discussion
- Q&A from the audience

The discussion will focus on Art, perceived as public in nature as well as serving as an effective communication tool, an instrument able to engage the individual, and to create an impact on a publicly relevant processes. Through highlighting the motivations and consequences of human choices and actions, as well as their impact on society and nature, through the ages Art has a unique ability to inform and inspire.
This premise inevitably provokes personal, artistic and cultural questions; and presents contradictions that can spart lively exchange not to mention some artistic soul searching.

- What's art's place in the public arena today? Does the public arena need art?
- How does crisis change the perception and function of Art?
- What is the difference in the function of Art during times of comfort vs. uncertain times of social change?
- Is whim and non-statement - a public decoration produced in fat times, a thing of the past?
- The Art and The Statement - How do Ideas differ from Ideology; How does Art differ from Propaganda?
- Is the inspiration of action always positive? Why or why not, and in what way?
- Is there a visual and aesthetic difference in representing "Don't bother ME" as opposed to "What Shall I DO" psycology?
- How does Post-Minimal Statement in Art differ from Entertainment or Decoration?
- Can Art help preserve the Purpose and Soul of a society scared by discredited Institutions?
- Can The Truth of Art compensate for a crisis of Faith in major social and economic institutions tarnished by a faded moral core and natural past prime attrition?
- Can artists bring back what bankers took from the society? Can Art re-introduce the social purpose to be any other than greed?
- How does the aesthetic quality of Art affect its credibility as a communication tool? Can good message subsitute for bad aesthetic?
- What is the position of Art in presenting and framing public conversation?
- What is the distinction between a Personal Point of View and a Group Position?
- What is the visual consequence of presenting a statement of Individual contemplation of reality as opposed to a manifestation of belonging to a group?
These are the questions contemporary artists face today. Their visual and conceptual, perhaps mutually exclusive answers will likly determine or affect the course of Art at the beginning of the 21st century, a time marked by distinct multi-polar aesthetics and arts' institutional decentralization.
This is the scope of questions the panel hopes to raise, if not answer.

About Artists
Alexey Steele, a noted Los Angeles painter of the Russian Representational School, is a passionate believer in public art as well as in the greater role of art within the life of a society. In the unique institutional/academic setting of USC’s Institute for Genetic Medicine Art Gallery Alexey is giving us a preview and an inside peek at his two new stimulating projects currently in process:
 
“The Force of Life,” which represents his belief that Art is capable of giving voice to the land in danger;
"THE RISING", that examines the drama and struggle of an un-suppressible individual creative force within the restrictions of a modern day consumerist society, while commenting on a position of art within it.
More: http://www.highartforever.com/
 
RAYMOND CARRILLO has changed his life through art and began his art career at Poly High where he created seven murals between 2006 and 2008.  With his colleague, Josh Arias, Raymond currently serves as Co-Director of the “Living Art Team” art ministry at Church of the Way in the San Fernando Valley, providing guidance and skill acquisition in graffiti, animation, and mixed media arts.
 
In the process of preparation for this exhibition, Carrillo and his friends from the Living Art Team were accepted into a mentorship program with Alexey Steele.
The Rising
The Rising
In Nature's Cathedral
In Nature's Cathedral
Crime Scene - same place as In Nature's Cathedral
Crime Scene - same place as In Nature's Cathedral
 
 

The Public Statement and The Art of Crisis

in
(event)
 
Saturday, March 21, 2009 @ 4 p.m. - 7 p.m.
The Public Statement and The Art of Crisis
The place of art within a social context at the beginning of the 21st century.

Panel disucssion accompanying exhibition

The Public Statement: Environment, Society & Institutions
by Alexey Steele and Raymond Carrillo

presented by the USC Institute for Genetic Medicine Art Gallery
2250 Alcazar Street, 2nd Floor, Los Angeles, CA 90033

Participating Artists
: Raymond Carrillo and Alexey Steele
Moderator: Dr. Mark Konecny, Associate Director and Curator of the Archives and Library, USC Institute of Modern Russian Culture

Agenda and discussion topics:

- Introduction of participating artists by the moderator
- Presentation on the topic by Raymond and Alexey
- Panel Discussion
- Q&A from the audience

The discussion will focus on Art, perceived as public in nature as well as serving as an effective communication tool, an instrument able to engage the individual, and to create an impact on a publicly relevant processes. Through highlighting the motivations and consequences of human choices and actions, as well as their impact on society and nature, through the ages Art has a unique ability to inform and inspire.
This premise inevitably provokes personal, artistic and cultural questions; and presents contradictions that can spart lively exchange not to mention some artistic soul searching.

- What's art's place in the public arena today? Does the public arena need art?
- How does crisis change the perception and function of Art?
- What is the difference in the function of Art during times of comfort vs. uncertain times of social change?
- Is whim and non-statement - a public decoration produced in fat times, a thing of the past?
- The Art and The Statement - How do Ideas differ from Ideology; How does Art differ from Propaganda?
- Is the inspiration of action always positive? Why or why not, and in what way?
- Is there a visual and aesthetic difference in representing "Don't bother ME" as opposed to "What Shall I DO" psycology?
- How does Post-Minimal Statement in Art differ from Entertainment or Decoration?
- Can Art help preserve the Purpose and Soul of a society scared by discredited Institutions?
- Can The Truth of Art compensate for a crisis of Faith in major social and economic institutions tarnished by a faded moral core and natural past prime attrition?
- Can artists bring back what bankers took from the society? Can Art re-introduce the social purpose to be any other than greed?
- How does the aesthetic quality of Art affect its credibility as a communication tool? Can good message subsitute for bad aesthetic?
- What is the position of Art in presenting and framing public conversation?
- What is the distinction between a Personal Point of View and a Group Position?
- What is the visual consequence of presenting a statement of Individual contemplation of reality as opposed to a manifestation of belonging to a group?
These are the questions contemporary artists face today. Their visual and conceptual, perhaps mutually exclusive answers will likly determine or affect the course of Art at the beginning of the 21st century, a time marked by distinct multi-polar aesthetics and arts' institutional decentralization.
This is the scope of questions the panel hopes to raise, if not answer.

About Artists
Alexey Steele, a noted Los Angeles painter of the Russian Representational School, is a passionate believer in public art as well as in the greater role of art within the life of a society. In the unique institutional/academic setting of USC’s Institute for Genetic Medicine Art Gallery Alexey is giving us a preview and an inside peek at his two new stimulating projects currently in process:
 
“The Force of Life,” which represents his belief that Art is capable of giving voice to the land in danger;
"THE RISING", that examines the drama and struggle of an un-suppressible individual creative force within the restrictions of a modern day consumerist society, while commenting on a position of art within it.
More: http://www.highartforever.com/
 
RAYMOND CARRILLO has changed his life through art and began his art career at Poly High where he created seven murals between 2006 and 2008.  With his colleague, Josh Arias, Raymond currently serves as Co-Director of the “Living Art Team” art ministry at Church of the Way in the San Fernando Valley, providing guidance and skill acquisition in graffiti, animation, and mixed media arts.
 
In the process of preparation for this exhibition, Carrillo and his friends from the Living Art Team were accepted into a mentorship program with Alexey Steele.
The Rising
The Rising
In Nature's Cathedral
In Nature's Cathedral
Crime Scene - same place as In Nature's Cathedral
Crime Scene - same place as In Nature's Cathedral
 
 

The Public Statement and The Art of Crisis

Tuesday, March 17, 2009
Saturday, March 21, 2009 @ 4 p.m. - 7 p.m.

The Public Statement and The Art of Crisis
The place of art within a social context at the beginning of the 21st century.

Panel discussion accompanying exhibition
The Public Statement: Environment, Society & Institutions
by Alexey Steele and Raymond Carrillo

presented by the USC Institute for Genetic Medicine Art Gallery
2250 Alcazar Street, 2nd Floor, Los Angeles, CA 90033


Participating Artists: Raymond Carrillo and Alexey Steele
Moderator: Dr. Mark Konecny, Associate Director and Curator of the Archives and Library, USC Institute of Modern Russian Culture

Agenda and discussion topics:

  • Introduction of participating artists by the moderator.
  • Presentation on the topic by Raymond and Alexey
  • Panel Discussion
  • Q&A from the audience
The discussion will focus on Art, perceived as public in nature as well as serving as an effective communication tool, an instrument able to engage the individual, as well as to create an impact on a publicly relevant processes. Through highlighting the motivations and consequences of human choices and actions, as well as their impact on society and nature, Art has through the ages a unique ability to inform and inspire.

This premise inevitably provokes personal, artistic and cultural questions; and presents contradictions that can spark lively exchange not to mention some artistic soul searching.

  • What's art's place in the public arena today? Does the public arena need art?
  • How does crisis change the perception and function of Art?
  • What is the difference in the function of Art during times of comfort vs. uncertain times of social change?
  • Is whim and non-statement - a public decoration produced in fat times, a thing of the past?
  • The Art and The Statement - How do Ideas differ from Ideology; How does Art differ from Propaganda?
  • Is the inspiration of action always positive? Why or why not, and in what way?
  • Is there a visual and aesthetic difference in representing "Don't bother ME" as opposed to "What Shall I DO" psychology?
  • How does Post-Minimal Statement in Art differ from Entertainment or Decoration?
  • Can Art help preserve the Purpose and Soul of a society scared by discredited Institutions?
  • Can The Truth of Art compensate for a crisis of Faith in major social and economic institutions tarnished by a faded moral core and natural past prime attrition?
  • Can artists bring back what bankers took from the society? Can Art re-introduce the social purpose to be any other than greed?
  • How does the aesthetic quality of Art affect its credibility as a communication tool? Can good message substitute for bad aesthetic?
  • What is the position of Art in presenting and framing public conversation?
  • What is the distinction between a Personal Point of View and a Group Position?
  • What is the visual consequence of presenting a statement of Individual contemplation of reality as opposed to a manifestation of belonging to a group?

These are the questions contemporary artists face today. Their visual and conceptual, perhaps mutually exclusive answers will likely determine or affect the course of Art at the beginning of the 21st century, a time marked by distinct multi-polar aesthetics and arts' institutional decentralization.

This is the scope of questions the panel hopes to raise, if not answer.

About Artists

Alexey Steele, a noted Los Angeles painter of the Russian Representational School, is a passionate believer in public art as well as in the greater role of art within the life of a society. In the unique institutional/academic setting of USC’s Institute for Genetic Medicine Art Gallery Alexey is giving us a preview and an inside peek at his two new stimulating projects currently in process:
 “The Force of Life,” which represents his belief that Art is capable of giving voice to the land in danger;
"THE RISING", that examines the drama and struggle of an un-suppressible individual creative force within the restrictions of a modern day consumerist society, while commenting on a position of art within it.  More: http://www.highartforever.com/  

RAYMOND CARILLO
began his art career at Poly High where he created seven murals between 2006 and 2008.  With his colleague, Josh Arias, Raymond currently serves as Co-Director of the “Living Art Team” art ministry at Church of the Way in the San Fernando Valley, providing guidance and skill acquisition in graffiti, animation, and mixed media arts.

In the process of preparation for this exhibition, Carrillo and his friends from the Living Art Team were accepted into a mentorship program with Alexey Steele.

First Planning Meeting

in

There are enough people showing strong interst to form a planning committe and get the ball rolling on having a successful Town Hall meeting on April 18th (or around that date). The meeting will be on Sunday March 8th at 2pm on St. Edwards campus. If you are interested in attending the event, email or call me and I will let you know what room/area it is going to be in. I look forward to meeting and working with you all on this effort and can't wait untill the Town Hall! Don't hesitate to call or email me!

Dawnielle C
512-626-2672
dcastle@stedwards.edu

Reid pushing for climate change bill

JOSEF HEBERT
Friday, February 20, 2009

WASHINGTON – Saying it's time to "take a whack" at climate change, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid says he plans to push for Senate action on global warming by the end of summer.

The Nevada Democrat in an interview with The Associated Press said the Senate will take up energy legislation in a couple of weeks "and then later this year, hopefully late this summer do the global warming part of it."

Climate legislation will be among the most complex and contentious issues facing Congress.

While there is widespread agreement among both Democrats and Republicans — as well as across the business community — that global warming must be addressed, there remains a sharp divide over the details of a climate package and how best to limit the cost.

Nevertheless, Reid said he is convinced many senators want to move on the issue this year, ahead of international climate negotiations in Copenhagen, Denmark, in December.

"We have to take a whack at it," Reid said in a telephone interview late Thursday. He said failure to act "would be neglectful."

Along with climate, Reid, who is up for re-election next year, has assumed a high profile on the need to promote "clean energy" such as wind, solar and biomass that do not produce carbon dioxide, the predominant greenhouse gas. These are also energy projects popular in Reid's home state, where several major solar projects are under way or planned.

Next week, Reid will participate in a "clean energy" forum being convened by the Center for American Progress. Others participating will include former President Bill Clinton, possibly former Vice President Al Gore,and senior Obama administration officials.

Reid said the energy legislation expected to be taken up in the coming weeks will be limited largely to promoting renewable energy and energy efficiency — priorities of the Obama White House.

It is expected to say nothing about offshore oil development, or address the growing debate over whether the federal government should wield greater power in locating high-voltage transmission lines — an area of conflict between Washington and the states.

Sen. Jeff Bingaman, D-N.M., chairman of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, is crafting a national requirement for utilities to use renewable energy to generate electricity — at least 4 percent within two years, rising to a minimum of 20 percent over the following decade.

Reid said he favors a 20 percent renewable standard for utilities, but added, "We'll get by with what we can."

Many states already have requirements for utilities to use renewable energy, but attempts in Congress to establish a national mandate have fallen short repeatedly because of regional divisions. Lawmakers from the Southeast particularly have argued that utilities in their area would be hard pressed to meet a federal standard because they lack wind or solar energy resources.

Reid said he also favors some additional tax incentives aimed at spurring energy efficiency, especially for construction of more energy efficient buildings.

"We've got to give people incentives to build better buildings and also do something about the buildings that are there right now," said Reid.

But Reid said he doesn't expect the Senate to tackle the issue of offshore oil drilling again.

While Congress last fall ended a drilling moratorium that covered 85 percent of the U.S. Outer Continental Shelf, Reid said he's convinced that Obama's Interior Department will protect those areas where drilling shouldn't be allowed.

"I don't think we need to do anything legislatively," he said.

Interior Secretary Ken Salazar recently scrapped a Bush administration blueprint for offshore energy development through 2015 and said he was developing a new plan, keeping in mind that some areas are not suitable for drilling and putting greater emphasis on developing wind and wave energy projects offshore.

Syndicate content