How To Reduce Premature Deaths Linked to Environmental Risks
AUDIO: Energy's Water Footprint in the Western Drought
Are Media Outlets Megaphones for Polluters?
Are media outlets doing an adequate job covering the health and environmental impacts of dirty energy corporations and other polluters?
Not according to Steve Horn, a Madison, Wisconsin-based freelance investigative journalist and writer for DeSmogBlog. Steve has found an alarming trend in one-sided media reporting on energy issues, making it difficult for the public to make informed decisions about climate change, air pollution, and our energy future.
Join Steve on Thursday, May 21 at 5 pm PT / 8 pm ET to get the scoop on media’s scanty reporting on corporate polluters and what you can do about it.
Find audio archives of past calls here.
Boardman, Oregon Coal Plant Mulls Biomass
- by George Plaven, April 6, 2015, EO Media Group
[[{"type":"media","view_mode":"media_large","fid":"451","attributes":{"alt":"boardman coal plant in oregon","class":"media-image","height":"317","style":"width: 333px; height: 220px; margin: 3px 10px; float: left;","title":"Photo: Wweek.com","width":"480"}}]]As a potential source of renewable energy, giant cane could be the answer to saving Portland General Electric’s coal-fired power plant in Boardman long after the facility quits using coal by 2020.
On the other hand, as an invasive species, giant cane could spread wild across the Columbia Basin, choking out native vegetation and undoing years of work by local tribes to restore river habitat.
A proposed bill in Salem attempts to strike a balance between the competing environmental interests. House Bill 2183 would require farmers who grow giant cane for biomass or other commercial uses to post a $1 million surety bond with the Oregon Invasive Species Council. The money would pay for costly eradication efforts, should the crop escape from the field.
Company to Burn Biomass in Escanaba, Michigan Coal-Fired Plant
- by Jenny Lancour, April 3, 2015, Escanaba Daily Press
[[{"type":"media","view_mode":"media_large","fid":"447","attributes":{"alt":"Escanaba, Michigan coal plant","class":"media-image","style":"width: 333px; height: 228px; margin: 3px 10px; float: left;","title":"Photo: Escanaba Daily Press"}}]]Anyone wanting to express comments on a company's recent proposal to buy Escanaba's power plant can attend a public hearing next week at city hall, according to city officials.
A public hearing on a purchase proposal submitted by Sterling Energy Group, Inc. will be held during the joint meeting of council and the Electrical Advisory Committee beginning at 6 p.m. CDT Wednesday in council chambers.
Sterling Energy has offered to buy the coal-fueled power plant and equipment for $250,000 and plans to invest additional funds into the property to convert the facility to burn biomass.
The plant has been for sale for several years because it is less costly for the city to buy power compared to generating energy by burning coal. Escanaba has been buying power from a supplier for more than three years.
Council announced SEG's proposal last month but took no action pending next week's public hearing allowing citizen input on the matter.
SEG - headquartered in Gary, Ind. - buys coal-fired plants which no longer have a useful life and retrofits them into biomass-fueled facilities.
Dirty Energy Ash Blamed for Toxic Soil in Greenwich, CT
- by Bill Cummings, December 28, 2014, CT Post
[[{"type":"media","view_mode":"media_large","fid":"368","attributes":{"alt":"","class":"media-image","style":"width: 250px; height: 188px; margin: 3px 10px; float: left;"}}]]The discovery of PCBs and other contaminants at Greenwich High School two years ago is only part of a mosaic of cancer-causing toxics that have cropped up at various sites around one of the nation's wealthiest, most exclusive communities.
Pollutants have now been confirmed at three other locations in Greenwich, providing new and expanding evidence of a decades-old trail of ash stretching from the high school to the west, down along both sides of the Interstate 95 corridor and directly into Long Island Sound.
Recent soil tests near an old pool at waterfront Byram Park that the town wants to replace revealed arsenic concentrations at 11 times the acceptable residential standard and the presence of an "ash type material."
Keep Corporate Polluters at Bay, Please Donate Today!
[[{"type":"media","view_mode":"media_large","fid":"360","attributes":{"alt":"","class":"media-image","height":"480","style":"width: 222px; height: 318px; margin: 3px 10px; float: left;","width":"335"}}]]Energy Justice Network is one of the few national nonprofits in the U.S. organizing with grassroots communities to say NO! to all forms of dirty energy, from fracked gas, to coal plants, to biomass and waste incineration, to nuclear power.
Over 2014, we have raised $89,700 from individual donors, only $10,300 away from our goal of $100,000! Will you contribute $15-$150 for 2015 so we can keep helping communities like yours chase corporate polluters out of town?
We know there are a lot of organizations out there clamoring for your financial support, but here's what's different about Energy Justice Network:
1) Grassroots- We offer our organizing expertise to communities fighting dirty energy proposals, empowering their advocacy, not taking it over. We provide the know-how gleaned from decades of experience pushing back against predatory polluters, so you don’t have to reinvent the wheel in your advocacy.
2) Bang For Your Buck- Our lean and mean staff of sixmeans the vast majority of your tax-deductible donation directly funds grassroots community support work, instead of wasteful organizational overhead. Your money funds the organizing, networking, and informational resources needed to protect communities like yours from corporate polluters.
3) Taking the Hard Line- We believe that any energy source requiring a smokestack or cooling tower does more harm than good to the community that hosts it. We work to develop national solidarity to support only genuinely clean energy projects that don’t pollute the air or depend on finite and unsustainable resources.
Since 1999, Energy Justice Network has been there for you to provide community organizing support, networking, research, trainings, legal and technical support, policy analysis, and so much more! Will you help ensure we can build on this support in 2015 by donating today?
You can scour the nation and not find as focused, effective, and efficient organization as Energy Justice Network to support with your tax-deductible donation. We hope we can count on your help this year by making a $15-$150 donation for 2015!
In Solidarity,
Mike, Traci, Aaron, Alex, Josh, and Samantha
A Dollar a Day Keeps the Smokestacks Away
This is not just another fundraising letter. We want to remind you of all the services we provide to help YOU protect your community from corporate polluters. After all, Energy Justice Network exists to empower, inform, advise and support grassroots activists to win victories -- transforming communities from dumping grounds for dirty energy and waste industries into vibrant places where clean solutions can flourish.
How we help you win:
Community Organizing Support and Advice - We've "been there and done that" and can help you get a community group organized and on a path to victory. We can help with strategy development, outreach plans, how to use open records laws and public hearings to your advantage, social media strategies, corporate research, designing flyers and websites, and much more.
Getting Networked! – We can put you in touch with other grassroots activists who you might want to know in your area, or those elsewhere who have fought the same company, technology or fuel, so you can learn from their experience. We also use conference calls and email discussion lists to help you connect on specific issues. We have lists on natural gas, nuclear, coal, several types of incineration (separate lists for trash, biomass, tire and poultry waste incineration), ethanol biorefineries, electric power transmission lines and more.
Information / Research – We document the problems with technologies that communities face, making complex info into useful factsheets, powerpoints and articles available through our newsletter, Energy Justice Now, and throughout our Energy Justice.net and EJnet.org websites. We have access to legal and science journal databases, and data from industry conferences that we can tap to help you.
Speaking / Trainings - Need a speaker, trainer or workshop presenter? We do trainings for students, community groups and conferences on a range of topics and skills. See Mike and Alex's topic lists for a guide.
Limited Legal and Technical Support - We help communities stop polluters with local ordinances, and understand many complex technical and legal issues.
Energy Justice Map - Our interactive mapping site tracks existing, proposed, closed and defeated dirty energy and waste facilities, the corporations behind them, and the people and groups fighting them. It allows you to share information on polluters you're fighting, let people find your group through our site, and learn what polluters are in (or planned for) your area.
Our new JusticeMap.org site is the first to enable easy race and class demographic mapping, and is being integrated into our mapping site, so you can easily build environmental justice maps, showing if polluters are targeting low-income or communities of color. Our newest EJ mapping tool allows you to evaluate environmental justice trends in entire industries.
Policy Analysis and Development - With an eye for loopholes that would allow polluting industries to continue to harm communities, we've pushed to strengthen energy, waste and climate policies at all levels of government, and among our environmental allies.
Working with Students and Youth - We have a long history with the student environmental movement, from working with the Student Environmental Action Coalition since the 1990s, to co-founding Energy Action Coalition in 2004, to founding state-wide student environmental networks in Pennsylvania and Ohio. Our new Energy Justice Shale Initiative has brought students and recent college graduates together in a group house to work with shalefield residents fighting fracking, compressor stations and pipelines in the most fracked community in the nation, in northeastern Pennsylvania.
An Energy Justice Shale Convergence is planned for mid-March to train students and others to support local residents in Susquehanna County, PA. We have other campus organizing resources compiled here.
Activist Calendar - Share your events on our calendar! It's the only one to organize events by geography, so if you sign up for our map and want event updates by email, you'll see all the major events, and only have to see the local ones for your area.
Action Alert System - Tired of using online petitions like change.org where you don't get all of the contact info from those who sign? So were we, so we made our own system, which Energy Justice member groups can also use (joining is free!). You'll get the full contact info from all who sign, and can target state or national legislators by district, or other email targets. Unlike change.org, the message will go to the target, and direct from the signer's email. Messages and alerts can include links and images, too! Contact us if you're interested.
How do we provide all of this with a skeleton crew of two full-time and four part-time people and almost no overhead costs? Let's just say, we're good at what we do, and are the best investment you can make to support grassroots work over the coming year! Please make a generous donation of $15-150 for 2015. Regular, monthly donations (no matter how small) are even better!
...and if we're the ones who should be supporting you, please be in touch and we'll join you on the path to victory!
Happy Holidays!
Mike, Traci, Aaron, Alex, Josh and Samantha
October/November issue of Energy Justice Now | Where the Climate March Tripped Up
Take a deep breath and prepare yourself for the October / November issue of Energy Justice Now, a forum for the dirty energy resistance.
- Fossil Fuel Divestment: How to Evolve the Campaign
- Are Carbon Taxes Another False Solution?
- Biomass Energy: Another Kind of Climate Change Denial
...and more!
Please share the October / November 2014 issue of Energy Justice Now with your friends, colleagues, neighbors, media, and elected officials!
Subscribe to monthly email issues of Energy Justice Now!