Wednesday, May 25, 2016

The Case For Holding Climate Change Deniers Accountable




 The Case For Holding Climate Change Deniers Accountable

The Joy Cardin Show on WPR aired an interesting and highly recommended program on the topic of climate change. 

The Case For Holding Climate Change Deniers Accountable
WPR program aired on 5/20/16
7:00am Joy Cardin Show


Guest: Michael Kraft
Michael Kraft is a professor emeritus of political science and public and environmental affairs at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay.

 Link to WPR program

Link to Michael Kraft's original article:

Tuesday, May 17, 2016

It's the transportation, stupid!

On Friday, May 20, UWL will host the Active Transportation conference where people from around the region will discuss methods to encourage and accelerate effective strategies for engaging people in active modes of transportation. The more people who bicycle, walk, and take public transportation to work, school, errands, recreation, the few people will be driving. Since personal vehicle use contributes and large part of the United States' greenhouse gas emissions, whatever can be done to decrease personal driving will help reduce climate change causing emissions. Interested citizens can sign up for the afternoon sessions and an active transportation lunch.

The following day, May 21, the Wisconsin Bike Summit will be held at the Radisson in La Crosse. This day long event will cover many aspects of bicycling from economic benefits of having a bicycle friendly community and including bicycling in tourism planning, to infrastructure design, to vulnerable user laws, to encouraging bicycling among various segments of our society. Mayor Tim Kabat will speak at the conference opening and Prof. James Longhurst of UWL will be the luncheon keynote speaker.

Both these events point to the importance of non-personal-vehicle travel to health, economics, livable communities, and a sustainable planet.
A new book, Why We Drive: The past, present, and future of the automobile in the United States, uses comics, text, historic pictures, charts, and graphs to show how much we have been taken over by car culture. It was recommended during the planning of the recent anti-frac sand rally. The frac sand creates its own hazards and dangers to the health of people, animals, natural area, and *communities, but it is also the first step on the path to the dangerous practice of extracting fossil fuels for use in energy production and transportation. It is not easy to change this culture, especially when so many businesses and policies have been build up to sustain it, but we must change it and we have to do it now.

A great letter to the editor by Minnesota fractivist Donna Buckbee points out that fracking is related to how we "get here."
The question “How did we get here?" really needs to be about something more profound than our mode of transportation to a rally. We need to start asking, “How did we get so dependent on fossil fuels that we're willing to destroy the planet?”
While doing research in an online archive of old newspapers from Iowa's pioneer past, I came across this map of rail routes through Iowa. One could take a train from Decorah to any corner of the state in the, "comfortable DAY COACHES, magnificent PULLMAN PALACE PARLOR and SLEEPING CARS, elegant DINING CARS, ... [and] ... restful RECLINING CHAIR CARS." This is from 1876.

 Contrast this miracle of modern transportation (from 1876) with a recent effort to not drive to a conference in Madison. The conference was from about 10 a.m. to about 1 p.m. There is ONE bus that goes from La Crosse to Madison and it leaves in the afternoon and arrives in Madison at about 6:00 p.m. So, one would have to leave a day early and stay in Madison overnight. Fine. There's plenty to do in Madison including some mighty fine restaurants, so let's make a little trip out of it. But, oh oh, coming back ... there is ONE bus that goes from Madison to La Crosse and it leaves at 10:35 a.m. and arrives in La Crosse in the early afternoon. Hmmm. That's a SECOND night stay over in Madison. And the round trip ticket cost is more than twice the cost of gas for a car. Clearly, the bus is not going to cut it.

What about the train. We are fortunate to have an Amtrak line going through our city. Alas, Amtrak does not go to the capitol of our state. Your choices are take a train to Chicago and a bus to Madison - a five hour trip that costs about $70 one way OR take the train to Columbus, Wisconsin and a bus from there. But - yikes - the Amtrak pulls into Columbus at about 1:00 p.m. and the bus that goes from Columbus to Madison leaves Columbus at 12:40 p.m.


Meanwhile, in the tiny burg of Wehe-den-Hoorn, Netherlands, a village of fewer than 1,000 inhabitants, several buses per day will transport you to a regional transportation hub where you can connect to a very expansive web of trains and buses that will get you from there to the whole of Europe and beyond for a very reasonable fee and usually on time and in comfort.

You have to assume that even a fifth grader could come up with a better transportation system than we have here in Wisconsin where we are pretty much forced to drive personal vehicles over increasingly *crumbling roads to get anywhere. What if our lives, our planet, depended on changing this system?

It DOES!


Wednesday, May 11, 2016

TWO local TV stations broadcast LIVE from the ban frac sand rally!

That's right, both WXOW and WKBT had live reports on their 5:00 newscast from the rally to ban frac sand mining and address climate change! The WXOW coverage is here and the WKBT story can be found here. If you couldn't make it to the rally but want to be inspired by the amazing speakers, a full video can be found on the HCGAP page.

[Update]: Please read this good article by local La Crosse Tribune reporter Chris Hubbuch, too.

Monday, May 9, 2016

We've got the media's attention!

Thanks to a press conference this afternoon at which over a dozen organizations spoke, our opposition to the frac sand mining conference has made the news, both on television and on the La Crosse Tribune website. A full video of the press conference is available on youtube - please share far and wide! All the speakers that represented their organizations today were amazing, and there are more excellent speakers on tap for the rally tomorrow! Also, the Root Note has generously offered to provide refreshments at the rally and invites all participants to their café (115 4th St.) after the event. - Kathy

Sunday, May 8, 2016

Don't stop thinking about tomorrow


On Friday, Elizabeth Kolbert, Pulitzer prize winning author of The Sixth Extinction, wrote an article called, Fort McMurray and the Fires of Climate Change. She reminded us that, "We are all consumers of oil, not to mention coal and natural gas, which means that we’ve all contributed to the latest inferno. We need to own up to our responsibility and then we need to do something about it. The fire next time is one that we’ve been warned about, and that we’ve all had a hand in starting."

On Saturday, the Center for Media and Democracy's PR Watch reported that the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) has appointed a new chair of their climate change denial task force. The new chair is part of the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association. If you are a rural electric co-op member, you might be asking yourself (and your co-op) why they are in any way connected to ALEC and are any of the fees you pay used to pay for ALEC memberships. Just one (or so) question you might ask.

Today, the Sierra Club sent members a special mother's day message: Take action to protect mothers from toxic fracking. They note, "Fracking pollutes our water with dangerous chemicals that put the health of mothers and children at risk. This Mother's Day, call on the EPA to fully study the impacts of fracking pollution on our drinking water."

Today, Kathy Allen had an excellent letter to the editor in the La Crosse Tribune. She wrote, in part, "Humanity is addicted to fossil fuels and it's making us sick." It's making individuals sick and it's making the planet sick. 

Monday, a group of climate change deniers will open a conference in La Crosse telling people how to start even more frac sand mines. It's as if a doctor has diagnosed your children with a serious illness caused by junk food and your brother in law decides to throw a junk food party in your back yard.


Tuesday, May 10, you can make your voice heard by participating in the rally to ban frac sand mining and address climate change. The rally starts at 5 p.m. (with pre-rally activities starting at 3) at the corner of Second and Jay Streets (rain or shine!) It's the least you can do, but it's the most you can do on Tuesday at 5.

After that, plan to do something - reduce your driving, research a candidate, pledge to use public transportation, join an advocacy group, write to Ron Kind urging him to quit pushing the toxic TPP trade agreement, talk to your neighbors, think about tomorrow.  - cathy

Sunday, May 1, 2016

Rally to Ban Frac Sand Mining and Address Climate Change!

When: Tuesday, May 10, 5:00 p.m.

Where: The plaza outside La Crosse Center (2nd and Pearl Streets)

Why: Frac sand mining is not only destructive to our local environment, it supports fracking for oil and natural gas, which contributes to climate change.

What: Bring signs and your enthusiasm to make a difference for our region, our planet, and all its inhabitants!

CRCA is co-hosting this event with several partners, including Houston County Protectors, Land Stewardship Project, and Citizens Against Silica Mining (CASM). If you know of a group, large or small, that would like to join in hosting this event and promoting a frac sand mining ban, please let us know!

You can invite your friends and let us know you're coming through the Facebook event page: https://www.facebook.com/events/1755472391405833/