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Posts Tagged ‘life’

Design Intern / Sustainable Life Media / San Francisco, CA

January 26th, 2012 admin No comments

Sustainable Life Media/San Francisco, CA

The annual Sustainable Brands conference brings the leaders in sustainability, brand and design together for 4 days of conversation. We need a multi-talented designer who can assist in designing for web and print, is comfortable juggling multiple projects and is passionate about sustainability.

You will be working with the Design Manager and marketing team to produce a broad variety of conference materials. Ranging from web pages and e-newsletters to signage and event guides. You are guaranteed to gain a large amount of portfolio pieces by completing this internship.

We need 10-15 hours of work per week, of which at least 8 should be from our offices in San Francisco (the remainder can be done remotely if preferred). The internship will run until the conference in early June.

Skills:
- Adept at using Adobe Creative Suite software i.e. Photoshop, Illustrator, Dreamweaver, InDesign and bonus points for Flash or After Effects experience.
- HTML/CSS knowledge preferred, but not required
- Highly attuned attention to detail
- Good team player
- Familiarity with brand guidelines and maintaining design consistency

What we can offer:
This internship is unpaid but in addition to the opportunity to plug in with a terrific team of media and sustainable business experts, this position offers full travel, board and admission to the Sustainable Brands Conference 2012 in San Diego from 4-7 June. This comes with the opportunity to meet and interface with some of the top innovators on the global sustainable business landscape. We can also offer a flexible work schedule and part time telecommuting.

How to Apply:
Please send your portfolio or link to it, your resume, along with a cover letter detailing your interest in this role and what you feel your strongest skills are.

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Executive Assistant, Special Projects Intern / Sustainable Life Media, Inc. / San Francisco, CA

January 4th, 2012 admin No comments

Sustainable Life Media, Inc./San Francisco, CA

Executive Assistant, Special Projects Intern
Who you are:
• Masters graduate in sustainable business with undergraduate degree in international business, communications, or related field. Some work experience preferred
• Highly motivated self-starter, exceptionally well organized and detail-oriented, able to juggle many activities with grace and good humor
• Exceptional written and verbal communication skills; able to generate the trust and respect of all, whether interacting with a global corporate executive, a supplier, or an administrative assistant
• Willing and able to bounce between fairly mundane administrative support and project management of special projects that are of strategic significance to the business
• A team player who communicates well across the organization and views their personal success as integrally connected with the success of the team and the performance of the organization against its goals
• Proficient with all types of information technology and current business software
• Ethically driven, with impeccable personal integrity, able to maintain confidentiality, looking for a high level internship with a high impact, purpose driven, entrepreneurially run organization – strong potential for intern to hire for the right candidate
General Description:
Personal Assistance to Founder/CEO:
• Manage CEO Calendar
• Assist with design and coordination of SB’12 conference program
• Liaise with key partners on international conference expansion
• Assist with, and potentially lead other special tasks and projects which may or may not include: oversight of the 2012 Sustainable Brands Innovation Open, and/or helping to kick start new lines of business
• Other duties on behalf of the executive as needed
• Potential exists to move into paid leadership position depending on results of special projects activities

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Marketing Coordinator / Sustainable Life Media / San Francisco, CA

December 16th, 2011 admin No comments

Sustainable Life Media/San Francisco, CA

Who you are:
Bachelor’s degree in marketing, communications, or related field
Strong written and verbal communications skills
Self-motivated, detail-oriented and excited about working at a rapidly growing and entrepreneurial company
Excellent problem-solving and organizational skills with the ability to multi-task
Experienced with the use of integrated social media platforms
Familiar with Google Analytics Tracking URLs and tracking codes
Strong word processing and Excel spreadsheet skills
An understanding of the sustainability issues faced by businesses today

Key Duties/Responsibilities:
General marketing assistance to the marketing team, specifically with execution and analysis of marketing campaigns
Maintain database of media & affiliate partners and ensure deliverables are executed accordingly and on time
Assist in the development of online communications, including copywriting and publishing write ups on blogs
Customize URL banner ad tracking codes

What we can offer:
In addition to the unique opportunity to plug in with a terrific team of media, design and sustainable business experts, this position offers complimentary admission to the Sustainable Brands 2012 Conference taking place in San Diego, CA in June, 2012 (a $2395 value). The conference is an excellent opportunity to meet and interface with some of the top innovators in the global sustainable business landscape. We can also offer a flexible work schedule and part time telecommuting.

This is a part time contract position requiring you to work approximately 10-15 hours per week in our San Francisco office, primarily January 1, 2012 through June, 2012. University students are welcome to apply and we are happy to work with your school for course credit, if applicable. Contract to hire opportunity for the right candidate.

How to apply:
Please send your resumé via email, along with a cover letter detailing salary requirements, your interest in this field and in this role, as well as how you feel you can contribute to:

Marie Perriard, Director of Brand Communications & Marketing

Submissions without a targeted cover letter will not be considered. No phone calls please.

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The doctor and the life coach: A question for Andy Revkin

December 14th, 2011 admin No comments

by David Roberts.

I’m working on one last follow-up to my brutal-logic posts, but lemme just take a time-out to ask a question of my friend, NYT journo-blogger Andy Revkin, who seems to have thrown his lot in with Bjorn Lomborg and decided that talking about greenhouse-gas emissions is a drag.

First, to frame things, a thought experiment:

Say you are morbidly obese—you weigh 350 pounds. You go see a doctor and she gives you some blunt, upsetting news: Unless you lose 100 pounds within a year, you’re likely to develop a variety of life-threatening complications. It’s impossible to predict these things with precision, she tells you, but based on the best current health science, your chances of dying within the year are quite high and getting higher every day. And even if you don’t die, you’re likely to live the rest of your life in suffering. Just to be sure, you check with a few more doctors, but they all tell you roughly the same thing.

So you go see a weight-loss specialist. She gives you even more grim news: To lose 100 pounds in a year, you’ll have to embark on a crash program. You’ll have to strictly limit calorie intake, cut out most of the foods you love,  and exercise every day, twice a day. Relative to your current lifestyle, it seems like an impossibly (and miserably) huge undertaking.

But wait! The following day, you get a call from a life coach. She says, “This focus on your weight, on pounds, it’s so limiting! There’s no way you’re going to pull off that crash program. So let’s focus on achievable goals. We’ll find you some more friends,  get you a better haircut and some new clothes, maybe get you in yoga. We’ll figure out a diet and exercise routine, too, but one that works with your lifestyle.”

Good news, right? After all, she’s right that the crash program is unfathomably difficult. And she’s right that you’d like to be more handsome and more flexible and have more friends. Those are important goals too, which will increase your quality of life. And you’ll lose weight, too—maybe 25 pounds, which isn’t a ton, but it isn’t nothing either.

So what’s the problem?

Well, as you think it through, the problem seems obvious. The life coach’s prescription, while seemingly more achievable and definitely more pleasant, has a good chance of resulting in your death. Nothing about what she’s said changes the original doctor’s grim diagnosis. You’ll be more handsome and flexible for a while and then you’ll fall apart, suffer, and probably die.

What is the point of this analogy? The point is that on climate change, lots of folks seem to be playing the role of life coach these days—and very few the role of weight-loss specialist.

There are any number of examples, but this post by Andy is good and recent. He says we can’t accomplish the big emission (“pollution”) reductions scientists tell us are necessary to avoid the disaster of 4 degrees C (7.2 degrees F), so we should focus instead on reducing energy poverty and ramping up innovation, which seem more achievable, not to mention worthwhile for reasons unrelated to climate change.

Now, don’t get me wrong: I’m all for reducing energy poverty and I celebrate Andy’s call for innovation “not merely in the laboratory, but also in education, communication and policy.” And in all of culture! Huzzah for all of it. And I agree that it’s probably more achievable than sharp emission reductions, which would require substantial institutional reform and possibly even a period of economic contraction. But as with the analogy above, I can’t help coming back around to the fact that it leads to disaster. We’ll be happier and richer for a while and then water tables will dry up and agricultural crops will start to fail and mass migrations will start and sea level will rise and our children’s children will live in a miserable sh*thole of a world, if they live at all.

Andy doesn’t say, “these piecemeal, long-term actions will, contrary to appearances, produce the necessary emission reductions.” Nor does he say, “We can’t avoid disaster, so we’ll just have to brace ourselves for 4C and hope it doesn’t rise even higher.” He doesn’t say anything about it at all! The energy-focused path is presented as a more realistic alternative, not an abandonment of the goal.

So I’m going to use this 21st century blog technology to ask Andy (and others thinking along the same lines):  Is my analogy mistaken in some way? If so, where does it break down? Do you not think 4C (or the 6C [10.8F] and higher to which it will probably lead) is a disaster? Do you think prosperous adaptation to 4C is meaningfully possible? Or do you think the energy-focused path can succeed in avoiding 4C? Or do you secretly accept that we’re screwed and you just don’t want to talk about it publicly?

Temperature rise above 3 or 4C is increasingly likely. If we fail to talk about what that means, aren’t we being the life coach?

———

PS: Just to be clear, this isn’t meant to be some kind of rhetorical trick or trap. I’m genuinely curious what Andy (and others! please weigh in) think about this.

PPS: And just to be clear about something else: Neither I nor, as far as I know, anyone else is advocating a Terror Only strategy, or even a Terror First strategy. I’m just wondering why, with the brutal logic we face, terror seems to have dropped out of the picture entirely.

Related Links:

The brutal logic of climate change mitigation

The brutal logic of climate change

Durban dispatch: Climate deniers rip Tutu






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Life Cycle Assessment Consultant / pkg packaging / Oxnard, CA

November 17th, 2011 admin No comments

pkg packaging/Oxnard, CA (Telecommute)

pkg packaging is the US distributor for PaperFoam

(http://www.paperfoam.com/)

PaperFoam is 100% compostable packaging that is relatively new to the US market.

pkg is looking for a sustainability consultant to do a LCA on PaperFoam using US standards, along with comparing PaperFoam to a couple other packaging options.

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SB’12 Conference Operations Coordinator / Sustainable Life Media / San Francisco, CA

November 9th, 2011 admin No comments

Sustainable Life Media/San Francisco, CA (Partial Telecommuting Possible)

Full time contract opportunity for a dedicated individual, passionate about the intersection of business and sustainability. The Conference Operations Coordinator is part of the Operational Team, along with the Customer Service Coordinator and the Faculty Coordinator. The team is headed up by the Executive Producer. We have a very flat structure at SLM and focus on collaborative efforts and high-performance individuals to reach our goals. If you are a self-starting individual comfortable in a fast-paced start-up environment, please apply.

General Description:

- Sponsorship Fulfillment
- Exhibitor Coordination and Tradeshow Management
- In-Kind Donor Recruitment and Fulfillment
- Tradeshow and Event Operations
- Graphic Art and Signage Coordination – online and on site

Who you are:

- Experienced with meeting and conference/event planning and management
- Self-starter with exceptional communication and customer service skills
- Creative and result oriented individual who takes pride in your work
- Preferably experienced with donor and/or sponsor recruitment
- Technically Savvy
- Ability to keep calm under pressure, prioritize and manage multiple and sometimes competing tasks
- Fun-loving person with a sense of humor

This is a project-based, full time position with estimated dates from January through June. The Conference Operations Coordinator is responsible for executing on all sponsorship agreements for the conference and deals directly with high level conference sponsors, exhibitors, producers and venues. The position reports to the Executive Producer, and sits in the Operational Department of live events. If you are a highly motivated, detail oriented and collaborative individual, knowledgeable about business management and/or sustainability or would like a foot in the door of this industry, please apply.

What we can offer:
In addition to the opportunity to plug in with a terrific team of media and sustainable business experts, this position offers a monthly salary for the duration of the position. Furthermore, we offer a flexible work schedule, possible part time telecommuting and a terrific networking opportunity with the crème of the crop in the sustainability industry at the SB’12 Conference. We are a fun, young team of individuals passionate about the role brand and business can play in moving towards a sustainable future. If you feel the same way, we'd love to hear from you.

Application Requirements:
Please send your resume, along with a targeted cover letter detailing your interest in this field and in this role, salary requirements and a link to your LinkedIn profile.

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Sustainability & Life Cycle Analysis Specialist / GOJO / Akron, OH

October 2nd, 2011 admin No comments

GOJO/Akron, OH

Primary Responsibilities/Accountabilities
Develop sustainability and life cycle assessment methods and tools for GOJO. Assist in the development and maintenance of the sustainability strategy. Influence and lead the implementation of sustainability across GOJO value chain. Enhance and deploy LCA practices and information. Engage thought leaders on LCA. Provide expertise in LCA for GOJO internally and externally. Serves as primary analytical resource for the Global Sourcing and Value Chain Improvement teams.
• Informs, supports, and evaluates design decisions involved with the design and development with new and improved products, technology strategies and platforms to support GOJO Purpose and Vision
• Identifies and communicates important external sustainability –related initiatives which likely impact GOJO or its products
• Manages the sustainability-related aspects of projects in cooperation with team leaders.
• Develops and cultivates relationships with key sustainability partners/thought leaders
• Understands and characterizes the relationship between materials/chemicals in a product and their effects on human health and the environment
• Serves as an internal expert on life-cycle principles and their application to product life-cycle systems.
• Proactively scans, researches, and assesses opportunities for effective GOJO positioning on sustainability –related issues.
• Expedites implementation for market introduction of innovative new environmentally preferable GOJO products
• Generates scientifically sound life-cycle based data capable of supporting effective market-facing communication strategies capable of driving market differentiation for GOJO products
Coordinates with key GOJO personnel to develop, implement and manage sustainability related initiatives to support overall GOJO Purpose and Vision objectives.
• Is a resource for sustainability-related issues
• Recommends design and process improvements leading to the development of leadership environmental GOJO products
• Routinely seeks out and evaluates information on new materials, chemicals, or products available in the marketplace capable of influencing future development of GOJO products.
Effectively communicates the application of life-cycle principles to inform GOJO design and development processes.

Duties may also include:
• Leading and/or participating in customer sustainability inquiries/surveys
• Clearly communicating sustainability and LCA information and reporting across GOJO

Education and Experience Required
4+ years of combined professional experience in manufacturing or product development. 2+ years of experience with environmental or sustainability-related topics/issues with demonstrated success in developing and deploying lifecycle strategy. Advanced degree in chemical, industrial, or environmental engineering or biological sciences.

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Protect the coral reefs—the life you save might be your own

May 13th, 2011 admin No comments

by Robert Lalasz.

Coral reefs are in big trouble worldwide—and that’s not just bad news for snorkelers. It could mean death instead of life for millions of people … maybe even you.

Here’s why: Coral already provides the elemental compounds for a growing number of crucial medicines and health products—ranging from antiviral drugs like Ara-A and AZT to anti-inflammatories, painkillers, and even sunblocks. But science is in a race against time: We’ve
just started to plumb the depths of coral’s potential to attack the world’s health issues … only to have many reefs on the brink of disaster from threats like warming oceans and overfishing.

So who better than two doctors to make the case for coral as a life preserver? Bruce Chabner, professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and director of clinical research at Massachusetts General Hospital’s Cancer Center, and Daniel Gruenberg, oncologist at Northwest Cancer Specialists in Portland, Ore., sat down with my Nature Conservancy colleagues Kerry Crisley and Jen Newlin to find out what makes coral so valuable for the medical community—and how we can act to help reefs keep healing us.

Q. What is it about the ocean—and coral reefs in particular—that make it a valuable source of medical research?

A. Chabner: There’s an enormous amount of life in our oceans, particularly
in coral reefs. Where you have high concentrations of different organisms living together in one place, you have a treasure trove of unique microorganisms—and compounds produced by those organisms—not found elsewhere on Earth.

Q. This recent report by the World Resources Institute—which says that 75 percent of the world’s coral reefs are in trouble—how much does that worry you?

A. Chabner: First, I firmly believe that coral reefs should be protected in
their own right so we can be good stewards of our natural habitat. But we have only scratched the surface of what the reefs can offer medically. The sea could very well hold the building blocks of drugs that could treat, or even cure, cancer. We don’t know. But if we lose the reefs, we’ll never find out.

Gruenberg: We think a lot about nature in our anti-cancer strategy. In the oceans, when we trawl in ways that carve up the ocean bottoms, we’re removing organisms we didn’t even know existed that could be valuable for treating cancer, not to mention things like heart disease or diabetes.

One other thing we should think more about is indigenous cultures. These societies have ways of treatment that we don’t fully understand—rich histories in natural healing strategies that may be relatable to other communities. Who knows what can be found in prairie grasses, for instance, that’s beneficial? There are so many natural opportunities we know nothing about. And we don’t have a lot of time to figure it out.

Q. With cancer drugs—how many do we get from nature? And how did science figure out the connection?

A. Gruenberg: More than 90 percent are derived from natural sources. Actually, even drugs like Cytoxan come from nitrogen mustard, as in the gas used in World War I. How did they figure out it had anti-cancer properties? From autopsies at that time, they saw that lymph nodes shrank. Of course it killed a lot of other cells, too. But it’s become important in the treatment of cancers like lymphoma. So I’d actually revise that to say that 99.9 percent of our drugs are naturally derived.

The oncology field has changed so much in 20 years, considering all that we’ve learned about cell division and the immune system. Not only do I see improved survivorship and outcomes, but
there’s less toxicity to medications we use. And there are more supportive medicines and natural medicines because of natural sources and better understanding of natural processes. It’s remarkable.

Q. How does getting it from sea to pill work? How does one go from looking at, say, a sea squirt to creating a new drug?

A. Chabner: We start by studying the organism. How does it grow? How does it defend itself? How does it survive in its surroundings? When we’ve found the specific compounds that contribute to its survival we can see where it might be effective in treating certain types of cancers. The drug Ara-C, for example, is the backbone of chemotherapy for leukemia and lymphoma. That was derived from a sea sponge in the Caribbean.

Q. Do we have to keep harvesting the reefs to maintain supplies of these medicines?

A. Chabner: That’s the best part; in most cases, no. Once the compound has
been isolated it can often be synthesized and created in the lab. What’s important is that we discover it while it’s still there in our oceans.

Q. Alzheimer’s disease and strokes—there are other marine-based drugs being tested that show tremendous promise in the treatment of these conditions. What else? Are there new drugs in the works?

A. Chabner: Yes. Several new medicines for the treatment of lymphoma and
ovarian, breast, and prostate cancers have gone through their clinical trial phases and are close to receiving FDA approval. And—equally exciting—other marine-based medicines are showing tremendous promise in the treatment of strokes and Alzheimer’s disease.

Q. Bring it down to a personal level. Give us one thing that anyone could do to keep the nature-medicine connection a healthy one.

A. Gruenberg: One simple thing is to eat local. It’s good for our bodies. There’s less transport so less pollution and use of fossil fuels. There’s less disturbance to the natural environment and indigenous cultures. You know the agricultural source and it’s local to you and your system and environment.

Q. Do you follow your own advice?

A. Gruenberg: As much as possible. And I try not to eat anything out of season.

Related Links:

Protecting our oceans, one supermarket at a time

We CAN Do Something About Tsunami Devastation

Fishermen find creative ways to get paid more to catch fewer fish






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Facebook’s new campus will simulate real street life, just like Facebook

April 8th, 2011 admin No comments

by Sarah Goodyear.

Now that Facebook has eaten
the entire world and drunk its milkshake, the company understandably needs more
space to let it all hang out. So they’re moving from their offices in Palo Alto,
Calif., to a campus of their own in Menlo Park, a corporate park that is being
vacated by the retreating Sun Microsystems.

Here’s the thing about the
move. The choice of the site, which is cut off from the rest of
Menlo Park by roads, railroad tracks, and protected wetlands, makes one thing
quite clear: Facebook doesn’t want to do the work of connecting the brains of
every living human to advertisers while it’s in an actual place, like downtown Palo Alto or San Francisco. That could get
messy.

But hey! They know they’re
supposed to want some kind of placey-ness thing, because places are cool,
right? So they’re remaking the insular kingdom of the campus into a simulacrum
of a real neighborhood. Or something.

The New York Times went to
take a look:

[John Tenanes, Facebook’s director of global real
estate,] said he was
determined to employ small firms like Roman and Williams, [the New York
design firm behind the Ace Hotel and its Breslin and John Dory restaurants]. He said he liked the
“casual eclectic” look of the firm’s Ace
Hotel
after he stayed there on a recent trip. (The Ace crowd, which tends
toward 20somethings with laptops, mirrors the Facebook employees’ demographic.)
Unlike the Sun campus, with color-coordinated buildings reminiscent of an
upscale resort, Facebook is looking for “an urban streetscape where no one
architect or designer” dominates, Mr. Tenanes said. “Random is good,” he added.

Robin Standifer, a principal
at Roman and Williams, said Facebook wanted there to be “life and soul and
some idiosyncrasy to the campus.”

“They don’t want to buy into
that corporate structure,” she said. “They want to continue to feel
hungry.”

Putting aside the fact that
it’s probably hard to feel hungry when you’ve just swallowed many billions
of dollars, Facebook is going to be dealing with some real practical changes in
the way its 2,000 employees interact with the world. According to the Times article,
some 40 percent of the company’s workers currently commute by foot, bike, or
bus. It’s unclear when, or if, the new campus can be connected to the outside world in a way that is
friendly to bikes or pedestrians.

To address that issue, as
well as community concerns about what’s in the move for Menlo Park, Facebook recently
hosted
a design charrette
where architects and community members tossed around
ideas about how to create connections between the campus and the surrounding
city—maybe a pedestrian underpass to a nearby neighborhood will be reopened, maybe
public transit will be developed.

That’s all great, and some
of it might actually happen. But the bigger question is, why did a theoretically
forward-thinking company like Facebook choose to relocate to a location that—in its isolation and current car-dependence—epitomizes the failed planning
strategies of the past two or three generations?

Related Links:

Seoul tears down an urban highway and the city can breathe again

The drugstore chains that ate America’s suburbs [VIDEO]

New ‘Tactical Urbanism’ guide for aspiring guerrilla urbanists






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Life under the leadership of budget axe-man Hal Rogers

February 16th, 2011 admin No comments

by Matt Wasson.

In case you haven’t heard, dozens of proposed amendments to the House Budget Bill would strip EPA of funding to update and enforce safeguards for mountaintop-removal mines, coal ash storage ponds, and emissions of hazardous air pollutants from coal-fired power plants. If these amendments are approved, House Republicans would successfully turn back the clock on all of the clean air and clean water safeguards put in place over the past two years and bring back the polluter-friendly rules of the Bush administration.

The man overseeing the budget is Rep. Hal Rogers of Kentucky, whose district is home to more than half of the 500 mountains already destroyed by mountaintop-removal mining in Appalachia. Not only does Rogers’ district lead the nation in mountains destroyed, it also leads the nation in human misery according to the Gallup-Healthways 2009 Well-Being Rankings. Of all 435 Congressional districts in America, Rogers’ district ranked dead last in Gallup’s overall well-being index, which combines information on physical and emotional well-being, life evaluation, work environment, and basic access to government services.

As my Appalachian Voices colleague JW pointed out on the Front Porch Blog, while Mr. Rogers’ neighborhood may be “dead first” in mountaintop removal, his district ranks:

435th in life expectancy (dead last)
435th in physical health (dead last)
435th in overall well-being (dead last)
435th in emotional health (dead last)

There could be no clearer indication of where the new House leadership is trying to take the country. What are you going to do to stop them? [Hint: you can start by taking action here].

Related Links:

What is coal’s true cost?

Budget for rainforests puts Obama’s $1 billion pledge at risk

Obama’s International Climate Budget Proposal Would Make Key Investments






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