Archives

August 7th 1-3pm Green Party rally on the Ithaca Commons

When: August 7th, from 1:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m.

What: Green Party rally on the Ithaca Commons, calling for a ban on hydrofracking and support for green energy, with the following speakers:

Colia Clark, Green Party NY 2010 candidate for U.S. Senate

Cecile Lawrence, Green Party candidate for U.S. Senate.

Howie Hawkins, Green Party NY 2010 candidate for Governor of New York, may make a surprise appearance

Urgent! Call in Support of Moratorium

In the past few weeks our combined efforts have brought the Sweeney/Thompson 11-month moratorium back to life.  Last week several Republicans came out in support of the moratorium, and Senate leadership took up the issue.  Now, as the Legislature returns to session and many expect the bill to come to a vote, oil and gas corporations are increasing the pressure on legislators in an effort to defeat a moratorium. The industry has devoted more than $1 million this year to lobbying the Governor and Legislature, with $350,000 spent just since May.

Gas corporations are pinning their hopes on politics as usual, but we’ve come too far to let the industry stop us now!  The wind is at our backs, but we need to make our voices heard in this final push to get a bill passed.

CALL our leaders in Albany and tell them to stand up to the corporate bullies.  We need them to do everything they can to build and maintain support for the moratorium in the face of this threat to our water and public health.

Senate Majority Leader John Sampson
518-455-2788

Senator Antoine Thompson
518-455-3371

Assembly Majority Leader Sheldon Silver
518-455-3791

[read more about industry lobbying in today's Times Herald-Record:
http://tinyurl.com/BackBurnerSenator ]

Please forward widely.

Frack Action
www.frackaction.com
(347) 709-3585

Appalachia Rising is September 25th-27th

“We will not stand idly by as we see mountaintop removal blast our mountain heritage to rubble, eliminate our communities and mountains, and poison our neighbors, as coal executives and their shareholders grow rich. Appalachians are not, and never will be, collateral damage for our nation’s energy consumption!” Vision Statement, Appalachia Rising.This cry is echoing from every corner of Appalachia – will you respond?
Appalachia Rising is September 25-27 in Washington DC. It is a movement gathering and day of action calling for the abolition of mountaintop removal and strip mining in Appalachia. Mountaintop removal has destroyed over 500 of the world’s oldest mountains and contaminated our nation’s water resources. Stand with us on Monday, September 27, 2010 in our nation’s capital for an end to mountaintop removal and a renewed vision of Appalachia.
Click here to register or go to www.appalachiarising.org/registration/reg1.php
Communities across Appalachia and America are mobilizing for Appalachia Rising. Join their ranks and organize your friends, family, and community for Appalachia Rising by filling out this 5 question form by clicking here.
By joining the organizing team, you will be working with the likes of these four Appalachian heroes.
Mickey and Nina McCoy, Kentucky: Mickey and Nina McCoy live in Inez, Kentucky, in the heart of eastern Kentucky’s coal-ravaged mountains. “Our streams were killed and people’s homes flooded by over 300 million gallons of toxic coal sludge from a breach in Massey Energy’s Martin County sludge dam on October 11, 2000. We are yet to see the full extent of the devastation. Cancer rates are rising in the toxic flood’s wake – now is the time for action, before it is too late,” said Mickey McCoy.
Jane Branham, Appalachia Virginia: In Wise County, Virginia, retired underground miners and residents are uniting to defend Ison Rock Ridge from obliteration at the hands of A & G Coal. Their state Department of Mines, Minerals, and Energy approved the company’s application for 1,230 acre mountaintop removal site. “This is another permit being railroaded by state regulatory agencies,” said Jane Branham, Vice-President of Southern Appalachian Mountain Stewards. “We have significant concerns about the impact of this permit on our waterways, our community and quality of life for those of us who live in the shadow of this permit.”
Judy Bonds, Coal River Valley, West Virginia: The mountains that rise above the Coal River Valley and the communities in the valleys below are disappearing as blasts resound through the narrow river valley and rubble is pushed onto the headwaters of the Ohio River. Judy Bonds was the last woman out of her mountain-holler home when Massey Energy moved in to build a 9 billion gallon coal slurry dam on Coal River Mountain: Brushy Fork. She said, ”Stop Bombing Appalachia. We demand an end to the blasting of our ancestral mountains and homes and an end to the poisoning of our streams. On September 27th, we will stand with all Americans to demand clean water for all our children and grandchildren.”
Appalachia Rising is 100% funded by grassroots donations. Please make it possible, make a donation by clicking here.
Appalachia Rising Day of Action is Endorsed By:

Organizations: Coal River Mountain Watch, On Coal River, Coal Country, Burning the Future, Rainforest Action Network, Student Environmental Action Coalition, Mountain Justice, Climate Ground Zero, Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition, Energy Justice Network, Rising Tide, Chesapeake Climate Action Network, West Virginia Labor History Association, Progressive Democrats of West Virginia, Progressive Democrats of America, Mountain Keepers, United for Peace and Justice, Great Turning, Appalachian Institute for Renewable Energy, Topless America Project, Earth Savers, Heartwood, Kentucky Heartwood, the CLEAN, United Mountain Defense, Green America, Beehive Collective, WildEarth Guardians, NY Loves Mountains, Church of Life After Shopping, WV Mountain Party, Northern Virginia Greens, Earthjustice (VM), Presbyterian Earthcare, Social Justice Committee of the UU Ohio-Meadville District, 2/3 Goat, Demolition String Band, Nuclear Information and Resource Services, The Great Turning, Canary Coalition, 350.org, Southern Appalachian Mountain Stewards (VM), Gray Panthers of Metropolitan Washington, Washington Peace Center, Action Center, American Coal Productions, Burning the Future: Coal in America, Recycling Education, Clean Power Now, RRENEW, Talking Across the Lines, Just Seeds, Climate Pledge of Resistance, North Carolina Waste Awareness and Reduction Network, Green Delaware, Energy Action Coalition, Eastern PA Permaculture Association, Peaceful Uprising, Beyond Talk, One Life

Celebrities: Silas House, Jason Howard, Kathy Mattea, Mari-Lynn Evans, Ashley Judd, James Hansen, Gloria Reuben,  Ed Begley Jr., Colin Beavman,  Woody Harrelson,  Darryl Hannah, Kyra Sedgewick, Kevin Bacon, Reverend Billy

Movement Leaders: Judy Bonds, Maria Gunnoe, Bo Webb, Chuck Nelson, Mickey McCoy, Nina McCoy, Teri Blanton, Bev May, Wendell Berry

(VM) – Indicates endorsement of Voices from the Mountains only.

Shaleshock Meeting

Shaleshock Meeting from 6 – 7:30pm at the Shaleshock Outreach Office. 115 E. MLK St (the commons)

Agenda:
- EPA Hearings briefing and update (specific meeting for this on monday)
- Role of Shaleshock.org in supporting the larger network of organizations
- Re-Imagining Shaleshock. What and Who? (let’s make a new diagram)
- Outreach efforts and feedback

-SHSH at State Fair

-Trailer Billboards about Fracking

-Ryan

Water Monitoring Training

Our beautiful, clean watersheds of the Cayuta and Catatonk Creeks are up to us to preserve. With increased industrial activity slated for our area (from shale gas extraction), we need to be prepared. Gathering baseline data and monitoring stream health are powerful tools we can use to protect our water resources.

Your help is needed! Do you have a favorite fishing spot or swimming hole? Do you live near a creek or in the watershed? Do you like spending time out doors? Do you want to participate in a community science project and learn more about your local environment?

Please come and get trained by Dr. Stephen Penningroth, director of Community Science Institute on how to create and implement a water-monitoring project.

Tentative workshop topics are:

1) August 29th, 3pm to 6pm. Maps, watersheds, and general land use impacts on water quality;

2) September 12th, 3pm to 6pm. Monitoring techniques: a) “Red flag” indicator tests for gas well contamination: temperature, conductivity, total hardness, pH and dissolved oxygen; b) Benthic macroinvertebrates (BMI); and c) Observational monitoring.

3) TBA. Identification of gas well permits; selection of monitoring locations.

4) TBA. A fourth workshop devoted exclusively to BMI could be added if there are volunteers interested in investing the time to learn this powerful biological monitoring technique.

Workshops will be held at:

the Spencer Municipal Building (behind the library)
41 N. Main Street, Spencer, NY 14883

For more information or to RSVP (appreciated but not required)

Call Candace at 589-6412

Water Monitoring Training

Our beautiful, clean watersheds of the Cayuta and Catatonk Creeks are up to us to preserve. With increased industrial activity slated for our area (from shale gas extraction), we need to be prepared. Gathering baseline data and monitoring stream health are powerful tools we can use to protect our water resources.

Your help is needed! Do you have a favorite fishing spot or swimming hole? Do you live near a creek or in the watershed? Do you like spending time out doors? Do you want to participate in a community science project and learn more about your local environment?

Please come and get trained by Dr. Stephen Penningroth, director of Community Science Institute on how to create and implement a water-monitoring project.

Tentative workshop topics are:

1) August 29th, 3pm to 6pm. Maps, watersheds, and general land use impacts on water quality;

2) September 12th, 3pm to 6pm. Monitoring techniques: a) “Red flag” indicator tests for gas well contamination: temperature, conductivity, total hardness, pH and dissolved oxygen; b) Benthic macroinvertebrates (BMI); and c) Observational monitoring.

3) TBA. Identification of gas well permits; selection of monitoring locations.

4) TBA. A fourth workshop devoted exclusively to BMI could be added if there are volunteers interested in investing the time to learn this powerful biological monitoring technique.

Workshops will be held at:

the Spencer Municipal Building (behind the library)
41 N. Main Street, Spencer, NY 14883

For more information or to RSVP (appreciated but not required)

Call Candace at 589-6412

Volunteer Water Monitoring Training Workshop Series

Our beautiful, clean watersheds of the Cayuta and Catatonk Creeks are up to us to preserve. With increased industrial activity slated for our area (from shale gas extraction), we need to be prepared. Gathering baseline data and monitoring stream health are powerful tools we can use to protect our water resources.

Your help is needed! Do you have a favorite fishing spot or swimming hole? Do you live near a creek or in the watershed? Do you like spending time out doors? Do you want to participate in a community science project and learn more about your local environment?

Please come and get trained by Dr. Stephen Penningroth, director of Community Science Institute on how to create and implement a water-monitoring project.

Tentative workshop topics are:

1) August 29th, 3pm to 6pm. Maps, watersheds, and general land use impacts on water quality;

2) September 12th, 3pm to 6pm. Monitoring techniques: a) “Red flag” indicator tests for gas well contamination: temperature, conductivity, total hardness, pH and dissolved oxygen; b) Benthic macroinvertebrates (BMI); and c) Observational monitoring.

3) TBA. Identification of gas well permits; selection of monitoring locations.

4) TBA. A fourth workshop devoted exclusively to BMI could be added if there are volunteers interested in investing the time to learn this powerful biological monitoring technique.

Workshops will be held at:

the Spencer Municipal Building (behind the library)
41 N. Main Street, Spencer, NY 14883

For more information or to RSVP (appreciated but not required)

Call Candace at 589-6412