Archive

Archive for June, 2012

Supremes uphold healthcare reform; I eat crow

June 30th, 2012 admin No comments

CNN had a Dewey-defeats-Truman moment with this erroneous headline. (Photo by C.W. Anderson.)

It rarely feels this good to write about how wrong I was, but there it is.

As you might have heard in the last nanosecond, the Supreme Court has upheld both the overall Obamacare health package and specifically the “individual mandate” part of the law.

Yesterday I made a (nearly worthless, as I admitted at the time) prediction that the conservatives on the court would go for broke and strike the whole thing down.

I’m very glad they didn’t, as Chief Justice Roberts sided with the court’s liberal wing. Instead of pursuing a Shermanesque total-war strategy, he apparently opted for a longer-term plan of chipping away at the government’s commerce-clause powers in narrowing the scope of the federal ability to control how states spend their Medicare dollars.

Now, nobody’s even read this whole decision yet, so there’s a lot more analysis to be done. But for the moment, we know that the Obama administration didn’t waste the last four years, and the real decision about healthcare reform will be made where it should be, at the polls in November.

So maybe there’s some steam left in the old “Americans banding together to solve real problems” engine!

(As you can see from the above image, CNN’s editors apparently made the same wrong bet I did — but they actually went live with the headline, even though it was entirely wrong.)

UPDATE: As today progresses, we’ll have reactions to the healthcare decision over in Gristmill from a variety of people who are thinking broadly about sustainability.

In the meantime, here’s some food for thought:

This decision will have a massive effect on the lives of literally millions of people. Mitt Romney may have joked yesterday that the White House was “not sleeping real well” last night. But a lot of people tonight and in the future will sleep a lot better for this result … What also matters is: we may learn that President Obama sacrificed his presidency to push through this piece of legislation — the Dems already lost Congress over it. But presidencies are for doing important things not just for getting elected to second terms in office. And I strongly suspect that even if Mitt Romney wins and gets a Republican Congress, they still won’t be able to get rid of this law.

Josh Marshall at TPM

Today’s ruling is life-changing news for indie artists and makers — especially those with families. (Like me.)

Andy Baio on Twitter

During the New Deal, Franklin Delano Roosevelt sought to expand the federal government’s management of the economy to cope with the Great Depression. While the court initially dealt Roosevelt plenty of setbacks, the era as a whole can be seen as a ratification of Roosevelt’s broad contention that the crisis merited expansive federal intervension.

During the Warren Court, a liberal era, questions surrounding federal authority were different — and were more directly concerned with the battle between federal power and states’ rights. The Court frequently upheld the federal government’s authority over states on matters ranging from civil rights to voting to education.

Today’s decision can be seen as the start of a third such era, says [James O’Hara, a trustee of the Supreme Court Historical Society]…. This is the most far reaching decision the court has made to date to reckon with the complexities of today’s economy, of which health care is an increasingly dominant part.

Greg Sargent, Washington Post

Filed under: Politics

View full post on Grist

Sr. Wetland and Waterway Regulatory Specialist(TSP4)(71000964) / Southern California Edison / Monrovia, CA

June 30th, 2012 admin No comments

Southern California Edison/Monrovia, CA

Description:
Highly-motivated; likes challenge; collaborative; committed to delivering high quality work… Did we describe you? Read on…

Southern California Edison is one of the nation’s largest investor-owned electric utilities. We are an industry leader that is designing new and innovative ways to meet our customer’s needs. We are looking for highly motivated individuals who enjoy the challenge of working on key industry changing projects. We need your good ideas and your contributions to remain a leader in this industry.

About:
Operations Support works with its business partners to understand their business requirements and utilizes the functional expertise of its people, its resources and its processes to deliver solutions to meet those requirements. The organization acts as a steward to do what is best for the company, ensuring that SCE meets or exceeds the sustainability, safety and compliance standards set by the corporation.

Position Overview:
The successful candidate will be a lead subject matter expert in the Corporate Environmental Services department supporting major and O&M projects in Wetland and Waterway (401/402/1602) permitting. The Senior Wetland and Waterway Regulatory Specialist will represent the company through interaction with federal, state and local environmental regulatory agencies. The candidate will also conduct negotiations related to enforcement actions or other correspondence with regulatory agencies, typically with the US Army Corps of Engineers, Regional Water Quality Control Boards and/or State Water Resources Control Board and the California Department of Fish & Game. Additional responsibilities will include preparing internal guidance documents and procedures related to Wetland Delineation and Waste Discharge Requirements. Collaborating with other Corporate Environmental Services sections on 401/404/1602 permitting applications, implementations in their relation to natural resources protection and to assess and implement company programmatic agreement needs in the natural resources area. Reviewing and commenting on proposed legislation and regulatory changes; providing guidance to SCE operating units on evolving environmental requirements related to Wetland and Waterway policy and wetland delineation and jurisdictional water determinations. Assisting operating units with effective training, compliance evaluation and developing Root Cause Analyses and Corrective Action Plans. Responding to agency notices, performing site assessments, field inspections and biological surveys. Participating in the oil spill notification/response team. Some after hours and on call duty required; and performing other duties and responsibilities.

Job Requirements:
•Bachelor's degree in Biology, Engineering, Hydrogeology, Natural Sciences or a related field or an equivalent combination of education, training, and experience.
•Must have a minimum of three years’ experience in environmental compliance work related to wetland and waterway permitting.
•Typically possesses eight or more years’ experience in the field of water quality performing complex analyses, consulting, and providing recommendations.
•Demonstrated experience working with laws, regulations and permitting requirements related to the Federal Clean Water Act 401 certification, 404 permitting and the State of California Porter-Cologne Act and California Department of Fish and Game Streambed Alteration Agreements-1602.
•Demonstrated experience with jurisdictional water determinations and wetland delineations.
•Demonstrated ability to analyze laws and regulations to determine their applicability, risk and impact to a large corporation.
•Demonstrated ability to interface effectively and collaborate with environmental groups and regulatory agencies.
•Ability to maintain reference information, GIS and data bases using Microsoft Word, Excel, Access, Visio and PowerPoint.
•Demonstrated ability to follow Edison safety protocols and safe work practices.
•Must demonstrate the ability to integrate work across relevant areas, develop the business and services to enhance customer satisfaction and productivity, manage risks appropriately, develop and execute business plans, manage information, and provide exceptional service to internal and external customers.
•Must demonstrate effective resource and project planning, decision making, results delivery, team building, and the ability to stay current with relevant technology and innovation.
•Must demonstrate strong ethics, influence and negotiation, leadership, interpersonal skills, communication, and the ability to effectively manage stress and engage in continuous learning.

Comments:
•There are 2 open positions for this requisition.
•If you are interested in this position, please submit your resume in confidence by visiting www.edisonjobs.com.
•Edison International is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
•Candidates for this position must be legally authorized to work directly as employees for any employer in the United States without visa sponsorship.

Southern California Edison, an Edison International (NYSE:EIX) company, serves a population of nearly 14 million via 4.9 million customer accounts in a 50,000-square-mile service area within Central, Coastal and Southern California. Join the utility leader that is safely delivering reliable, affordable electricity to our customers for over 125 years.

Apply To Job

View full post on GreenBiz Jobs

Incoming search terms for the article:

‘Monsanto Protection Act’ would keep GMO crops in the ground during legal battles

June 30th, 2012 admin No comments

It’s that exciting time of the year again when the Senate and House Appropriations Committees gets together to hash out the annual agriculture budget. I know, right? Really fun stuff.

This year, in addition to the usual underfunding of legislation that could make the food system more sustainable, the appropriations process has become especially charged, thanks to a one-paragraph addition called the “farmer assurance provision.” The provision — which the agriculture committee approved last week, but has yet to go to the full House — would allow farmers to plant and grow GMO crops before they’ve been deemed safe. Or, more accurately, if it passes, farmers will be able to plant these crops while legal battles ensue over their safety.

Groups ranging from the Center for Food Safety and the National Family Farm Coalition to the American Civil Liberties Union, the Sierra Club, and the Union of Concerned Scientists are all opposing the provision, which they’re calling the “Monsanto Protection Act.”

As it stands now, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) can suspend planting while the environmental impact of one of these crops is being assessed. Or that’s how it’s been in theory at least.

And it is what happened in 2007 when a federal judge overturned the USDA’s approval of GMO alfalfa, in response to a lawsuit filed by farmers and the Center for Food Safety. (Planting of alfalfa resumed again in 2011 when the USDA fully deregulated the crop.)

In the case of GMO sugar beets, another hotly contested crop, planting was supposed to be suspended, but by the point that suspension was ordered, the market had been cleared out and there were no longer enough non-GMO seeds. As we reported recently, “America faced the prospect of a 20-percent reduction in that year’s sugar crop. In response — and in defiance of the federal judge’s order — the USDA allowed farmers to plant GM sugar beets anyway.” Now, all this back and forth could be moot to most farmers (unless a crop is officially, finally deemed unsafe — and well, that hasn’t happened yet.)

Needless to say, producers of big commodity crops are excited at the prospect. As Businessweek reports:

The American Soybean Association, one of nine U.S. agriculture groups supporting the House provision, said the legislation would give farmers assurance they can plant and harvest modified crops during legal challenges.

The Center for Food Safety, which has sued over USDA approvals of biotech crops, called the bill’s language a “Monsanto profit assurance provision” that interferes with judicial oversight of agency decisions and has the potential to disrupt the global grain trade.

It only makes sense that the soybean industry would be glad to see these “legal challenges” disappear, since a whopping 94 percent of soybeans planted in this country are now genetically engineered to be herbicide resistant.

The sad fact is, the USDA’s oversight over the biotech industry has been eroding slowly for a while. If this provision makes it through the full House vote, the agency will have just about lost the reigns completely.

Filed under: Corn, Farm Bill, Food, Industrial Agriculture

View full post on Grist

Three ways robots can help us deal with environmental catastrophes

June 30th, 2012 admin No comments

A version of this article originally appeared on Climate Progress.

Someday soon, robots could help us fight wildfires like the ones blazing in Colorado. (Photo by U.S. Air Force.)

In the last few years, we’ve seen an increase in extreme weather events and environmental disasters — costing us money, and far more importantly, human lives.

Some have been natural (or indirectly caused by humans due to climate change), and others, like BP’s Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, have been directly caused by us.

With scientists warning that the frequency of wildfires, floods, drought, and other catastrophes will only increase as the planet warms, engineers are now focusing on how to use robots and other mechanical gadgets to aid in disaster response. Some of these bots vacuum up oil, some sort rubble and rescue earthquake survivors, and some help battle wildfires. Here’s a look at three of the coolest robotic defenders, both in use and on the horizon.

Image by John MacNeill.

Firebug: Right now in Colorado, the Waldo Canyon Wildfire is burning out of control. As of Thursday, 30,000 people had been evacuated and firefighters had only 5 percent of the blaze contained.

Enter the firefighting robot army. Three groups — one at University of Magdeburg-Stendal in Germany, an American duo, and the makers of the Segway — are all working on a revolutionary and potentially life-saving technology.

The German group has plans for an insect-inspired bot called the OLE. The Saint-Bernard sized bugs are covered in fireproof armor and carry sensors that help them find fires. Once they get to the heat source, they can spray it with water or other fire-extinguishing materials. The bots have legs instead of wheels, helping them to navigate over downed trees, rocks, and other forest impediments that rolling machines would have trouble with, and letting them get to fires faster. (Interestingly, these OLEs look kind of like pine beetles, the ferocious bugs wreaking havoc on western forests.)

Marching into battle alongside the OLEs (and possibly a lot sooner) could be Segway’s design. Armed with a water cannon that can launch up to 10 gallons per second and Segway’s motors that let it travel up to 18 miles per hour, this robot is the heavy artillery of robo wildfire-fighting. Though it’s fast, its wheels make it less maneuverable than the OLE; however, this bot has the ability to haul injured or exhausted human firefighters out of harm’s way.

Behind the OLE and the Segway bot, a transformer-like robot could be clearing trees at a frenzied pace, creating the firebreaks that are so vital to containing a blaze. Though the robot looks like something out of science fiction, its creators have already built a prototype. The robot uses its four arms and massive cutting blades to completely deforest an area rapidly. Clearly, these bots could be dangerous for forests if used the wrong way. But in emergency scenarios they could help save thousands of lives and homes.

Image by Hsu Sean.

Splashdown: The Obama administration is in favor of offshore drilling for oil in the Arctic, despite the fact that there is no infrastructure in place to deal with an oil spill if one occurred.

Clearly, not drilling in such a sensitive place is preferred. But that doesn’t mean we should stop thinking about how to address a mess if companies do start operating there.

Designer Hsu Sean has envisioned a unique design that eliminates the need to use big, expensive, complex machinery to put chemical dispersants into the water. Sean’s design uses oil-degrading bacteria housed inside of a robot-vacuum vessel to treat oil spills without releasing nasty chemicals that secondarily pollute the water. The devices also contain a sonic emitter that drives marine wildlife away, helping to steer them clear of the oil slick.

The best part is that the devices can be deployed via helicopter and simply dropped into the ocean, thereby limiting the need for a response fleet and the necessary support infrastructure.

Search and rescue: Unlike fire and oil spills, many disasters can’t be dealt with until they are over. For disaster response to things like earthquakes, hurricanes, and tornadoes, the most important thing is finding and rescuing survivors in piles of unstable, toxic, or even radioactive rubble. There is no shortage of robots ready to help out:

There’s no substitute for good planning to prevent disasters — whether it be in how we build our communities or take actions to mitigate climate change. But we still need innovations like this to help us out when we inevitably face a catastrophe.

Filed under: Article, Climate Change

View full post on Grist

Analyst / Recyclebank / New York, NY

June 29th, 2012 admin No comments

Recyclebank/New York, NY

JOB TITLE: Analyst
LOCATION: New York, NY

JOB SUMMARY:
As a member of the Analytics Team, the Analyst is an everyday partner of multiple departments, including Product, Operations, Marketing, Finance, IT Development, Sales, and Data Management. The Analyst tackles analytical and operational inquiries by developing thoughtful, incisive, and thoroughly practical analyses and reports that inform decisions and support business needs. Results must be highly polished and suitable for internal and external presentation. The Analyst reports to the Senior Manager, Analytics.

ESSENTIAL FUNCTIONS:
• Assist, or lead, in the development of highly dynamic, decision-informing models designed to support a rapidly evolving business with limited comparables or precedents. Subject areas may include:
o Optimization of Marketing initiatives
o Operational forecasting
o Client forecasts & reporting
o Member engagement
o Customer lifecycle touch points
o New product verticals
o Ad hoc projects and analyses
• Perform research and analyses to identify and quantify market trends.
• Assist in developing standard reporting packages that effectively inform direct stakeholders on key business indicators.
o Design and standardize reports and queries.
o Partner with the Technical Reporting team to ensure consistency and alignment with business needs.
• Assist in achieving foundational objectives, including the identification and diagnosis of key business issues, development of solutions, and timely and seamless execution.

KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS AND ABILITIES:
• Business and Problem Solving Skills:
o Strong problem solving and analytical skills with a keen eye towards execution that drives tangible results.
o Fast learner of business models, programs, and architectures.
o ‘Can-Do’ attitude with willingness to develop foundational understandings and solutions.
o Demonstrated capability to synthesize data, understand business dynamics and think globally and strategically.
o Able to maintain a consistently high level of objectivity.

Quick Learner:
o Enthusiastic to apply aptitude to new learning experiences.
o Approaches challenges as learning opportunities, not an obstacle to success.

Leadership:
o Self-starter who is also capable of collaborating and playing a specific role within teams.
o Comfortable delivering solutions with limited direction and supervision while working in a complex and rapidly evolving business environment.

Communication:
o Strong verbal and written communication skills.
o Able to translate simple inquiries into complex analyses that are translated back into simple and straightforward results.
o Comfortable presenting internally as needed.

Strong Interpersonal Skills:
o Capable of working with a very diverse team on a day to day basis.
o Understands others quickly.
o Can find common ground without compromising total position.

Project Management:
o Comfortable and effective at simultaneously maintaining multiple projects and priorities in a fast-paced work environment.
o Able to measure situations and use judgment to make shrewd decisions.

EDUCATION AND EXPERIENCE:
Experience. 0 – 18 months of analytical work experience. Preferred backgrounds include investment banking, consulting, Big 4 accounting and Fortune 500 FP&A. Bachelor's degree in Finance, Economics, Mathematics, Accounting, Information Sciences, or a related field required. Working knowledge of Microsoft Office suite of programs, including Excel and Access. Foundational understanding/experience of data base structure, design, SQL and other programming languages highly preferred.

ABOUT RECYCLEBANK
Recyclebank helps create a more sustainable future by rewarding people for taking everyday green actions with discounts and deals from more than 3,000 local and national businesses. Through its online platform and partnerships with municipalities, haulers, small businesses and corporate brands, Recyclebank is empowering individuals to make a collective impact on the environment by increasing household recycling, reducing household energy usage and taking other environmentally-preferred actions. Recognized as a Technology Pioneer by the World Economic Forum, a Champion of the Earth by the United Nations Environment Programme and for Outstanding Excellence in Public/Private Partnerships from the U.S. Conference of Mayors, Recyclebank is headquartered in New York City. For more information, visit www.Recyclebank.com.

Recyclebank is an equal opportunity employer committed to providing equal employment opportunity for all people regardless of race, color, religion, gender or sexual orientation, age, marital status, national origin, citizenship status, disability, veteran status or other personal characteristics

Apply To Job

View full post on GreenBiz Jobs

Categories: Green Jobs Tags: , ,

Did climate change ’cause’ the Colorado wildfires?

June 29th, 2012 admin No comments

Photo by USAF.

The wildfires raging through Colorado and the West are unbelievable. As of yesterday there were 242 fires burning, according to the National Interagency Fire Center. Almost 350 homes have been destroyed in Colorado Springs, where 36,000 people have been evacuated from their homes. President Obama is visiting today to assess the devastation for himself.

Obviously the priority is containing the fires and protecting people. But inevitably the question is going to come up: Did climate change “cause” the fires? Regular readers know that this question drives me a little nuts. Pardon the long post, but I want to try to tackle this causation question once and for all.

What caused the Colorado Springs fire? Well, it was probably a careless toss of a cigarette butt, or someone burning leaves in their backyard, or a campfire that wasn’t properly doused. [UPDATE: Turns out it was lightning.] That spark, wherever it came from, is what triggered the cascading series of events we call “a fire.” It was what philosophers call the proximate cause, the most immediate, the closest.

All the other factors being discussed — the intense drought covering the state, the dead trees left behind by bark beetles, the high winds — are distal causes. Distal causes are less tightly connected to their effects. The dead trees didn’t make any particular fire inevitable; there can be no fire without a spark. What they did is make it more likely that a fire would occur. Distal causes are like that: probabilistic. Nonetheless, our intuitions tell us that distal causes are in many ways more satisfactory explanations. They tell us something about the meaning of events, not just the mechanisms, which is why they’re also called “ultimate” causes. It’s meaning we usually want.

When we say, “the fires in Colorado were caused by unusually dry conditions, high winds, and diseased trees,” no one accuses us of error or imprecision because it was “really” the matches or campfires that caused them. We are not expected to say, “no individual fire can be definitively attributed to hot, windy conditions, but these are the kinds of fires we would expect to see in those conditions.” Why waste the words? We are understood to be talking about distal causes.

When we talk about, not fires themselves, but the economic and social impacts of fires, the range of distal causes grows even broader. For a given level of damages, it’s not enough to have dry conditions and dead trees, not even enough to have fire — you also have to take into account the density of development, the responsiveness of emergency services, and the preparedness of communities for prevention or evacuation.

So if we say, “the limited human toll of the Colorado fires is the result of the bravery and skill of Western firefighters,” no one accuses us of error or imprecision because good firefighting was only one of many contributors to the final level of damages. Everything from evacuation plans to the quality of the roads to the vagaries of the weather contributed in some way to that state of affairs. But we are understood to be identifying a distal cause, not giving a comprehensive account of causation.

What I’m trying to say is, we are perfectly comfortable discussing distal causes in ordinary language. We don’t require scientistic literalism in our everyday talk.

The reason I’m going through all this, you won’t be surprised, is to tie it back to climate change. We know, of course, that climate change was not the proximate cause of the fires. It was a distal cause; it made the fires more likely. That much we know with a high degree of confidence, as this excellent review of the latest science by Climate Communication makes clear.

One can distinguish between distal causes by their proximity to effects. Say the drought made the fires 50 percent more likely than average June conditions in Colorado. (I’m just pulling these numbers out of my ass to illustrate a point.) Climate change maybe only made the fires 1 percent more likely. As a cause, it is more distal than the drought. And there are probably causes even more distal than climate change. Maybe the exact tilt of the earth’s axis this June made the fires 0.0001 percent more likely. Maybe the location of a particular proton during the Big Bang made them 0.000000000000000001 percent more likely. You get the point.

With this in mind, it’s clear that the question as it’s frequently asked — “did climate change cause the fires?” — is not going to get us the answer we want. If it’s yes or no, the answer is “yes.” But that doesn’t tell us much. What people really want to know when they ask that question is, “how proximate a cause is climate change?”

When we ask the question like that, we start to see why climate is such a wicked problem. Human beings, by virtue of their evolution, physiology, and socialization, are designed to heed causes within a particular range between proximate and distal. If I find my kid next to an overturned glass and a puddle of milk and ask him why the milk is spilled, I don’t care about the neurons firing and the muscles contracting. That’s too proximate. I don’t care about humans evolving with poor peripheral vision. That’s too distal. I care about my kid reaching for it and knocking it over. That’s not the only level of causal explanation that is correct, but it’s the level of causal explanation that is most meaningful to me.

For a given effect — a fire, a flood, a dead forest — climate change is almost always too distal a cause to make a visceral impression on us. We’re just not built to pay heed to those 1 percent margins. It’s too abstract. The problem is, wildfires being 1 percent more likely averaged over the whole globe actually means a lot more fires, a lot more damage, loss, and human suffering. Part of managing the Anthropocene is finding ways of making distal causes visceral, giving them a bigger role in our thinking and institutions.

That’s what the “did climate change cause XYZ?” questions are always really about: how proximate a cause climate change is, how immediate its effects are in our lives, how close it is.

There is, of course, a constant temptation among climate hawks to exaggerate how proximate it is, since, all things being equal, proximity = salience. But I don’t think that simply saying “climate change caused the fires” is necessarily false or exaggerated, any more than saying “drought caused the fires” is. The fact that the former strikes many people as suspect while the latter is immediately understood mostly just means that we’re not used to thinking of climate change as a distal cause among others.

That’s why we reach for awkward language like, “fires like this are consonant with what we would expect from climate change.” Not because that’s the way we discuss all distal causes — it’s clearly not — but simply because we’re unaccustomed to counting climate change among those causes. It’s an unfamiliar habit. As it grows more familiar, I suspect we’ll quit having so many of these tedious semantic disputes.

And I’m afraid that, in coming years, it will become all-too familiar.

Filed under: Article, Climate Change

View full post on Grist

Raw Deal: Maine residents’ fight for unregulated food draws crackdown

June 29th, 2012 admin No comments

Farmer Dan Brown has been sued by the Maine Dept. of Agriculture for selling raw milk, despite the passage of a food sovereignty ordinance in his town.

New England town meetings typically include dozens and dozens of proposals for citizens to vote up or down, on quickly forgotten matters like new stop lights and bridge repairs.

But this year, things have been different. The residents in eight small Maine towns have all voted to declare “food sovereignty” — and they won’t be forgetting the issue any time soon. In other words, they’ve passed ordinances that explicitly allow local farmers and ranchers to sell their food — meat, eggs, unpasteurized milk, honey, veggies — directly to consumers within town borders, without state or federal licenses, permits, or regulations.

Towns in Massachusetts, Vermont, and California have all replicated these experiments, which in Vermont have all been based on a single template [PDF]. And while the mainstream media is referring to the ordinances as “symbolic,” it is yet to be seen how the courts will rule.

These votes are the result of work by activists in the food sovereignty moment, who see the ordinances as a response to an ever more intensely regulated food system. On the federal level, the recent Food Safety Modernization Act could require small food producers to complete a sophisticated hazard analysis critical control point (HACCP) plan, which would be both costly and tedious. Meanwhile there has also been an increase in local health department enforcement around the country, in places like school bake sales and kids’ lemonade stands.

Activists see food sovereignty ordinances as a compromise of sorts over the thorny issue of private food distribution. And although many food safety measures and regulations were developed alongside industrial food production — and have a place in protecting consumers — many activists now believe they’ve been used to target small businesses. Food sovereignty activists feel that people have a right to acquire food — such as raw dairy products — privately through membership-based food clubs, outside the parameters of long-standing regulations that require retail, dairy, and other permits.

In a recent AP article, Maine’s state agriculture officials said the ordinances “don’t hold legal muster.” But the state’s so-called “local rule” laws could contradict this view. Via its constitution and legislation, Maine confers significant power on municipalities to enact ordinances that are local in nature, and aren’t denied by state law, like controlling town growth or banning herbicide spraying. “Maine has long been considered a strong ‘home rule’ state,” says the Maine Municipal Association. (Here’s a list of these hyper-local laws.)

While everyone who voted to pass Maine’s food sovereignty ordinances knew they were risking conflict with state and federal authorities, they hadn’t imagined the objections would be as swift, or intense, as they have turned out to be.

“Farmers know whether the milk is bad”

Just months after the first six towns passed the ordinances, the state filed a lawsuit [PDF] against a farmer named Dan Brown of Blue Hill, Maine, for selling unpasteurized milk without a state permit. Brown says losing the suit could put him out of business, since complying with state permit requirements would be so costly as to not justify operating his two-cow dairy. He owns the cows primarily so that he can provide milk for his family, and he sells what’s left. (Activists set up a Facebook page in support of Brown called We Are All Farmer Brown.)

“I have never had any questions from customers saying there was any problem with my milk,” Brown told the Bangor Daily News. “This has been done this way for hundreds of years. Farmers, when they milk a cow, know whether the milk is bad or not.”

Brown says the state has devoted significant investigative resources to making the case against him, and he has led several demonstrations, including one at the capital in Augusta, demanding that the state drop the suit.

While there’s no mention of the food sovereignty ordinances in the suit, and state officials have denied a connection, Brown’s defense lawyers obtained email correspondence that suggest otherwise. For instance, a Maine Dept. of Agriculture program manager sent an email in June 2011 — two months after Blue Hill’s food sovereignty ordinance was enacted — about Brown allegedly selling food at a local farmer’s market without a license. “Sounds like we have our first test case,” he wrote.

The email was one of nearly 700 pages of emails, memos, and other documents obtained by the lawyers under Maine’s Freedom of Access Act, and they provide a window into the intensity of the food sovereignty battle. Activists also found written warnings to a second farmer, Heather Retberg of Quill’s End Farm, who has been active in organizing the residents of several towns in favor of the food sovereignty ordinances. One warning reads: “If you refuse to bring your business into compliance and continue to operate in violation of the laws of the State of Maine we will refer this matter to the Attorney General for enforcement action.”

Regulation or retaliation?

The controversy has extended to the top levels of Maine’s government, including Republican Gov. Paul LePage. Last September, after hearing feedback from constituents in support of the food sovereignty ordinances, LePage wrote a memo [PDF] to the head of the Maine Dept. of Agriculture, Walt Whitcomb, that read:

I am particularly concerned about over-regulating the small farms with large capital investments and costly licensing. In recent weeks I have received letters, emails and constituent visits concerning regulations involving intrastate commerce.

Attached to LePage’s memo was a proposed bill in the Maine legislature that would have allowed the sale of raw milk without a state permit. On the proposed legislation was a note that appears to be from the governor or an aide: “This statute sounds reasonable. Please advise the problem you see with it?”

Also attached was a letter from a Maine farmer, John O’Donnell, who wanted to let the governor know what was behind the food sovereignty movement. In the letter, O’Donnell wrote:

As you may know, several Maine towns passed food sovereignty resolutions last year. This was mainly driven by small farmers experiencing unfair regulations that are barriers to entry, and restraint of trade. Many of these farmers fought for the same Maine bills I did, and saw how the Subcommittee on Agriculture was mainly under the control of the large farm and dairy interests and would never let small farm bills out of committee favorably. We also saw how the Department of Agriculture testified in these hearings that there would be repercussions from the USDA or FDA if we relaxed the standards for selling poultry, milk, and other products in our local communities and state.

Under this paragraph was a hand-written note, presumably also from the governor or an aide. It read: “Why would this concern us, if the products are sold intrastate.”

There is no direct response from the Maine Dept. of Agriculture in all the documents. But the department made its opinions known this February in a form letter from Agriculture Commissioner Whitcomb. The letter was addressed to everyone who “shared … thoughts with the administration regarding local food sovereignty ordinances.” Here’s an excerpt:

Local food sovereignty ordinances leave the false impression that residence in certain towns exempt individuals from food licensure and inspection requirements. … Persons who fail to comply (with state laws) will be subject to the Department’s statutory responsibility to enforce state law, including the removal from sale of products from unlicensed sources and/or the imposition of fines.

The cache of emails show the Dept. of Agriculture having reversed a long-standing agency policy of ignoring unlicensed sellers of raw milk who don’t advertise. It also shows the department deciding to intensively investigate any illnesses reported from people who consumed raw milk, even if the illness were known to be highly unlikely to have originated from raw milk consumption.

As early as the summer of 2010 — just when food sovereignty organizers like Retberg were beginning to discuss their plans to push for local ordinances — agriculture investigators began visiting any farm that sold milk to people who contracted a nasty parasite known as cryptosporidium, or “crypto.” According the U.S. Centers for Disease Control, crypto spreads most often from “drinking water and recreational water” and “is one of the most frequent causes of water-borne disease among humans in the United States.”

Depositions are now being taken and arguments made in the state’s case against Brown and the trial could begin next fall. The state of Maine is hoping to end quickly and absolutely any notions people might have that they can distribute food privately, outside regulatory constraints.

While food sovereignty may stem from local efforts, however, it has arisen in response to a much larger problem — one that’s far from localized.

As Bob St. Peter, farmer and food sovereignty, organizer said to WABI, a local Maine TV news channel, recently, “Seventy-six million people a year get sick from foodborne illness. These are systemic problems … When people come to my farm or they come to Dan Brown’s farm they’re looking for a way out. They’re looking for an alternative to that system.”

Filed under: Food, Food Safety

View full post on Grist

Assistant or Associate Quaternary Geologist (depending on qualifications) / Illinois State Geological Survey / Champaign, IL

June 29th, 2012 admin No comments

Illinois State Geological Survey/Champaign, IL

Assistant or Associate Quaternary Geologist
(depending on qualifications)

Illinois State Geological Survey
Prairie Research Institute
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

We are seeking an individual to fill one position. The successful individual’s qualifications will determine the level to which he/she is appointed.

Responsibilities: Carry out and complete investigations of Quaternary geology, history, climate, and ecology as basic research and as applied research and communicate results of those investigations in a variety of formats and venues. Map the distribution of Quaternary deposits and landforms at various scales at the land surface and in the subsurface in the form of basic geologic, structure contour, isopachous, and derivative or application specific maps. Minimum Qualifications: Bachelor’s degree in geology, geography, or related discipline with 4 years related industry or research experience is the minimum requirement. A master’s degree is preferred. Demonstrated ability to conduct research in Quaternary geology and to map glacial and other unconsolidated deposits. Ability to communicate research results through high quality reports, publications, and presentations. For a detailed description of the position and qualifications please visit jobs.illinois.edu.

To apply all candidates must submit an online profile through jobs.illinois.edu by the close of the posting period. Qualified candidates must upload a letter of application which details qualifications noted above, résumé, and the names, addresses, phone numbers, and e-mail addresses of three professional references. All requested information must be submitted for your application to be considered. Incomplete information will not be reviewed. Applications must be received by July 31, 2012.

For further information please contact Lori Walston-Vonderharr, Human Resources, Illinois State Geological Survey, at lwalston@illinois.edu or 217-244-2401.

The University of Illinois is an Affirmative Action, Equal Opportunity Employer.
www.inclusiveillinois.illinois.edu

Apply To Job

View full post on GreenBiz Jobs

Operations Analyst / Chevron Energy Solutions / San Francisco, CA

June 29th, 2012 admin No comments

Chevron Energy Solutions/San Francisco, CA

We are looking for a positive, motivated self-starter with a diverse range of capabilities to join our team as Operations Analyst. This is a fantastic opportunity to launch a career in the fast-moving world of renewable energy!

This position would play a crucial role in the RIBU, an exciting division of CES that is focused on creating strategic competitive advantage for the company through the investment in and building of large-scale renewable energy projects, including solar, wind and geothermal power plants. Each member of our team is a superstar in their own right, but they are humble in their achievements and are motivated by constant learning and development. They are never satisfied with the status quo and expect the best of everyone around them. Personal egos don’t enter into the equation with this team – there is a strong sense of supporting your colleagues and everyone is focused on winning as a unit.

The role of the Operations Analyst is to provide support for and/or pilot a variety of projects ranging from contacting project brokers and seller outreach to marketing campaigns and efficiency initiatives within Chevron.

Primary responsibilities will continuously evolve, but will initially be focused on:

• Interfacing with top management leaders within CES and at other top-tier renewable energy and investment firms across the country.
• Business development assistance and support of established relationships with the goal of fostering new projects and closing projects in the pipeline.
• Managing the creation of complex, strategic marketing materials for use both inside and outside of the company.
• Working closely with the RIBU General Manager to coordinate business activities across the RIBU team.
• Assisting in identifying short-term investment and long-term competitive advantage opportunities.
• Executing and managing high-level market research initiatives as needed.
• Managing the flow and timely execution of important legal and business contracts across multiple internal teams.

This is a contract position with compensation ranging between $94,400 and $108,100. Benefits are not included for this contract position.

ABOUT YOU

The ideal candidate is a charismatic and energetic star, able to simultaneously juggle multiple initiatives. You are eager to launch or continue a long-term career in the renewable energy field and are passionate about creating sustainable business solutions to meet the energy needs of America and the world. You graduated from a great college/university with an impressive GPA, and have at least one year of experience in the energy or business field (internships included). You are professional, ambitious but humble and able to work equally well independently or in a team. Most importantly, regardless of experience, the ideal candidate possesses a positive “can-do†attitude, willing to do whatever it takes to help, and shares our passion for delivering programs that have profound and lasting results.

HOW TO APPLY

Please send your resume and cover letter to solarbusinessmanager@chevron.com by 5:00pm, July 10th. Include “Application: Operations Analyst†in the subject line for responses to this job posting. You should be available to start in our San Francisco office on August 1st or earlier.

Note your cover letter (please limit to <1.5 pages) should specifically address:

1. Your passion for renewable energy and evidence thereof
2. How a green energy project from your resume has inspired your career
3. Career goals and how this position fits your path

Chevron is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

Apply To Job

View full post on GreenBiz Jobs

Incoming search terms for the article:

Date with disaster: Adventurers sail through wave of tsunami debris

June 29th, 2012 admin No comments

Anna Cummins and Marcus Eriksen

The Pacific Ocean is a pretty darned big place. The hull of the 72’ former racing yacht, Sea Dragon, not so much, especially when crammed full of research equipment and 14 full-sized human-type people not necessarily accustomed to the rigors of the open ocean. But that’s just what the intrepid team of oceanic avengers from the 5Gyres Institute are up against as they race across the Pacific on a collision course with the great field of debris washed away from Japan by last year’s devastating Tohoku earthquake and tsunami.

Imagine cramming into an RV and driving from Nome, Alaska to Tierra Del Fuego with the cast of Road Rules Season 9. (That would be the Maximum Velocity Tour, but I’m sure you knew that, gentle reader.) Now try to imagine that the I-5 is heaving 30 to 40 feet into the air, is full of sharks, and generally wants you dead. Add to that, Theo won’t stop spraying you with the super soaker he brought for some reason, and you’ve got a pretty good idea of the potential horror involved here.

Scientist, adventurer, and Gulf War veteran Marcus Eriksen previously floated the length of the Mississippi on a raft made of plastic bottles and sailed from California to Hawaii on a boat made of trash to raise awareness of the pollution problem facing us all. What he saw changed his life. “I couldn’t believe how much waste was littering our coast lines,” he says.

Eriksen and his wife, Anna Cummins, co-founded the 5Gyres Institute in 2009 to study the Earth’s 5 great subtropical gyres – enormous, slow-moving whirlpools on the ocean’s surface – and raise awareness of the horrifying levels of garbage floating within. These great pelagic depressions (I think I just named Jimmy Buffet’s next album) serve as the Earth’s mighty bellybuttons, collecting all sorts of unwanted refuse, the vast bulk of it, plastic.

The most infamous of these gyres holds The Great Pacific Garbage Patch, and while the notion of an island of garbage a thousand miles across is an exaggeration, what is actually out there might be far more insidious. “Those 5 gyres make up about 21 percent of the planet’s surface, and they are covered in this thin confetti of plastic,” says Eriksen, who has trolled for trash across the high seas.

This confetti, made of particles the size of fish-food, is often coated with a thin layer of industrial chemicals and petroleum, creating little poison pills that fish in turn eat and absorb. But very little is known about how this stuff travels, and that’s where the tsunami debris comes in.

Some of the debris has already made landfall in North America, most notably a Harley Davidson discovered on a Canadian beach earlier this year (perhaps the first time a Harley has made it over 4,000 miles without breaking down) and shockingly, a 66 foot-long concrete dock covered in millions of invasive organisms that washed up on the Oregon coast.

But according to Eriksen, this debris is only the vanguard. “The stuff washing up in British Columbia right now, that is the stuff affected by wind,” he says, speaking via satellite phone, noting that anything peeking above the surface of the Ocean acts as a sail, speeding its journey east. “But what’s subsurface, what’s beneath the waves, hasn’t made its way across yet.”

For an organization dedicated to studying the effects of plastic pollution in the sea, last year’s catastrophe provided a unique opportunity. “You don’t often get a chance to take an entire city, put it in the ocean, and see what happens to all the stuff,” Eriksen says. “That’s what happened here.”

Eriksen and his team of scientists, journalists, and environmentalists sailed from Yokahama Japan on June 10. They sailed half way across the ocean until finding their first piece of tsunami debris on June 17, then turned south to travel the length of the debris field. “What’s left behind is going to be plastics and anything that’s trapping air, say lightbulbs, car tires still on the rim, insulated refrigerators, boat hulls,” Eriksen says.

Eriksen says the stuff should help answer some questions: “What’s the impact on marine life? How much is out there, and what kind of pollutants are sticking to the materials that are left behind? Are there going to be mountains of trash washing up along the Hawaiian beaches a year from now?”

In the meantime, Dr. Eriksen and his shipmates are bunking a foot from their boat-mates, spending a goodly portion of their days heaving along with their storm-tossed decks, and all in the name of a cleaner, plastic-free sea. Follow the adventures of these ocean adventurers at the fantastic 5Gyres blog.

Filed under: Pollution

View full post on Grist