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Colorado climate scientists tell Ken Buck: Global warming is not a ‘hoax’

October 25th, 2010 admin No comments

by Brad Johnson.

Cross-posted from the Wonk Room.

Colorado’s climate scientists—among the world’s leaders in the
field—have sharply dismissed the assertions made by the state’s
Republican candidate for the U.S. Senate that global warming is a
“hoax.” Colorado is a hub of American climate science, home to the
National Center for Atmospheric Research, the National Renewable Energy
Laboratory, and the Natural Resource Ecology Laboratory. On Thursday,
Interior Secretary Ken Salazar announced Colorado State University would
house the North Central Climate Science Center,
leading a consortium of the University of Colorado, Colorado School of
Mines, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, University of Wyoming, Montana
State University, University of Montana, Kansas State University, and
Iowa State University. Nevertheless, Ken Buck, the Republican candidate
for Senate in Colorado, is a radical denier of the science of global warming, campaigning with Sen. Jim Inhofe (R-Okla.) this week:

Sen. Inhofe was the first person to stand up and say this global warming is the greatest hoax that has been perpetrated. The evidence just keeps supporting his view, and more and more people’s view, of what’s going on.

Colorado’s climatologists have responded to Buck, en force. In a
press conference hastily arranged by the League of Conservation Voters
on Friday, Colorado State University climatologist Scott Denning blasted the anti-science position of Buck, Inhofe, and the like:

There’s really no question at all that CO2 molecules emit heat. It seems like the onus is on them to explain how you can add heat to the surface without warming it up.
The basic science of the effect of human-produced CO2 on climate change
is 150 years old. It was first measured in 1863. The first estimates of
the effect were published in 1896. It piles up and the more stuff you
put up there, the more heat you’re going to get. [Emphasis mine.]

In an exclusive email interview with the Wonk Room, Denning’s colleague Dennis Ojima,
chair of Colorado State’s Natural Resource Ecology Laboratory and a
senior scholar with the Heinz Center, explained that “there is no hoax”:

Quite simply, there is no hoax in studying climate change. It is an important research concern, the same as studying cancer or the economic growth. There
is no controversy about the role human actions have made to alter the
climate system through the emissions of greenhouse gases over the past
150 years. The fundamental physics associated with the impact
of this change in atmospheric concentrations of these gases is not
disputed. The manner in which these gases react in the atmosphere is one
of the fundamental properties of the climate system. The
science at the fundamental level related to greenhouse gases and climate
are as solid and as important as the finding that germs are responsible
for illnesses and that there are specific strategies to reduce germs in
the environment we live in.

“Climate science is not at all a hoax,” climatologist Caspar M. Ammann,
a senior scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research,
told the Wonk Room. In fact, when Ammann heard comments by Buck several
months ago on Colorado Public Radio questioning the science of climate
change, Dr. Ammann contacted the Buck campaign, offering to explain “why
we are sure most of the warming in the last thirty to forty years is
human made.”

Ammann received no response from Ken Buck.

In the interview, Ammann emphasized how severe the changes to the
global climate will be if greenhouse pollution is not curtailed:

The magnitude of temperature change will be comparable to
interglacial periods, when New York City and the Upper Midwest were
covered with an ice sheet, about 5-6 C degrees of temperature change. If we keep going with our emissions, we could get that temperature change in a hundred years. We expect 4 C and it could be more by the end of the century, about five times as much warming as we’ve already experienced. The
magnitude, even on a geologic perspective, is a substantial change, far
larger than anything human civilization has ever seen.

“It’s very likely it’s disruptive to anything we’re doing and take for granted at the moment,” Ammann cautioned.

And yet, it seems that because the response to this civilizational
threat requires some form of governmental regulation, Buck’s ideology
does not permit him to accept that the problem even exists.

Related Links:

BP, other European polluters, pump money into Senate campaigns

States have clean-energy momentum, but it’s under threat

The GOP changes its tune on cap-and-trade






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Engineering Manager – Satellite Office Leader / Farnsworth Group, Inc. / Colorado Springs, CO

September 3rd, 2010 admin No comments

Farnsworth Group, Inc./Colorado Springs, CO

Farnsworth Group, Inc. is a full-service engineering and architectural firm that offers our valued clients over 325 employees located in a nationwide network of offices. We are also one of the nation’s leaders in sustainable design initiatives, dedicated to solutions that blend in harmony with our natural surroundings. We are currently looking for quality and dedicated employees to join our team. Farnsworth Group is an employee-owned company with a rich 100-year history that offers an impressive benefits and compensation program in addition to excellent career development opportunities. We have the following position available:

Engineering Manager – Satellite Office Leader
Colorado Springs, CO

This is an exciting opportunity for an experienced engineering manager to work with a highly successful organization. The person hired in this role will play a dual role of an Engineering Manager and Satellite Office Leader. In this role you will manage staff and resources and support multiple commissioning, retro-commissioning, energy assessment/auditing, and design projects in the Colorado Springs, CO area and across the nation for a wide variety of clients and facility types.

Engineering Management Responsibilities include:
• Staff and resource management
• Technical quality control
• Marketing and proposal development
• Establishing and maintaining budgets
• Working within our project accounting system
• Management and execution of projects from inception through completion
• Overnight travel required to support projects

Office leadership duties will include:
• Acting as satellite office leader
• Staff development and meetings
• Office budget management
• Collaborating with other discipline teams in the organization as required
• Coordinating multiple disciplines on local or national projects
• Participation in local events and attendance of periodic evening meetings
• Overnight travel to other Farnsworth Group office locations

Minimum Specific Requirements include:
• BS in Architectural Engineering, Mechanical Engineering or Electrical Engineering
• 10 -15 years of progressive experience in engineering management
• Proven leadership skills with minimum of 5 years of engineering staff leadership experience
• Previous commissioning experience as defined by ASHRAE Guideline 0
• Previous LEED® and/or sustainable design project experience
• Previous MEP design experience
• Registered PE in the State of CO or able to obtain CO licensure
• Experience with Federal projects considered a plus

We offer an excellent salary and benefits program that includes:
• Medical/Dental Plans
• Prescription Drug Program
• Vision Plan
• 401(k) with Company Match
• Tuition Reimbursement
• Flexible Spending Account
• Time-off Benefits
• Company ownership potential

For immediate consideration please:

Apply Online by clicking below or visiting our website at http://www.f-w.com and clicking on the careers link.

Farnsworth Group, Inc. is proud to be an EEO/AA employer M/F/D/V.


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Colorado Tea Party candidate struggles to explain U.N.-bicycle conspiracy

August 10th, 2010 admin No comments

by Brad Johnson.

Cross-posted from the Wonk Room.

Dan Maes, the Tea
Party-supported candidate
in the Colorado governor’s race, has
argued that a popular Denver bike-share program is a “very
well-disguised
” part of a plan by Denver mayor (and Democratic
gubernatorial candidate) John Hickenlooper for “converting Denver into a
United Nations community.” Last week, Maes told the press that Denver’s
membership in the International Council
for Local Environmental Initiatives
(ICLEI) “could threaten our
personal freedoms
” because environmental initiatives like the
cycling program are “very specific strategies that are dictated to us by
this United Nations program that mayors have signed on to.”

Yesterday afternoon, Maes appeared on MSNBC to explain his conspiracy
theory. Although the “bike program in and of itself is fine,” he said,
what worries him is “what’s behind it all:”

We’re trying to differentiate myself from the mayor. If I
win the primary and when I win the primary tomorrow, people are going
to say what the difference is. We’re both business people. When a
mayor signs onto a program sponsored by the United Nations, that should
bring concern to people as to how the program may or may not be
compatible with our state constitution
. [Emphasis mine.]

Watch it:

Despite Maes’s dark fears, Denver’s participation in ICLEI carries no
legal obligations and raises no constitutional issues, but does allow
city planners to share information and ideas with other urban
communities throughout the world. Maes has not yet commented on Colorado
State University’s support for the U.N. Convention
to Combat Desertification
, the suspiciously named Denver International Airport, the
University of Colorado Model United Nations
Club
, or Denver’s international sister cities, like Brest,
France, Chennai, India, and Kunming, China.

Transcript:

MSNBC: To Colorado now, in a primary showdown that has
one Republican candidate accusing the left of taking part in a United
Nations plot. Businessman Dan Maes says Denver’s new bike-sharing
program threatens Americans’ “personal freedoms.” They have stationed
bikes all over the city for residents to rent. And it’s been championed
by the city’s Democratic mayor and gubernatorial candidate John
Hickenlooper. But Maes says it’s a “well-disguised” plot to turn Denver
into a “United Nations community.” Dan Maes is running for the
Republican nomination for governor in Colorado. Good afternoon.

MAES: Hi, how are you?

MSNBC: You know, you live in a state where there’s a lot of
environmental consciousness, we keep hearing about how we’re too
dependent on oil and you have a program that encourages people not just
to bike around and not use gas but also presumably to get a little
healthier, what’s so bad about that?

MAES: Well, the Denver Post article that you might have learned this
from, it took a lot of comments out of context. The bike program in and
of itself is fine. I’m a biker, I rode the seat off my mountain bike
last year myself. But what we’re concerned about is this is just one
piece of a larger U.N. program titled ICLEI, communities for
sustainability. It also includes a lot of other dynamics within city
management. I was trying to draw a distinction between myself and the
Democratic mayor of Denver. So the bike program isn’t in and of itself
bad. What I’m concerned is what’s behind it all.

MSNBC: What’s behind it all that has you so upset?

MAES: Well, again, we’re trying to differentiate myself from the
mayor. If I win the primary and when I win the primary tomorrow, people
are going to say what the difference is, because we’re both business
people. When a mayor signs onto a program sponsored by the United
Nations, that should bring concern to people as to how the program may
or may not be compatible with our state constitution.

Related Links:

Colorado gov. candidate: Biking and transit are part of U.N. plot

Is cap-and-trade to blame for the death of the climate bill?

Denver mayor and Colorado guv candidate talks bike-sharing, light rail, and coal






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Biking—not casinos—banned in small Colorado town

June 24th, 2010 admin No comments

by Ashley Braun.

In the 100-person town of Black Hawk, Colorado, you’re free to gamble away your savings at any of its fine casinos, but you better get the heck off that bike of yours if you don’t want a fine of $68. Black Hawk has recently become the first town to outlaw cycling, which it did for “health and safety” reasons since its focus on gambling has brought more auto traffic a-ramblin’ through.

Now, cycling is only illegal in the narrow, 19-century streets of Black Hawk’s historic district, but forcing cyclists to dismount and walk their bikes for the quarter mile through town where cars and trucks get a free pass to whizz on by … does this actually accomplish the intended goal of “safety”? Maybe someone should send them a pamphlet about Complete Streets, which aims to design safe, efficient streets for all kinds of people and all kinds of transportation.

“At this point the council has no intention of repealing the ban,” said Michael Copp, Black Hawk’s city manager. “They believe their actions are what’s best for its citizens in Black Hawk, which are casinos and their patrons.” Yup, casinos.

Pro-cycling groups are getting ready to challenge the even bigger danger here than cycling—the precedent of such a ban on bikes.

When I was searching for anti-bike photos for this post, I realized I stumbled on a goldmine of ridiculous and ironic pictures. If you’ve seen crazy signs against cycling and managed to snap a pic, send them to me, and I’ll put up a slideshow of the best (worst?).

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Related Links:

Why, yes, mass transit stations should always have a slide

Tricked-out cargo bikes give SUVs a run for their money

WTFood: Friendly’s Grilled Cheese Burger Melt






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