Monday, July 26, 2010

Meet Me In Hillcrest



Image: Judy Garland Singing The Trolley Song in "Meet Me In St. Louis." She Was So Green!

I live by UC San Diego, and I love the lovely La La Jolla area, Dahlings, and having seals for neighbors. However, it is isolated from my tribe in Hillcrest, and our very pretty and lively downtown, except by I-805 and I-5. Driving is a slow, smoggy, expensive bore, often. We simply have no truly viable mass transit, from north to south in San Diego, unless you want to broil to a crisp waiting for an occasional bus at stops without shelters. No, thank you. The coaster train is wonderful, but has few stops.
The local planning entity, SANDAG, is hooking us up by approving a new trolley, which connects to other mass transit at Old Town.  Assuming they get $600M! BTW, I don't care for the phrase "mass transit." How about something more  clang, clang, clangish like the  Judy Garland Trolley. See actual trolley map 

Source: Signonsandiego.com

"As expected, the SANDAG board of directors this morning selected the route for a $1.2 billion extension of the San Diego Trolley north from Old Town to the UCSD campus and University Town Centre.
The new 11-mile trolley route is expected to be in operation in early 2015. Conservative estimates expect 20,000 riders per day, comparable to the Green Line which services San Diego State University and the Mission Valley shopping centers...
...Elyse Lowe, executive director of Move San Diego, endorsed the trolley selection but said serious consideration is needed to the bus routes that serve the densely populated coastal area."

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Proud to Vote No on Proposition 23 (SDGLN Cross Post) July 13, 2010


"As San Diego Pride approaches, we deserve to both celebrate and take stock of all that we do for our own equality and for the whole globe.
As I pointed out in a piece on SDGLN, polls show that the LGBT community leads the nation in Green awareness, and our ethics embody the desire to save both nature and humanity from the rapidly growing dangers of a very real warming of the Earth’s climate.
We also lead in other, painful ways, as we are all too familiar with the danger from ballot attacks funded by out -of -state interests with lots of cash, as Prop. 8 demonstrated.
Even as BP’s errors and evasions are destroying self-reliant communities and creatures in the Gulf states, Texas oil companies Valero and Tesaro have the audacity to drill down into our community in an effort to win votes and kill an existing California Green law.
We have all seen this movie before. Scene 1: Mix a murky, toxic formula of fear, deception and millions of dollars. Scene 2: Get on the ballot in California, stop progress and maintain the status quo. Scene 3: Keep America addicted to oil, regardless of the consequences.
Proposition 23 will be on our November ballot, and it’s crucial that we stand together on this issue as an LGBT community. We must defend our innovative state and the planet, and reject Prop 23.
Why? Four years ago, with support from businesses, labor, environmental and health organizations, California passed a clean air law – AB 32 – that holds polluters accountable and requires them to reduce air pollution that threatens human health and contributes to global climate change.
This law, building on decades of state clean energy policies, has launched our state to the forefront of the clean technology industry – sparking innovation and clean energy businesses that are creating hundreds of thousands of new California jobs.
A clean California economy and our equality are at stake
The Texas oil companies’ initiative will allow polluters to avoid our state’s clean energy standards, kill competition and jobs from California's clean technology companies, and keep us addicted to dirty fossil fuels.
Many new clean tech jobs and inclusive companies are being created in San Diego’s clean tech hub right now because of the existing bipartisan clean energy law that Texas oil wants to light a match to.
The Texas carpetbaggers have some allies in California, such as billionaire Meg Whitman, Republican candidate for governor, who has said she would roll back clean air (and clean tech efforts) as a top priority if she is elected. However, a statewide coalition, StopDirtyEnergy, public interest groups Courage Campaign, California Bright Spot and others have entered the arena to defeat Prop 23.
Like all Californians, the San Diego LGBT community obviously needs new Green jobs, clean air, and a new clean energy standard. But we also need to send a loud, proud and unequivocal message:
Conservative Texas power trippers, don’t mess with our state or the LGBT community again!
For if Prop. 23 succeeds, external anti-gay forces will certainly be emboldened to try and parachute back into the Golden State and further diminish our rights. This summer Pride season, San Diego can start to show Texas oil what real power is all about by committing to reject this heinous proposition in the fall.
Kathleen Connell is a sustainability strategy consultant in San Diego and blogs about Green and the LGBT community at www.equalitygreen.blogspot.com. She is a member of the San Diego AB 32 Task Force, and a board member of The Sustainability Alliance of Southern California."

Friday, July 2, 2010

It's Green Over The Rainbow In Hillcrest

Colored lights brighten Hillcrest night
LED devices shine up onto palm trees

BY KAITLIN SCHLUTER, CONTRIBUTING WRITER
THURSDAY, JULY 1, 2010 AT 9:41 P.M.

The skies of Hillcrest lit up with dazzling colors Thursday night — and it wasn’t even Independence Day.

More than 50 LED devices have been installed in the median along University Avenue between 10th Avenue and Normal Street. The Hillcrest Business Association funded the project, which took six months to complete and cost roughly $70,000. The devices, which shine upward onto palm trees, can be programmed to give off different hues for community events and holidays.

These include all the colors of the rainbow for the San Diego LGBT Pride week, red and yellow for San Diego City Fest, and green and purple for Mardi Gras.

“If the Chargers win a game ... we can do blue and gold,” said Benjamin Nicholls, executive director of the Hillcrest Business Association.

Each fixture contains flat little panels that generate light and color. The display is programmed by computer software to shine any palette. It’s green-friendly, too, giving off no heat and designed for longevity so bulbs don’t have to be changed often.

Dianne Sheridan, lighting specialist with Dianne Sheridan Designs, worked on the project, which contains a special clock that notifies the system to turn on once the sun disappears.

The hope is that the glow attracts patrons like moths.

“It’s a tangible reflection of the vibrant business community that’s already there,” said San Diego City Councilman Todd Gloria, whose district includes Hillcrest. He was invited to flip the switch Thursday.

The Hillcrest Business Association has posted a clip of the lights on YouTube.

Kaitlin Schluter: (619) 293-2043; kaitlin.schluter@uniontrib.com




- Posted using BlogPress mobile by Kat