Friday, April 22, 2011

Earth Day Message

This week we celebrate Earth Day, Passover, and Good Friday. These days are ones of beauty and brokeness, a time to be called out of the chains of bondage. We walked the Via Dolorosa around the neighborhood today, the Way of Sorrow, each of the 14 stations a place where somebody has been murdered. Each of these places where violence has filled the land. We lament.

Today on Democracy NOW Amy Goodman facilitates a conversation with physicist Vandana Shiva and Maude Barlow on the Rights of the Earth for Earth Day and their thoughts from the Global Harmony with Nature Conference at the United Nations. A revolution of "Harmony with Nature" was passed by the General Council on the UN yesterday proposed by Bolivia and Ecuador. The wisdom of the mountains are speaking. This piece reveals the depths of interconnectivity of the social, ecological, and economic concerns in our trajectory toward sustainability.


Fracking Accident and Local Fracking Protest


Fracking or Hydraulic Fracturing is ruining the land in Pennsylvania and surrounding open and groundwaters. The drilling fluids are dumped in municipal treatment in plants illequipped to purify.

Yesterday's Fracking Accident in Bradford County, PA

Fracking Protest in Philadelphia on Saturday


Alternatives:
Check out Coast to Coast Interviews with George Noory


Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Rain Gardens in the news...


Here's what all the latest buzz is about in the region. Announcing the kick-off of the Camden SMART (stormwater management and resource training) initiative! A great way to bring the problems of the expensive outdated combined stormwater/sewage system of the County to the grass-roots/beautification/job creation level.

This article is on the cover of today's Courier Post South Jersey section. The ironic part of this article is that on the same page is an article about the $8 million the Department of Transportation is spending on preventing flooding unsuccessfully on just one section of the Admiral Wilson Boulevard.


Perhaps the state should have a Department of Transformation.



Rain gardens a twofold solution

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CAMDEN — A small, empty lot on Ferry Avenue that looks a little like a sunken tri-corner hat is easy to miss.

And yet environmentalists see it as a low-tech solution to antiquated sewer pipes in Camden that allow raw sewage to float down streets after heavy rains and seep into basements.

"Can you imagine letting your children out to play after a rain and they come home with raw sewage on their shoes, clothes, hands," Andrew Kricun said passionately.

"This is unjust. Fixing this problem is fundamental to the quality of life here and bringing the city back."

Kricun is deputy executive director of the Camden County Municipal Utilities Authority, which treats wastewater for the city and county. For years, CCMUA was a pariah in South Camden because of the acrid smell that wafted from the plant.

Now Kricun has a seat at the table with the city's environmentalists. He joined a panel Monday in honor of Earth Day with speakers from the New Jersey Conservation Foundation, the Walter Rand Institute for Public Affairs, Cooper's Ferry Development Association and a grass-roots group from South Camden called the Camden Center for Environmental Transformation.

This week, CCMUA plans to unveil a $30 million upgrade to its 50-year-old system that its engineer promises will "significantly improve" neighborhood air quality. It also will present the city's first rain garden, a CCMUA demonstration project.

Absent billions of dollars to dig up the entire city and line it with separate stormwater and sanitary sewer systems, Kricun and other conservationists have latched onto the idea of rain gardens, strategically placed basins that catch rain water before it overflows the sewers.

The rain garden on Ferry Avenue is one of 40 that the city plans to build with a $300,000 grant from Rutgers. The difference between it and a typical retention basin is that residents and environmental groups plan to line it with water-loving trees and flowering shrubs.

This makes the role of a rain garden twofold. It soaks up water like a sponge and adds a breath of green space to gritty urban areas.

Construction on a second rain garden on the site of a former gas station on Broadway is expected to begin soon.

"It is imperative that this critical public health issue be fixed," said Kricun. "It's a matter of social justice.

"Every gallon of water we keep out of the sewers keeps another gallon of sewage from running in the streets."

Andrea Ferich, of the Center for Environmental Transformation, shared more ideas with about 30 people who attended the panel discussion sponsored by Camden County College at the Technology Center on Cooper Street.

Use less water. Collect rain water in barrels, plant rooftop gardens to absorb water and go easy on the blacktop. Instead, she said, developers should be encouraged to use only porous materials on sidewalks, playgrounds and other outdoor spaces.

Reach Eileen Stilwell at (856) 486-2464 or estilwell@gannett.com


here's part of my powerpoint from the presentation:


Monday, April 18, 2011

April 2011 News and Notes

April 15, 2011

Hello everyone.*

A week or so ago I finished reading a novel by  Wendell Berry entitled “Hannah Coulter.”  It was a delightful story, told by the title character, an 80 year old woman who is looking back on her life, reflecting on the place that she calls home, Port Williams, Kentucky.  I recommend it highly to everyone.  It is a story that offers ongoing criticism of the way in which we as a society have decided to live our lives, divorced from place, ensconced in technological sophistication and the unremitting demand for “progress.”  However one finally rests in relation to Wendell Berry’s trenchant critique of our modern fascination with technology and its apparent ability to liberate us from the restraints of time and space, it is a worthwhile opportunity to ask ourselves some simple questions.  How much does it matter to me where I am?  How deeply do I know the place in which I dwell daily?  How much of a member am I with the people, places and things that make up my place?
I have been spending some time, and the beginning of Spring is a particularly appropriate time, to think about my place.  I mean, the place where I live, where I wake up each day, serenaded by the birds whose song chases away the silence of night around 4:30AM.  It is a gentle interruption, a calling to life of this place where I have chosen to breathe most of my breaths on any given day.  I think about the membership I have with my partner, Cathy, with my neighbors, with those who walk by each day, in the regularity of exercise.  I think about my membership with the daffodils who shout to all those around them of the coming warmth of Spring.  The hostas push themselves up out of the ground, and then slowly unfurl their flags, identifying themselves as residents of this place and time.  I cannot forget the groundhog who has begun his investigations of our gardens, looking for something to satisfy a winter’s worth of hunger.  The deer make their way through our yard, enjoying the delicacies that are a tulip’s fresh green.  All of this is my place.  I think about the many human beings and other beings who have made this space their own.  Our house is only about 35 years old, and before that this was either farmland, woods or both.  There was violence done to this land when the contractors came with their bulldozers, and architects’ plans, and hopes for an American dream (a house, picket fence, and a two car garage!) It is not the hope for such a dream that is unsettling, but what we have had to destroy, or more importantly, forgotten in order to pursue that dream.  We have forgotten that we are, as human beings, people rooted in a place, or better, that we are most human when we are rooted somewhere.  We have forgotten that we are not alone in the places where we root ourselves.
Cathy and I have tried to make this place more friendly to those who live here also, the flowers, the grass, the chipmunks, rabbits, one groundhog and the birds.  We’ve done that by not using petroleum-based products on our lawns or garden beds.  We have accepted that our notions of  a “perfect” lawn are not in harmony with this place.  We try to create habitats for the birds, the rabbits, and even the groundhog!  We have a large pile of brush on the back line of our property.  It certainly doesn’t look “neat and clean,” but it supplies shelter for small animals, a place for birds to gather in the rain, and a renewable source of small twigs and branches for the ubiquitous birds’ nest that find their way into the most unlikely of places.
A few weeks back two wrens began working feverishly on a nest.  They chose a precarious place.  They built the nest under the wrapping of our retractable awning on the back of our house!  It was a clear message from our Creator, not only that Spring is the most life-centric time of the year, but also that we are not the Masters and Mistresses of our castles.  We are members of the community that lives in this place.  So, our awning won’t come out til the fledglings find their wings!
All of this sparked by the musings of an old woman, captured in fiction, yet powerfully reflective of the most real thing there is:  the place where we are.  If you haven’t read “Hannah Coulter,” then I suggest you do.  It will make a wonderful Passover and Easter present to yourself, a reminder that life must always be rooted in a place so that it can reach its fullest bloom.  
Help us in the blooming of Waterfront South and Camden City!  A place most in need of the blessing of new life!  Indeed!

Sincerely,

Mark Doorley
President,
Board of Trustees
The Center for Environmental Transformation


NEWS AND NOTES
1.       A wonderful announcement!  Andrea Ferich, our Director of Sustainability Initiatives, will be honored on April 29th in New York City by the federal Environmental Protection Agency.  She was nominated by Senator Robert Menendez (D) of New Jersey to receive the 2011 Environmental Quality Award. This award is given to citizens who exemplify a commitment to the environment.  Andrea will receive the award at the EPA’s Region Two office in Manhattan.  She is the only person from South Jersey who will receive this award.  Congratulations, Andrea!  If you’d like to flood her inbox, her email is aferich@gmail.com.
2.       We had an amazing event at Sacred Heart Church, facilitated by the  Center, on Saturday, April 9th.  Members of M’Kor Shalom, a synagogue in Cherry Hill, NJ and members of Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Camden gathered for a morning of work in the gardens and an afternoon of faith sharing and visioning.  As Eileen Borland, a board member of the Center and a parishioner at Sacred Heart, said, we spent the day “falling in love” with each other.  We finished putting mushroom soil into the garden beds at Eve’s Garden.  Many of us transplanted broccoli and collard green seedlings into the park community garden, and many others transplanted little tomato seedlings into larger containers so that they will be strong and healthy when they are made available to people.  After a wonderful lunch, we heard from Nancy Axelrod, Stew Abrams and Mark Doorley who shared insights on justice from the Jewish and Roman Catholic traditions.  In small groups we shared with each other how justice first dawned on our consciousness.  Andrea then offered us her vision of the healing of the earth and hearts in Waterfront South, inviting us to imagine what the partnership of these two communities might look like.  A group of people from both faith communities have committed to plan ongoing collaborations in the work for justice.  Thanks to all who participated!
3.       The Center for Environmental Transformation is one of several collaborators who are working to create rain gardens in the city of Camden.  Our collaborators are the Camden County Municipal Authority and Rutgers’ University.  This collaborative is part of the SMART campaign in Camden (Stormwater Management and Resource Training). As some of you may know, Camden has a combined sewer/storm water system.  When there are hard rains, it is not uncommon for the sewers to back up into streets and people’s homes, with storm water AND sewage.  This initiative to create rain gardens aims to build 40 of these systems throughout the city.  A rain garden traps rain water before it goes into the sewer.  Through a combination of landscaping and vegetation, these rain gardens capture the storm water and gently reintroduce it into the water table, rather than allow it to go in to the already strained sewer system. The combined water trapped by these rain gardens may reach as many as 1,000,000 gallons!  The Center will be the provider of all the seedlings that will be planted in these rain gardens.  Very exciting!
4.       There are several Earth Day celebrations coming up that we want to alert you to.  The first is in our neighborhood, on Wednesday, April 20th.  We will be cleaning the neighborhood from 8AM to 3PM.  At 10AM at the Camden County Municipal Authority building, near the corner of 4th and Ferry Ave. in Waterfront South.  Camden Mayor Dana Redd will hold a press conference to kick off the 2011 Camden Clean Campaign and the SMART initiative.  Join us!  Other Earth Day celebrations are scheduled for April 30th.  There is a celebration in Haddon Heights, right on Haddon Ave., from 10AM – 2PM.  Also on the 30th, from 10AM – 4PM Sustainable Cherry Hill is hosting its annual Earth Day celebration at Croft Farm, 100 Borton Mill Rd, in Cherry Hill.  There will be lots of activities for the whole family, and the Center will have a table at each with seedlings of various heirloom vegetables available for a modest contribution to our work.
5.       The Annual Fair Earth Day, sponsored by the Center for Environmental Transformation, will take place on Sunday, May 15, 2011.  Once again, we will have lots of information on how you can do your “bit” in reducing your carbon footprint.  There will be Palestinian fair trade olive oil available, as well as fair trade clothing, chocolate and coffee.  There will be compost making lessons as well as heirloom seedlings available for all comers.  Please plan to join us.  The fair begins at 10:30AM and goes til 1PM if not later.  We will be in the basement of Sacred Heart  Church, on the corner of S. Broadway & Ferry.
6.       We will have a First Saturday workday on Saturday, May 7th.  Please join us at 9AM, behind Sacred Heart Church.  We will be working in the gardens.  We have work gloves, but you may want to bring you own, as well as water.  See you there!
7.       The Center’s retreats:  We have had two groups on service experiences/retreats with us.  We invite all groups to consider spending a weekend or a week with us.  The programming is built around working in the various projects sponsored by the Center, in collaboration with neighborhood children and adults.  Sprinkled throughout the work are sessions of reflection on environmental justice, our lifestyles, and ways in which we can begin to effect change, personally, in our communities and in the arena of public policy.  We are opened to tailoring the experience to each group, but we are also in a position to facilitate the entire experience.  If you have any questions, particularly those responsible for fall and spring break trips, please contact us at info@camdencenterfortransformation.org
8.       Become a seller of the Poet of Poverty and the green book, “It’s a Terrible Day:  Thanks be to God!”  We have plenty of copies of both, and all the proceeds of their sale goes to the Center.  We could use your assistance.
9.       Mark Doorley represented the Center at Villanova University, a guest of its Center for Peace & Justice Education.  The Poet of Poverty was screened followed by the discussion of the film and what’s happening in Waterfront South.  Several of the participants in this discussion came to the April First Saturday work day.  Volunteers from the Center are available to come to your organization, school and/or faith community to show the film and lead a discussion of what’s going on in Camden.  Please contact Mark Doorley at president@camdencenterfortransformation.org
10.   Save your printer cartridges and your old cell phones.  Get them to us and we’ll have them recycled, therefore supporting the work of the Center.  Also, you can purchase recycled ink cartridges, and the Center will receive 15% of the proceeds.  Go to this website to learn more:  https://planetgreenrecycle.com/participants/message.php  Enter the Center’s website at the prompt.
11.   We have three major construction jobs to accomplish before the Center is complete.  We must rebuild the porch on the side of the building which will serve as the main entrance.  We must redesign the front entrance, with a new door and a redesigned brick entryway.  Finally, we still have about 20 windows to replace.  Please consider supporting us in pursuing these goals.  There will be more in the future on this fundraising project; keep us in mind as you make choices of support for causes you believe in.  Checks payable to the Center for Transformation can be sent to 1729 Ferry Ave., Camden, NJ 08104. Please write “capital projects” in the memo line.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Clean Air Council Public Hearing!!

Cumulative air impact has been identified as one of the worst unregulated problems contributing to environmental justice communities, places like Camden, Newark, and other communities. In EJ Communities around the Country. Now is our chance to speak, act, and write written statements. It's going to be an amazing day in Trenton.

New Jersey Clean Air Council Annual Public Hearing April 13, 2011 9:30 a.m.
NJ Dept. of Environmental Protection 401 E. State St., Trenton, NJ


The Challenge
Currently, air pollution control in New Jersey is governed by the practice of regulating each pollutant individually, with no specific guidelines for considering the cumulative health impacts of multiple chemical and nonchemical stressors. A cumulative health impacts approach would move beyond the pollutant-by- pollutant method of regulation and take into account additive and possibly synergistic adverse health effects of exposure to multiple air pollutants and other environmental stressors, even when no single-pollutant standard may be violated.
The need for a cumulative impacts approach is greatest in urban communities that are burdened with higher levels of pollution and multiple stressors that may increase susceptibility to development of health related disorders. Groups who are particularly
vulnerable to air pollution include children, the elderly, and residents with pre-existing conditions such as asthma, other respiratory disorders and heart disease. Socioeconomic status associated with both increased exposures to pollution and increased vulnerability includes poverty, race and ethnicity.
Understanding, evaluating, and remediating the unequal burden of air pollution and its impacts throughout New Jersey and the rest of the nation are major challenges facing advocates of the environment and environmental justice, regulators, scientists and the regulated community. Several governmental environmental protection departments, including the NJDEP, the California Environmental Protection Agency (Cal/ EPA), and the United States Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA), also are seeking methods to address the issue of cumulative impacts. Engaging this issue will be a continuation of earlier Clean Air Council discussions that resulted in the inclusion of several recommendations regarding cumulative impacts in the Council's 2010 report, "Vision for the Next Decade: Air Quality and Air Pollution Control in New Jersey." The hearing will provide a more extensive discussion and examination of this cutting-edge issue that has significant implications for the health of New Jersey residents. The Council has compiled a set of questions related to cumulative impacts, listed below, that it would like to have addressed at its upcoming hearing.

Saturday, April 9, 2011

M'Kor Shalom, Sacred Heart, and the Chicken Cowboyz

Today in the gardens with our hands in the soil we touched our roots. The soil of Camden was pleased with the source of peace and community, with two group coming together, M'Kor Shalom Congregation (Jewish) and Sacred Heart (Catholic) to move each other into a deeper sense of justice. About 40 of us gathered together from different faith traditions to get the soil of Camden under our nails, and listen to each other's stories. We are grounded in the sanctity of all life. We learned that we have far more in common with each other than we realized, and the peace that has filled me during this day is one that is greater than the sum of our diverse faiths.

Thank you for coming and sharing so much with us at the Center. Thank you for loving your neighbor and sharing your hearts. yes, this is only the beginning.


Some of the children from the neighborhood came and hung out in the garden. They are known as the Chicken Cowboyz. They take care of the chickens and give tours of the chickens and all the nests. They will wow you with their stories and their knowledge about the eggs.



Brilliant KID about the industrial food system

This is ammmmmaaaaaazing! Brilliant and funny 11 year old discussing the industrial food system on Ted Talks x

Friday, April 8, 2011

PLAN B


PBS has just released PLAN B: Mobilizing to Save Civilization. It features the work of Agronomist and Economist Lester Brown in providing a glimpse into a new and emerging economy based upon renewable resources.

PLAN B The 23 minutes MOVIE

Neumann Goes Green!


I am very pleased to announce that the Campus Ministry Department who led the first retreat here at the Center has announced this week that they are officially going green!!!


Here they our pictured with Father Michael Doyle. We are so excited to spread this great news.

Monday, April 4, 2011

Brownfields Conference

One more day of the free and amazing 14th Annual Brownfield Conference in Philadelphia. I went today, and my head is spinning with thoughts and ideas for community based sustainable development here in Camden, transforming problems into resources and making jobs. so exciting.

Saturday, April 2, 2011

RIDER, Villanova, Cherry Hill East, and Chicken Farmers... click here to read more




We had a really lovely morning at the Center For Environmental Transformation with some lovely people from Rider, Villanova, Cherry Hill East, and our Chicken Cowboyz. (pictures to come.)


Thanks so much you guys for coming out. It was really precious, I look forward to our continued partnership. Check out what they're going on campus at UMASS:

Friday, April 1, 2011

RUTGERS Boycotts BOTTLED WATER click here to read more.....



Some of the students from Rutgers New Brunswick who stayed with us last week are leading the way for environmental social change in New Jersey with their Boycott on bottled water.

Reflection From a Moorestown Teacher...click here to read more




Here is a lovely reflection from a wonderful teacher from Moorestown Friends School, Eliza McFeely on her recent week with us at the Center with a group of high schoolers. She teaches history and I had a really fun time with her while she was here discussing the history of industrialization, globalization, and sorts of Quaker stories of serious peacemaking through boycotting. She also taught me an old working song while we turned the soil of Camden and our hearts Down By the Erie Canal.

Also check out her fascinating story telling workshop she helps to lead for teachers. AMAZING. There are scholarships available for Camden teachers.

Greening the Ghetto...click here to read more

Check out Majora Carter from Sustainable South Bronx. She is incredibly visionary in a community quite similar to Camden. She speaks very clearly to the importance of sustainable development creating jobs that are good for the environment, transforming problems into resources: