Chairman Jerry Jennett reported that VLCIA was generally operating
at a slower pace due to the economy.
Roy Copeland asked for the board to come back to the operating budget
later in the meeting when they could ask their CPA a few questions.
He was out of town, so they agreed to try to get him on the telephone later.
The war on some drugs has failed.
Locking up people for marijuana while oxycontin is legal makes no sense.
Locking up huge numbers of people for private profit at taxpayer expense
while schools are getting defunded makes even less sense.
A report by the Florida Medical Examiners Commission has concluded that
prescription drugs have outstripped illegal drugs as a cause of death.
An analysis of 168,900 autopsies conducted in Florida in 2007 found that
three times as many people were killed by legal drugs as by cocaine,
heroin and all methamphetamines put together. According to state law
enforcement officials, this is a sign of a burgeoning prescription drug
abuse problem.
Karen Noll reported on WACE’s facebook page that
the VSU Faculty Senate passed a resolution Thursday 19 May 2011 that
biomass will not be considered renewable for VSU’s climate commitment goal.
Why?
Because
leading medical associations have identified woody biomass
incineration as increasing risks of
“a variety of illnesses, some life-threatening”,
because biomass incineration
produces more CO2, NOX, and fine particulates than existing coal plants,
and because it
“may lead to
unsustainable forestry practices and a net increase in global greenhouse
gas emissions”.
Whether you’re talking about grid tied power here in America tied to the wire,
or solar in the rural countryside of Uganda,
it’s immediately available and accessible in all sizes.
So I can use it to power a cell phone, charge a laptop,
put light in a school, or pump water in a hospital.
Solar is immediately available to do that, without massive
which is a barrier to development in much of the developing world.
And to development in south Georgia, for that matter.
So we can
leapfrog that barrier with solar.
Solar power is the peoples power –Alden Hathaway
Commissioning Ceremony,
Wiregrass Solar, Valdosta-Lowndes County Industrial Authority (VLCIA),
Valdosta, Lowndes County, Georgia, 12 May 2011.
Videos by John S. Quarterman for LAKE, the Lowndes Area Knowledge Exchange.
Not sure what started this particular post, but as Stephen Hawking put it:
“The greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it is the illusion
of knowledge.” –
We are where we are as a community in relationship to the biomass issue
because of our holistic approach, and with “we” I do not mean WACE
exclusively. There have been countless
Last weekend Lenny’s Market marked opened for the summer season,
showcasing fresh local produce and much more well into the fall. On
Saturday some early offerings were available by a few local producers,
including William and Lydia Overholt and their daughter Eunice. The
Overholts own Willso Farm Bakery and Eggs in Montezuma and have been
selling at Lenny’s Market for the past three years.
“We like to be here every week, Saturdays mostly,” William said.
The Overholts arrived around 7:30 a.m. with fresh picked Vidalia type
onions, beets, romaine lettuce, cabbage and zucchini, ready to sell.
“They’re picked the day before we come down,” William said.
Lydia said that they will have more things as the summer progresses like
green peppers and eggplant.
There’s more in the story about other foods available in the market.
They also have entertainment.
One of my high school friends says a Led Zepellin cover band brought
in some of us old fogies,
and they often have more current music.
This comment from Seth Gunning came in today. -jsq
Speaking About organizing & activism- We can make them dichotomous, in order to speak about them more distinctly; but my intent (in the comment turned blog-post) was not to insinuate that the two are anti-thetical or opposing to one another in many ways at all.
That is not to say, though, that the work of one doesn’t clearly look much different from the work of the other.
I hesitate to use metaphor, because while they might be good heuristic learning tools, they too often are or become justificatory and prevent us from communicating clearly.
This Georgia Tech announcement emphasizes how quickly technology is
changing toward healthier energy production and away from coal. I would
hate to see our South Georgia stuck with a contaminating, health-harming
coal plant for 50 years while so much progress would be going on during
that time.
Valdosta and Lowndes County are not the only places with sunshine
in south Georgia, and Albany and Dougherty County are perhaps
already more organized.
MAGE SOLAR, looking for both customers and installers, is hosting a
program at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at Albany Civic Center.
Susanne Fischer Quinn, communications manager for MAGE SOLAR, said there
are just 13 certified installers of solar panels in Georgia.
The opportunity for growth in this area is tremendous, she said.
Tuesday’s program will open with remarks by Jeff Sinyard, chairman
of the Dougherty County Commission, and Albany City Commissioner Roger
Marietta
Then, a panel of representatives from MAGE, the U.S. Department of
Agriculture and the University of Georgia will present information about
solar power in Georgia.
We already did a smaller version of this, but what have we done since?
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