Showing posts with label Earth Week 2011. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Earth Week 2011. Show all posts

Monday, April 18, 2011

Japanese Garden green generation mixer focused on “Redesigning CSULB, the renaissance of Long Beach and Southern California”


The beautiful Earl Burns Miller Japanese Garden on the Long Beach CSU campus was the perfect setting for the third in a series of Student Sustainability Task Force (SSTF) green mixers designed to foster dialogue and collaboration to unite the campus and local community on issues of environmental sustainability that affect us all.

Held April 13, this prelude to Earth Week 2011 featured guest speakers spotlighting green efforts on and off campus and representing the city, the university, and other community groups. Jeanette Schelin, Director of the EBM Japanese Garden, and Tracy Gorden, Program Assistant at the Garden, presided over the event and introduced the speakers.

Whole Foods sustains local & ethical healthy food choices!

Adrienne Peters, the marketing supervisor at the Long Beach Whole Foods Market that sponsored this event, spoke about Whole Foods’ green mission and commitment to local healthy food and environmental sustainability. She introduced Whole Foods’ Health Starts Here program to help people make healthier food choices, and the store’s participation in Global Animal Partnership (GAP) which she described as “beyond organic.” GAP is a 5-Step animal welfare rating standard used to rate and certify meat producers based on their animal welfare practices.

Donnie Bessom, the SSTF Project Coordinator, asked Ms. Peters to consider bringing Whole Foods to campus because as he said,
 “right now food on campus is pretty bad.”
The snacks Whole Foods shared at the event were pretty good,
“Especially the cheese,” says the cheese lady*.
Green Long Beach! shines a spotlight on the green community!

Tiffany Chen, recent CSULB alumna, current sustainability assistant in the city’s Office of Sustainability, and co-Catalyst of Green Long Beach!, highlighted the evolution of the Green Long Beach! festival. First held in 2009, the festival attracted >1,000 attendees and 100 participants. The theme of this year’s festival is Ignite Change! and is expected to draw > 5,000 attendees and 400 participants. It will take place Saturday June 11, 2011 from 10 AM - 8 PM at The Promenade between Broadway and 3rd Streets.

City of Long Beach sees a greener future!

Larry Rich, who has worked for the city in various positions for 20 years, became one of the city’s sustainability commissioners in 2008 the year the Office of Sustainability was formed to develop and implement green initiatives throughout Long Beach. He describes himself as the most sustainable of the sustainability commissioners, since he is the only one of three remaining.  His office currently oversees 10 part time interns (8 who are paid) and 17 youth workers from the Workforce Development Bureau’s green jobs program.

In what Larry describes as a soft sell (of green awareness) some of the interns act as one-on-one field supervisors of the youth workers, working on projects such as planting native drought tolerant plants at city installations, and delivering mulch to vacant city lots as part of Project Mulch-A-Lot and to residential applicants as part of a new Mulch Delivery Program. In collaboration with West Coast Arborists, the Office of Sustainability diverts ~6,000 tons of green waste per year from the waste stream.

Larry explained that the city’s solid waste reduction program does not include green bins (such as are offered in neighboring San Pedro) because Long Beach has the largest of the only three California Southeast Resource Recovery Facilities (SERRF) where solid waste is burned for energy. This is considered diversion, not incineration.

CSULB facilities are green behind the scenes!

Jon Root, the campus manager of integrated waste management and waste services, spoke about the university’s recycling efforts that mostly go unseen. The mulching mowers used on 60 acres of campus turf divert ~400 tons a year of grass from the waste stream, The tree trimmings from the 7,200 trees on campus are saved and re-used in the landscape. The university’s recycling efforts include not only paper and plastic recycling (see these images from last year’s CSULB Earth Week fair) but also a scrap metal program and an Associated Students Recycling Center that is operated by student employees.

Long Beach Grows plans for local food security! Grow Beach!

Long Beach Grows promotes food security through urban agriculture. Donna Marykwas, the Executive Director of Long Beach Grows, spoke about her plans and vision for a Long Beach with at least one community farm co-operative per city wide district, where people can grow and harvest real food together while building community. Donna has gardened at various community gardens throughout the country since 1985, first at Cornell in upstate NY, then in Cambridge, MA, Lincoln, MA, and Long Beach, CA. Describing the major differences between typical community gardens versus community farm co-ops, she envisions truly cooperative sites where people share in the work, share the rewards of their efforts, and share the bounty with the community. There are over 100 families on a waiting list to grow food with Long Beach Grows. Donna expressed serious interest in growing food security through urban agriculture on the CSULB campus, preferably at the site where there once was a community garden in the past. She thinks that growing food for the present on the Native American Indian ancestors of the past is a way to honor, respect and preserve their connection to the land.

CSULB faculty designs green phones!

Department of Design Professor Wesley Woelfel spoke about design methods to divert cell phones from the e-waste stream, citing statistics that with 1.2 billion cell phones sold globally per year, only 10% of obsolete cell phones are e-cycled. This is the motivation for his life cycle analysis of ways to design sustainable cell phones. Some ideas that he and his students have come up with are to encourage the design of new phones that are modular, easier to repair, upgradable, and did I hear him say biodegradable? We’ll see.

Industrial designer dreams green transportation!

Max Beach, a founding partner of Impact Design Associates in Culver City, teaches part time at CSULB. He wowed the audience with a futuristic animated video that brought to life his dream of an alternative transportation system based on inductively charged solar-powered CSULB streetcars.

Go green!

Connect with the green community at the next mixer to be held Wednesday, May 4th, 4:30- 6:30 PM, also at the Japanese Garden.


 
Enjoy this? Please share the link and comment below even if only to say "Hi!"

You might also be interested in Donna’s other work as  Long Beach Urban Agriculture Examiner, National Science News Examiner and founder and executive director of Long Beach Grows.


Copyright © 2011 Donna Marykwas*; All rights reserved.

Friday, April 15, 2011

Earth Week 2011 in Long Beach is lush with green activities

Earth Week 2011 officially starts tomorrow April 16 and runs through April 22, ending on Mother Earth Day. There is no shortage of green activities to keep you busy in Long Beach. Here is a summary of the most notable green happenings in Long Beach.

Saturday, April 16

    9 AM Produce Exchange Long Beach @ Bluff Park
  • Location: Bluff park @ Ocean Blvd and Junipero
Sunday, April 17

    10AM - 1PM Mosaic Workshop at 2CC Art Gallery

          FREE, kid-friendly environment-themed workshops

          Most Sundays, April through July
  • Location: 2nd City Council Art gallery & Performance Space, 435 Alamitos Ave.
          For More Info: 562-901-0997, website

Monday, April 18

    9 AM - 11 PM Colorado Lagoon Earth Week Clean up Event
  • Location: Colorado Lagoon Marine Science Education Center, 5119 East Colorado St.
          For More Info: Taylor Parker, email

Tuesday, April 19

    7 PM - 9 PM Donation-based Herbal Education Class
  • Location: The Catalyst Space, 430 East 1st St.
          For More Info: Julie James, Green Wisdom Herbal Studies, meetup

    10:30 AM - 2 PM CSULB’s Earth Week Environmental Fair
  • Location: CSULB Campus, Speakers Platform across from the University Bookstore
          Parking: permits available at Visitor Information Center,
                         on Beach Drive just off of Bellflower Blvd.
  
           For More Info: Jessica Young, email

Wednesday, April 20


    9 AM - 6 PM Long Beach City College Horticulture Club Open House &Plant Sale
  • Location: Pacific Coast Campus, 1305 East Pacific Coast Hwy, Horticulture Gardens
          For More Info: 562-938-3092

    10:30 AM - 2 PM CSULB’s Earth Week Environmental Awareness Fair, continued

Thursday, April 21

    9 AM - 6 PM Long Beach City College Plant Sale, continued

    2 PM - 5 PM Growing Experience Earth Day Event

          Family-friendly farm tours and kid activities
  • Location: 750 Via Carmelitos
          For More Info: Jimmy Ng 562-984-2917

Friday, April 22 “MOTHER EARTH DAY”

    9 AM - 6 PM Long Beach City College Plant Sale, continued

    10 AM - 2 PM Earth Day Celebration at Long Beach City Hall
  • Multiple city departments will be coming together to showcase their green initiatives and environmental programs.       
          Location: Long Beach City Hall Plaza, 333 West Ocean Blvd
       
          For More Info: Tiffany Chen email, city website

    11 AM - 2 PM Earth Day on Campus! @ Long Beach City College

  • Demos on solar energy, water pump, climate change presentation, reuse guide, recycling tips & more!
  • Location: LBCC Liberal Arts Campus, Courtyard by White Oak Hall, 4901 E Carson St

Saturday, April 23

    9 AM - 6 PM Long Beach City College Plant Sale, last chance

    10 AM - 1 PM Colorado Lagoon Habitat Restoration
  • Location: 5119 East Colorado St.
          For More Info: 562-261-9058, email

Additional Resources

Download the City of Long Beach’s Earth Week 2011 calendar here, for more events.

Earth Week History

Enjoy this? Please share the link and comment below even if only to say "Hi!"

You might also be interested in Donna’s other work as Long Beach Urban Agriculture Examiner, National Science News Examiner and founder and executive director of Long Beach Grows.


Copyright © 2011 Donna Marykwas; All rights reserved.