Thursday, October 20, 2011

Green Experts Academy, San Diego November 16: New... More Leaders To Brief on Success in the Green Economy



Green Leaders Share Success Strategies, Latest Information • Evolve Your Green Plans and Career •  Engage in Public Policy
November 16, 2011 5:30PM-9:00PM
Agenda details and registration:
Event Hosting Sponsor: Cricket Communications, Inc. $23 plus Eventbrite fee. $30 at the door. Includes catered meal, beverages, and free parking at the venue.  Presented by The Connell Whittaker Group LLC
Part I:  Leadership Briefings: Ms. Lisa Bicker, Consultant, Former CEO and President of CleanTECH San Diego. David Steel, CEO, US Green Chamber of Commerce. Commissioner Robert Coleman, City of Chula Vista. 

Part II:  Green Workshop: 7 Steps You Must Take To Grow Your Green Career and/or Business and the Green Economy
(Bring your ideas, plan and/or resume and business cards, for a hands-on workshop to advance your goals)
Part III: Green Policy Brainstorm
                                • • •
 The Green Space and sustainability are the future of the global economy, if we are to overcome the challenges of climate change.  What does Green success require, and what does it take to succeed in this emerging sector? Expert Green leaders will speak on this topic, and a hands-on workshop will enable attendees to vet and refine their Green goals. Also, real-time policy engagement via a Green Policy Brainstorm, with results communicated to staff in the San Diego Mayor's Office. Join us for this dynamic event, and come away inspired and empowered to take the next steps to reach your goals!
The November 16th event is supported by our generous Host Sponsor, Cricket Communications, Inc.  The seminar and workshop will be held in Cricket's LEED-certified corporate headquarters in San Diego, California.   Register Today!

Where: Cricket Communications, Inc. corporate headquarters office, San Diego, California.  Training Room, 1st Floor.
Address:  
5887 Copley Drive
San Diego, CA 92111
"Success Strategies in the Green Sector During Turbulent Times"  is a diversity  and equality-friendly event.


Tuesday, September 13, 2011

CLEANTECH AND GREEN ECONOMY SECTOR LEADERS TO SHARE LATEST INFO ON GREEN JOBS & GREEN ECONOMY SEPT. 15 AT SAN DIEGO SEMINAR

(San Diego, August 29, 2011)  “San Diego CleanTech Beach:  Riding The Green Jobs and Economy Wave” http://sandiegocleantechbeach.eventbrite.com is an event that is designed to help people launch or expand clean technology careers, start-ups and community initiatives by providing briefings from leaders in the Green economy sector.  The September 15 event is hosted by The Connell Whittaker Group LLC. (see http://www.missiontohumanity.com).  The location is San Diego Environmental Services 9601 Ridgehaven Court , First Floor Auditorium, San Diego, CA 92123 (Free Parking) Thursday, September 15, 2011 from 5:30 PM to 8:00 PM (PT)
In the wake of new studies and confusing media reports about the status of the Green economy, many career changers, entrepreneurs, and others are in need of reliable information and networking to help reach their business goals.  CleanTech Beach speakers are leaders in the sector and will offer reality-based briefings on the 2011 status of the local and state Green economy.
Speakers and topics include:
6:00-6:20 pm  Jacques Chirazi, Office of the Mayor of San Diego, Cleantech Program Manager:  “The CleanTECH San Diego Success Story and Jobs Outlook”
6:20-6:40 pm  Bill Powers, P.E. Powers Engineering, and Author, San Diego Smart Energy 2020 Distributed Generation Plan:  “Insights Into The California Plan for Green Job Growth, and Briefing on Distributed Energy”
6:40-7:00 pm  Arun Kumar, MSEE, MBA, LEEP AP, and President, Global Renewable Energy & Power Inc.:  “Greening the Globe From The Web:  Global Green Job Training and Job Creation From San Diego to India and Beyond
7:00-7:30 pm  Emily Young, PhD, Senior Director, Environment Analysis & Strategy, San Diego Foundation:  “Findings from the San Diego Foundation Regional Clean Jobs Study, and Building Our Vision for the Future of the Region.”
Event organizer Kathleen Connell of the Connell Whittaker Group stated:
“Recently, the Brookings Institution released a report on the status of our national green economy, which found that 2.7 million Americans work at green jobs.  In San Diego, over 810 Cleantech companies have taken root, local entrepreneurs are creating jobs and consumer-focused businesses.   Organizations  of all types are implementing sustainability and energy efficiency practices, which can also create jobs.  Certainly, more needs to be done, but the US Conference of Mayors estimates that the number of green jobs will almost triple by 2040.  So, the landscape is shifting, and people need quality up-to-date information and connections to break into the sector.   Our event is designed to orient folks about the status of local Green jobs and businesses, and point them to where the action is happening, even as Washington is slow to act, in our view. Attendees will also have the opportunity to ask what can be done to create more jobs and to find out about planning and growth that are already underway in California and San Diego.”
News from ReleaseWire.

Monday, August 1, 2011

Making Green Jobs Equal Jobs




With new Green and Cleantech companies emerging, there is an opportunity to make sure that a "Green Job is an Equal Job."
Green employers and employees should set a high bar for workplace inclusion, and there is room for improvement. Overall, 60 percent of all corporate employers offer domestic partner benefits, according to HRC. A new study by the Department of Labor shows that DP benefits are actually available to only 20-30 percent of workers overall.

Urging new Green companies to be inclusive can up these percentages as solar and other Cleantech firms are gaining market share in the US economy. You can ask, for example, solar providers about thier diversity policy. The same goes for other companies in the sustainability space. It it's Green, clean and sustainable, a product or service needs to be created in
an equality workplace as well.
---

Source: HRC
"New Data on Domestic Partner Benefits

For the first time, data on domestic partner benefits was included as part of the Department of Labor’s National Compensation Survey (NCS). This is the first time that a federal government survey has asked employers about domestic partner benefits. HRC President Joe Solmonese released the following statement:

The inclusion of domestic partner data in major surveys and studies presents new opportunities to fully understand and address the challenges that LGBT people face.

Offering domestic partner benefits has increasingly become a standard best practice in America's workplaces, with nearly 60% of Fortune 500 companies offering them. The data released in the NCS reflects that progress, but also reminds us that, despite the advances in corporate America, many American workers still lack access to equal benefits for their families. For example, the NCS shows that only 29% of private sector workers have access to health insurance benefits for a same-sex domestic partner, and that number drops to around 20% in the South and Midwest."
---

- Kathleen Connell, M.A.

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Will San Diego LGBT Candidates Lead With Green Jobs and Equality?...Going Beyond Gay...




Three out of the four viable and/or likely candidates for Mayor of San Diego
are LGBT! The Republican candidates aside, what must happen is that the progressive LGBT candidate ( Christine Kehoe) and Bob Filner-who is not gay but can garner LGBT support- must put job creation-and green job creation- as number one on thier agenda.

Thus the progressive LGBT community is in a unique position to support the green candidate, green job creation for all in San Diego, as well as equal rights. Now that's far reaching Equality Green power, and "beyond Gay" Pride power as well.

Global Warming is hitting poorer countries and our LGBT family there first. We can support them by supporting LGBT candidates who will take action locally on both equality and climate issues as well.
Happy Pride Month!


- Kathleen Connell, M.A.

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

LGBT Humanitarians Help Climate Change Victims: Aid For Twister Communities

May 31, 2011

A call for action was issued today from the rainbowfund.org. Weather, and in this case, most likely global warming-related tornadoes, have inspired a San Francisco LGBT group to help the survivors. Please donate today at the link below. After all, these are our neighbors and family too.

Source: rainbowfund.org

U.S. Disaster Fund
Beginning in April the United States has been hit by a series of natural disasters resulting in over 425 deaths and $260 billion in property damage.
  • A violent tornado outbreak from April 25 – 28 produced destructive tornadoes in Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia. 314 died.
  • The Mississippi River floods of April and May have left entire towns submerged leaving thousands homeless. Areas in Illinois, Missouri, Kentucky, Tennessee, Arkansas, Mississippi, and Louisiana have been flooded.
  • On May 22 a tornado hit Joplin, Missouri, it caused wide spread destruction and killed117 people.
At the request of our generous donors, RWF has set up the U.S. Disaster fund.
To make a donation to help the survivors please specify "U.S. Disaster" when donating.

Donate by check by mailing to Rainbow World Fund, 4111 - 18th Street, Suite 5, San Francisco, CA 94114.

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

New Pew Poll: Red and Blue Alike Support Renewable Energy




"The Pew Research Center has just released a very interesting study, “Beyond Red vs. Blue: The Political Typology.” It segments the public into nine groups: eight politically active groups and one inactive group (bystanders) composed entirely of nonvoters. Of the eight active groups, two are described as “mostly Republican” (staunch conservatives and Main Street Republicans), three as “mostly Democratic” (new coalition Democrats, hard-pressed Democrats, and solid liberals), and three as “mostly independent” (libertarians, disaffecteds, and postmoderns). In reality, however, postmoderns lean strongly Democratic, while libertarians and disaffecteds lean strongly Republican. So there are really four active Democratic and four active Republican

In light of this diversity it is interesting to note a couple of areas where almost all of these groups agree. The first is on support for alternative energy. Overall, the public prioritizes developing alternative energy over expanding oil, coal, and natural gas by a 63-29 margin. And, as shown in the chart below, seven of Pew’s eight active typology groups support this position, including a whopping 40-point margin among the Main Street Republican group. Only the staunch conservatives (9 percent of the public) dissent from the rest.

Conservatives usually act like progressive ideas have no purchase in “their” part of the political spectrum. These data suggest otherwise.

General support for tougher environmental protection remains strong as evidenced by the polling numbers cited at the top. A related question found 53% of Americans believe “Stricter environmental laws and regulations are worth the cost” compared to 39% says “Stricter environmental laws and regulations cost too many jobs and hurt the economy.” Reconciling that with the71% who say they believe “This country should do whatever it takes to protect the environment,” would seem to imply that even some people who think environmental laws and regulations hurt the economy still want tougher environmental protection, which in turn would suggest that the overwhelming majority of Americans are not economists."
Source: Climate Progress)

- Kathleen Connell, M.A.

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Green Jobs Drive Younger Voters...And Older Voters Too?




Obviously jobs drive voters of all demographics in this era, but 10K young voters, who supported Obama, gathered at Powershift 2011. They are determined to hold him and the country accountable on the climate and green jobs campaign pledges. Older age groups, who, 20 million strong, began Earth Day, are advised to get organized around Green for 2012 as well.
---

Repost and image source: National
Journal.com
"Green Jobs Will Trump Climate Change for Young Voters
By Olga Belogolova | Monday, April 18, 2011 | 6:04 pm.
In November 2008, an estimated 22 million young people came out to vote for President Obama.
Believing in hope, change and a variety of progressive policies, these young people not only made history by electing Obama, but also as the third-highest showing of young voters, according to the Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement.
Nearly 40 years earlier, Wisconsin Democratic Sen. Gaylord Nelson chose April 22 as the first Earth Day. The specific day, first dubbed “National Teach-In on the Crisis of the Environment,” was selected to ensure maximum possible participation from college students, as it would not overlap with exams or holidays.
Young people today are saying they plan to hold President Obama responsible for his energy and environment record in 2012.
But with gas prices around $4 per gallon, a fragile labor market and a federal budget deficit that should weigh on their shoulders, many other factors may motiviate young voters.
And climate policy might be one of the last things on that voting agenda.
Nevertheless, in recent days, over 10,000 young people gathered in Washington to train leaders in community organizing and to challenge the administration on energy policy as part of Power Shift 2011.
The young climate activists, describing themselves as the “forgotten Obama voters,” heard from former Vice President Al Gore, former green jobs czar Van Jones and Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lisa Jackson, and others over the weekend.
And on Monday, over 5,000 of them gathered for a rally in front of the White House and marched toward Capitol Hill, calling on Obama and Congress to protect the Clean Air Act, reject “dirty energy” sources, and build a clean energy economy.
Organizers of the four-day event said young people are disillusioned with Obama’s slow movement on energy and environment issues.
Following the demise of cap-and-trade legislation in the Senate and this year's push from a Republican-controlled House to upend the EPA's climate rules, young voters were especially disenchanted with Obama’s energy security plan and speech at Georgetown University last month.
“It sounded like something that industry would have written,” said Maura Cowley, co-director of Power Shift, arguing that the Obama’s support of nuclear energy, natural gas, and offshore drilling disappointed many young voters.
The speech prompted an e-mail flurry and “a couple young people said – ‘I just took my `Hope' poster off the wall,’” Cowley said.
Her counterpart, Courtney Hight, co-director of Energy Action Coalition and former Obama campaign staffer, said those disillusioned voters might not show up for the president in 2012.
“We have the votes that brought him in,” she said.
But experts say that Obama’s record on energy issues is neither as bleak as portrayed nor potentially harmful for 2012.
“I don’t know why they should be disillusioned with the guy. He’s doing what he can,” Republican energy strategist Mike McKenna told National Journal.
“The guys blown $100 billion on wind and solar….more than [everybody] else has blown on it combined”
“I think part of being a young activist is that you’re impatient and you should be impatient and we all should be impatient for progress,” added David Axelrod, Obama’s 2012 strategist, saying that progress has been made.
“And there’s no doubt in my mind that whoever is on the other side of the ballet will be much less robust in that regard than us,” Axelrod told National Journal.
“There will be a choice… [and] that will motivate people.”
But the motivation will not necessarily be about climate policy in 2012.
Rock the Vote President Heather Smith said that while candidates shouldn't ignore the concerns of young people, doing so doesn’t mean the youth vote won't show up.
“It’s not ‘We won’t vote for you;’ it’s more ‘We voted for you, so pay attention,’” Smith said.
Though, as the President of Earth Day Network, Kathleen Rogers surely embraces the concept of young people engaged in moving energy and environment policy, she argued that it is a “gigantic mistake” to generalize about young voters.
With young people as the most unemployed age group today, climate change will no longer be the right message on energy issues in 2012, Smith added.
Young voters will be “looking at everything through a jobs lens,” she said. To that end, jump-starting a clean energy economy that creates jobs for these young people will be the most effective way of garnering support for an election campaign.
Jason Skovgard, a senior studying Chemical and Environmental Engineering at UC Riverside, who recently competed with a team for a $75,000 EPA grant, as part of the agency’s People, Prosperity and the Planet Competition, said he “absolutely” wants channel his engineering skills toward developing renewable energy technology.
“I really want to help solve this problem. It’s going to just get bigger,” he said.
Skovgard and teammates Christian Contreras, Marcus Chiu, Steven Chavez, Gregory Hammar, Joon Bok Lee and Trevor Vandergrift created a fuel cell that could generate electricity through a combination of solar power and hydrogen fuel. The University of California Riverside seniors said that they hope to join the clean tech industry when they enter the workforce.
The economic implications of energy policies would resonate most among young people in today’s fiscally focused environment, explained Matt Segal, a young entrepreneur who recently launched Our Time, a membership organization for young Americans.
“It is the most successful argument,” Segal said, adding that the environmental movement would “definitely gain much more momentum when it is tied to an economic argument.”



- Kathleen Connell, M.A.

Sunday, March 27, 2011

I am Quoted in Grist: Why Are Gays Green




It bears repeating, or Grist and Unte Reader thought so, I just discovered. In Homo
And Garden (clever) at Grist:
"Kathleen Connell writes in San Diego Gay & Lesbian News, "Our own hampered civil and personal lives mirrors [sic] a disregard for our home planet, which is in crisis from a century of abuse. The mentality that allows desecration of the ecosystem is the same mindset that continues to allow the second-class citizenship of LGBT people everywhere."
Well, that is what I said. Read on for the Grist cross-post. Now why are we Greener?
----
Photo: Jason Pier
A recent poll says gays and lesbians are more likely to support the environment, especially when voting or shopping, and a bigger percentage say they care about sustainability. Here's the breakdown:

55 percent of LGBT adults vs. 33 percent of straight adults say they care a lot about green issues
48 vs. 25 percent consider the environment when shopping
45 vs. 27 percent highly value a political candidate's stance on green issues
25 vs. 17 percent use the environment as a factor when considering a potential employer
Echelon Magazine reported similar findings in 2009: 33 percent of LGBT adults had seen or read An Inconvenient Truth, compared to 20 percent of heterosexuals, and 75 percent of gays believe global warming is happening right now (versus 53 percent of straight adults).

So why are the gays greener? For starters, gay rights and climate change are both human rights issues. Kathleen Connell writes in San Diego Gay & Lesbian News, "Our own hampered civil and personal lives mirrors [sic] a disregard for our home planet, which is in crisis from a century of abuse. The mentality that allows desecration of the ecosystem is the same mindset that continues to allow the second-class citizenship of LGBT people everywhere."

Grist asked those at the helm of several LGBT sites what they thought might be going on:

They're progressive voters in cities. The Advocate Senior Editor Neal Broverman says, "Gay and lesbian people vote progressively, so it seems natural that they would live progressively -- like being 'green,' for example. Also, many LGBT people live in urban areas, which are hotbeds for environmentally conscious ideas and lifestyles."

They're already advocates for social change. Kristin Russo of Everyone Is Gay told Grist, "Despite the fact that 'going green' may not be directly related to issues of sexuality, advocating for change is something with which many in the LGBTQ community have experience." Her partner and site co-founder Dannielle Owens-Reid quips, "It's like, maybe if we focus on going green you won't notice that I'm holding hands with a girl."

They're conscientious. Michael Jensen, editor of After Elton, says, "Growing up gay causes folks to look at the world from the perspective of ... being an outsider. I think that makes people much more aware of how actions ... can affect both other people and, by extension, the environment. We realize how thoughtless actions -- like dropping a homophobic remark without thinking about it -- can hurt a person. So it doesn't seem a leap to be able to know how our actions driving cars and consuming resources can impact the environment."

They're open-minded. Gerod Rody of Out for Sustainability says, "This planet is our home and caring about it is not just a straight-hippie thing anymore ... When I came out, it opened my perspective on the world. I realized how connected we are, whether we like it or not. Once you wake up to your own sexuality there is no going back. The same is true for understanding we can make real progress in the environmental challenges of our time. It may be tough, but together we can see the next generations of kids, whether queer or straight, do more than survive. I know we can see them thrive."

Want more? Here are some resources on same-sex sustainability:

Out of the Closet Queer Sustainability Society, a Victoria, B.C.-based not-for-profit
Green and Gay, a brand-new site highlighting green products from companies supporting LGBT rights
The Advocate on how one biker "aims to spawn a bevy of eco queers"
----


- Kathleen Connell, M.A.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Go Japan!




Maddowblog.com says the loose translation in the cartoon above is "Do Your Best, Japan". In other words, "Go, Girl!".

We need to take this moment and do our best to kick nuclear and dirty energy to the curb.
Please install solar and energy efficiency, and reject nuclear, coal and oil. Let your friends know where you stand! Go Green, Girl!


- Kathleen Connell, M.A.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Scott Walker Shuts Down Clean Energy Jobs In Wisconsin




Cross-post from CAP and Climate Progress.

"Newly elected Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker held an event called “Wisconsin is Open for Business” the day he was inaugurated. But every move the governor makes shows him to be an antibusiness, anti-innovation politician intent on running the state into the ground.

Let’s take clean energy. Clean energy industries offered a glimmer of hope during the past two years in the midst of a national recession that has hit the Midwest particularly hard. In Michigan, for example, total private employment dropped 5.4 percent from 2005-2008, while during the same period employment increased by 7.7 percent among the state’s 358 “green” firms. Michigan’s new governor, Rick Snyder, recognized the growth potential of these industries when he ran on a 10-point plan that emphasized the need to invest in clean energy sectors such as advanced batteries.

In Ohio, too, the green writing is on the wall. New Gov. John Kasich initially sounded off against clean energy, running on a platform that included rolling back the state’s renewable energy standard. But he reversed this position soon after his election when multiple business leaders told him how important green industries were in the Toledo area in particular. The city, which ranked in the bottom 10 by per capita income in 2000, has seen a renaissance as a hub for solar innovation and production. Over 6,000 individuals are employed in these industries in Toledo today, and the city is home to several major solar panel exporters including First Solar and Xunlight.

Gov. Walker, however, has apparently decided that Wisconsin should take a back seat to the Midwest’s green renaissance. The state has enormous potential to generate homegrown energy from renewable resources. Wisconsin has enough wind, solar, and biomass energy resources to produce power equivalent to the entire state’s electricity needs according to Environment America. But the new governor recently proposed a wind turbine siting law that would effectively shut down most wind power production. The new law, if put into effect, would require wind turbines to be set back at least 1,800 feet from any nearby property unless all affected property owners agree to the turbine in writing.

Only one-fourth of Wisconsin’s current wind turbines would ever have been built if this rule had been in place in the past. In other words, 2,250 fewer people would have construction or maintenance jobs, over a million fewer dollars would be flowing to rural communities in the form of land leases, and the 21 manufacturing plants in the state that supply the wind industry would have far fewer orders and would likely be closing their doors.

Gov. Walker is also taking aim at another potential growth sector: high-speed rail. Right now no passenger rail exists between Madison and Milwaukee, which between them house over 75 percent of Wisconsin’s entire population. A high-speed train running between the cities would serve commuters and business travelers, and it would provide a critical influx of visitors to both downtowns. It would also connect Madison to the existing Milwaukee-Chicago train route. Perhaps most important, studies have shown that the line would create over 13,000 jobs, eliminate 780,000 car trips annually, and save Wisconsin residents 2.76 million gallons of gas each year.

Investing in high-speed rail makes sense in Wisconsin. The state’s major university and state capitol are in one major city, but the majority of industry and commerce is in another. Connecting the two would be a major investment in Wisconsin’s future growth.

But Gov. Walker doesn’t see it that way. One of his first acts once in office was to defund the proposed rail line, turning down over $800 million in federal funds to support the project. That’s a lot of lost jobs today and lost revenue tomorrow.

Gov. Walker clearly wants to cut off Wisconsin from the clean tech revolution. But his job-killing, anti-innovation strategies don’t stop at clean energy. Over the past two weeks it has become clear that the governor wants to cut off the state’s entire public-sector workforce at the knees by using a budget battle as an excuse to take away these workers’ basic right to band together and bargain for better working conditions and fair wages.

This isn’t about the state budget. In fact, Wisconsin’s public-sector workers make about 8 percent less in wages than do workers in the private sector who have similar education and experience. And the state’s pension fund has an actuarial funding ratio—the ratio of actuarial assets as compared to liabilities—of nearly 100 percent. That means that the contributions to the state’s pension fund are sufficient to meet the needs of its retirees—in other words, Gov. Walker’s attempt to make this into a budget issue is a red herring.

Gov. Walker’s proposed state budget cuts are instead a transparent attack on public-sector unions, which are a major reason anyone even takes public-sector jobs anymore. Why work a job for less pay than you’d make in the private sector—an extremely demanding job like teaching in public schools or plowing two-foot drifts of snow in minus-20 degree weather—if that job doesn’t provide the stability, health and safety regulations, health and retirement benefits, and basic equality that come with being part of a union?

Gov. Walker undermines the state itself when he undermines public-sector workers. These workers provide essential services that are the backbone of the state’s economy. They educate children. They keep streets clear of snow and garbage. They process permits, cut through red tape, and keep essential city and state services moving.

Take away the benefits these workers have today—benefits that they have bargained for in exchange for lower pay than they might get elsewhere—and the quality of all these services goes way down. The result is a state with worse schools, worse public services, and an educated workforce fleeing to find a better deal elsewhere. In short, a state where no one wants to invest, start a new business, or make a new start."


- Kathleen Connell, M.A.

Friday, February 4, 2011

Vegan...Ellen is on to something





Recently for health benefits our house went vegan, or on a plant based diet. The benefits are enormous and fairly immediate from weight loss to artery self healing and much much more.
Check out "The China Study" for details on benefits. Power vegans from CEO's, to Hollywood. including Ellen, and Bill Clinton are on this diet for a very good reason.

It was only a bit into this that I began to realize after my research just how enormous the impact of plant based diet shifts would have on massive reduction of GHG output. Per the UN and Scientific American...more than transportation or industry! This could be something that is very affordable and has immediate personal and community benefits, with huge impacts but we never talk about it the Green sector as a major thrust. Time to go heat up the vegan chilie which tastes just fine... Friday thoughs...Kathleen
" the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), our diets and, specifically, the meat in them cause more greenhouse gases carbon dioxide (CO2), methane, nitrous oxide, and the like to spew into the atmosphere than eithertransportation or industry."
- Kathleen Connell, M.A.

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Clean Energy "Party"-- Are We Invited?

An idea is gaining traction. Move from Green education to getting folks involved in electing Green Candidates in 2012. I started trying this out with the SASC and CCSE Green Candidates Forum here in San Diego last fall. Will supporting Green candidates who
are "moderate" (see below) include support for LGBT issues? Is Green enough? Not really, IMHO. But we must do something serious on climate, as Washington is failing us and the planet. No planet, no equality.
http://www.grist.org/article/2011-01-03-new-year-new-idea-for-climate-the-american-clean-energy-party


- Kathleen Connell

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Brown Appoints Gay Green As Natural Resources Head

Great news!

Source bar.com
"This week Governor Jerry Brown confirmed reports he would name John Laird, one of the first openly gay men to serve in the state Legislature, as his secretary of the Natural Resources Agency.
It was the first in what is expected to be several high profile LGBT appointments by Brown, who took his third oath of office as the state's top official Monday, January 3.
Laird, 60, represented Santa Cruz in the Assembly for six years before being termed out of office. He lost a bid last summer for a coastal state Senate seat.
Should he be confirmed by the state Senate to the position, Laird will oversee policies that cover everything from logging and water to state parks and farming issues. A longtime environmental activist, Laird is expected to be a vocal opponent of offshore oil drilling, which he fought against when he served as a city councilman and mayor of his hometown.
In Sacramento, Laird helped push through the state's cutting edge climate change law known as AB 32, which regulates greenhouse gas emissions and has been fiercely opposed by oil companies. He was also a main voice for protecting Sierra forests, water conservation and renewable energy while in the statehouse.
Laird is the fifth out person to be appointed to a state position in recent weeks. Prior to his leaving office, former Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger announced he had selected four openly gay or lesbian people for state boards and commissions."


- Kathleen Connell, M.A.