PC op ed from Peter Rolnick

PC op ed from Peter Rolnick of Iowa City Climate Advocates 10-15-2015

Time to make your voice heard on pipeline plan

Have you been wondering what’s happening with the proposed Bakken oil pipeline? I’ll tell you, but first some background. Energy Transfer Partners, a company headquartered in Texas, wants to build a pipeline to move crude oil from the Bakken oil fields in North Dakota to refineries in Illinois and points south. The pipeline would run diagonally through Iowa. Energy Transfer Partners is the parent company of Dakota Access, created to build the pipeline. After refining, the gas may be sold in the U.S. or exported overseas. Unlike the oil extracted by conventional oil wells, the oil in the Bakken fields, called bitumen, comes mixed with sand and clay, and is more difficult to extract. Processing bitumen produces 17 percent more greenhouse gas than processing an equal amount of conventional oil. Those who support the pipeline refer to the oil as “light, sweet crude;” those who oppose it refer to it as “dirty oil.” They are both right. Dakota Access must get permission from owners of every parcel where it wants to lay pipe. Currently, there are about 500 parcels whose owners refuse to grant permission.

If Dakota Access is to use those parcels, it must have the land condemned by eminent domain. There are also some owners who didn’t want to grant permission, but did so because they felt it was a lost cause and figured they’d do better financially if they agreed now rather than wait to have their land condemned. In order to build the pipeline, the project itself must be approved, and each of the parcels refusing permission must be condemned. Legally, those decisions fall to the Iowa Utilities Board: three people appointed by Gov. Terry Branstad — Geri Huser, Elizabeth Jacobs and Nick Wagner; one Democrat and two Republicans.

The key issue is that land cannot be condemned by eminent domain for private ownership unless doing so serves a public use or a public service — something the board must decide. Though many pros and cons have been gathered, the hearing preceding the decision starts Nov. 12. That day will be devoted to input from the public. In the days that follow, legal points will be argued and witnesses will be examined. All correspondence is available on the board’s website. Supporters say the pipeline is a public service because it provides jobs and energy for Iowans. They say it will be built safely, and that land and water will not be harmed. Estimates of temporary jobs range from 2,000 to 4,000. There would be about 50 permanent jobs.

Detractors say a major oil spill would be inevitable, that the use of tar sands oil is unconscionable in light of the climate change crisis, and that the harm to the land, even without a spill, is unacceptable. In the event of a spill, Dakota Access would be liable for only $250,000. Those opposed to the pipeline have argued an environmental impact study should be required; Dakota Access has opposed such a study and the board has supported it.

Letters to the board during the past months tell a tale. At first the cons outnumbered the pros, but lately there have been hundreds of letters per week in support, the latter mostly form-letters signed by members of various unions.

About 80 percent of these are from outside Iowa. This makes me wonder how many of those temporary jobs will go to Iowans. Many letters from places like Arkansas or Texas say things like “We’ll build this safely; after all, we live here too.” The vast majority of letters opposed are from Iowans and are individually written. In the next month or two, we will see this play out. Is the pipeline a done deal and the hearing just for show, or will the board carefully examine the evidence before deciding whether or not it is in the interest of most Iowans? If you wish to express your opinion, pro or con, you can contact the board at iub.iowa.gov. You can also go to the Boone County Fairgrounds Community Building, 1601 Industrial Park Road, in Boone at 9 a.m. on Nov. 12 and make a statement.

This is a time when your voice can be heard.

Peter Rolnick lives in Iowa City and is a member of Iowa City Climate Advocates

Peter Rolnick

Guest Opinion

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PC Oct 15, 2015 Paul Cienfuegos

http://www.press-citizen.com/story/news/local/2015/10/15/100grannies-host-community-rights-workshop-saturday/74020744/

100Grannies to host community rights workshop Saturday

Can everyday people counteract corporate influence on American life? Organizers of a workshop set for Saturday in Coralville say that it’s possible — and that they’ll show Johnson County residents how to do it.

Attendees will “learn a lot of U.S. history that you never knew,” said Paul Cienfuegos of Portland, Ore., a community rights advocate who will lead the workshop. “We’ll review the community rights movement over the last 15 years.”

The free event runs from 9 a.m. to noon in Schwab Auditorium at the Coralville Public Library. Anybody can attend. 100Grannies for a Livable Future of Iowa City, a group that advocates for action to fight climate change, is the host for the workshop.

“All economic decisions are made by corporate boards of directors,” Cienfuegos said. “We live in a corporate state that has been building for almost 200 years.”

The aim, organizers say, is to protect future generations and nature from being harmed or corrupted.

“We can no longer expect our elected, heavily lobbied state and federal officials, or their government regulatory agencies, to prevent corporations from harming us and destroying the natural world, which is the source of all life,” Dawn Jones, a 100Grannies organizer, said in a news release. “We are determined to introduce a Community Bill of Rights which will allow the Johnson County/Iowa City community to determine the environment we wish to live in.

Cienfuegos said that an 1819 U.S. Supreme Court cause, Trustees of Dartmouth College v. Woodward, opened the door to the concept of corporate personhood and decades of individuals and communities being deemed subordinate to corporate interests.

Change, he said, “starts by passing local laws that strip corporations of the right of communities to self-govern.”

100Grannies has been working on community rights for six months, Jones said. It has not identified specific issues about which to approach local governments. Cienfuegos was available because he is leading a workshop in Fairfield on Sunday. If the October event is deemed successful, 100Grannies will host a three-day workshop with Cienfuegos from Nov. 13 to 15, which could lead to a specific platform.

Some common issues addressed by community rights activists include square footage of big box stores, sewer sludge disposal, and environmental issues related to concentrated animal feeding operations and sand mining for use in hydraulic fracturing.

“Typically before a community writes an ordinance, they have one overarching problem or threat to the community,” Jones said. “We don’t have that in our city that we can pinpoint right now.”

To that end, “the October event is to get the word out to a large number of people in the community. … It allows the community to decide what is important to them.”

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Daily Iowan on Climate Day of Action, Oct 14, 2015

http://daily-iowan.com/2015/10/14/climate-on-the-mind-locally%E2%80%A8/

Quotes from our grannies included in the article:

Metro
Oct 14, 2015 DI Editor –
Climate on the mind locally
By Ali Krogman
alison-krogman@uiowa.edu

Groups in Iowa City will spend today advocating for climate change.

The People’s Climate Movement is a national day for climate-change awareness and includes hundreds of communities across the country. The concept blossomed from last year’s People’s Climate March in New York City.

This year, communities were encouraged to have their own events.

Linda Quinn, planning coordinator for Iowa City’s People’s Climate Movement, said the hope is people will voice their concerns about climate change to their elected officials.

“It’s the most important issue of our time,” Quinn said. “We need to take action — everybody, everywhere.”

Quinn said even a small action like a phone call or signing a petition can help the cause.

The all-day activities include a film screening, a lecture, and opportunities to call or write representatives. Seven different environmentally focused groups in Iowa City sponsor the event.

Tom Carsner, the group head for the sponsor Iowa City Group of the Sierra Club, said the idea is to inform people about climate issues, such as renewable energy, and find solutions for those

problems.

“Here in Iowa we can think about floods and droughts we’ve had in the past 10 years,” Carsner said. “People can relate to that and understand that.”

Miriam Kashia, a member of sponsor 100grannies, said she would walk around town all day wearing a sandwich board addressing the day of action as well as the Bakken pipeline, a proposed crude oil pipeline that would cross through Iowa and has generated controversy.

“It’s going to be a great opportunity for people to let their voices be heard,” Kashia said. “People are coming to realize this is a critical issue.”

Those fighting for change now are looking towards the end of the year, when countries will meet in Paris to negotiate a United Nations agreement that addresses climate change. Climate advocates are also focusing on next year’s elections.

Kashia said she and the 100grannies are committed to the climate change issue and hope to bring more public awareness with the day’s events.

“It looks pretty cool in Iowa now. It’s warm. It’s beautiful,” Kashia said. “But it’s the hottest year on record. We need to address this now.”

Scientists recorded the highest global land and ocean surface average temperatures since record keeping began in 1880, about 1.24 degrees Fahrenheit above the 20th-century average, according to the National Centers for Environmental Information.

Quinn said the day’s intention is to encourage people to take action about climate change, and urge those in power to move forward with a plan for clean power plan on a state and national level.

“We hope our leaders will understand that there are a lot of people across the country who are concerned about climate change,” Quinn said. “It’s important to take steps to do something about this issue.”

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October 2015 Film Festival

newlogo.png

Environmental Film Series & Discussions

Free at the Senior Center, Mondays, October, 2015

Sponsored by 100Grannies.org 6:00-7:00 p.m. room 202

October 5- Disruption:  We know so much about climate change, why are we doing so little? This film takes a look at the devastating consequences of our inaction. Set against the backdrop of preparing for the largest climate rally in the history of the world last fall during the U.N. World Climate Summit in New York City. You will experience the days leading up to this major event and explore the reasons for our arrival at this social, moral and ecological crossroads.

October 12- When the Water Tap Runs Dry: Learn more about possible water shortages in the United States. Could the water tap really run dry? Think it can’t happen here? It’s happening right now in California. Every drop of water flowing in our rivers or stored in lakes and reservoirs is already spoken for. One of the greatest impacts of climate change will be water shortages. What can we do to address this coming water crisis? This film presents some possible solutions.

October 19- Standing on Sacred Ground: Indigenous people around the globe are standing as witnesses and protectors in defense of their creation stories, cultural survival and the environment. Will we listen to these unheralded guardians of our earth before it is too late?

October 26- Years of Living Dangerously: This new documentary pairs celebrity investigators with well-known journalists as they travel around the world to interview experts and ordinary people affected by climate change. What solutions will they find?

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Rob Hogg op ed 2015 DM Register

WE MUST TAKE ACTION NOW

It’s early fall and many of us are still talking about what we did this past summer.Have you been to Glacier National Park in Montana? If not, you had better go soon — if you want to see the glaciers. New predictions are that the 25 remaining glaciers will have melted by 2020.My family and I went this summer. I was in awe of the beauty, as well as somberly startled by what we learned.Of the 150 glaciers that existed in 1850, only about 25 remain today in the park. A National Park Service photo display at the Many Glacier Lodge on the park’s east side shows the dramatic change. The display outlines the changes that are occurring and what that means for the park: “As climate changes, both the visible and not-so-visible features of the park will be altered. In just a couple of decades, the view from this spot may look dramatically different. As climate warms, rainfall and snowfall are also likely to change. This will affect soil moisture, runoff and stream flow, as well as landscape disturbance processes such as fire and avalanches. These kind of changes will impact park ecosystems.“Climate plays an important role in determining what flora and fauna exist in a habitat. Every species has a temperature range in which it can thrive. For example, the elevation where trees stop growing, known as treeline, is strongly related to temperature and moisture. As climate warms, more trees will encroach on alpine meadows and treeline will migrate to higher elevations. Changes in the distribution of forests and trees and other vegetation may cause animals to seek higher ground or to migrate north to find suitable habitat.”

Our world is changing around us. The glaciers are dramatic — that was brought home to Des Moines last year by James Balog in a Bucksbaum lecture at Drake University and beautifully photographed in his “Chasing Ice” film, a film both beautiful and sober.

How do we connect melting glaciers in Montana’s Glacier National Park with what we are doing, or not doing, in Iowa to forestall/ prevent/adjust to climate change? The reality is that what happens in one part of our planet affects us all.

Recent news from the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change is a report we must listen to. According to Jaisal Noor, producer with the Real News Network, the Sept. 20 report from climate scientists “declared with 95 percent certainty that climate change is, indeed, manmade.”

So what do concerned Iowans have to say and what are we doing and how can we each get involved?

One promising new group in Iowa is Citizens Climate Lobby. One of its Iowa leaders, Joan Wooters Fumetti, wrote to me: “The sense behind Citizens Climate Lobby is that politicians don’t create, but rather respond to political will. CCL is an energetic, grassroots, nonpartisan organization dedicated to creating the political will for a stable climate as it empowers citizens to grow in their personal and political effectiveness.

“Our focus is a carbon fee and dividend (revenue neutral carbon tax) proposal that has broad support from economists across the political spectrum. It is simple to understand and makes good common sense.

“The CCL approach of civil and respectful dialogue sets it apart from many voices in the climate change debate. In order to solve climate issues we are going to have to learn to live and work together.”

State Sen. Jack Hatch of Des Moines, a candidate for the Democratic nomination for governor, wrote: “Climate change is real, is having a significant effect on our environment and is a major policy challenge for this and coming generations. In Iowa, we can have a positive effect on the carbon emissions that produce harmful greenhouse gases by continuing to build on our strengths in renewable energy, including wind and solar.

“Iowa’s ability to produce 20 percent of our energy from wind is extraordinary and is an example to the rest of the country and the world. We’re moving in the right direction and must continue. The result will be high-wage manufacturing jobs in an emerging industry, which is a net economic gain for our state.

“Over time, we must reduce our dependence on fossil fuels, including coal. Iowa must have a responsible state government that continually seeks ways to reduce direct carbon emissions at state-owned facilities and works on conservation of energy, including within the state vehicle fleet and in state buildings. New construction should be LEED certified to reduce the total amount of energy consumed over the life of a building.”

Ed Fallon, Des Moines radio talk show host and former candidate for governor and the U.S. House of Representatives, has been at the center of a planned walk across the United States to highlight climate change and what we can do about it.

Prospective marchers need to make their decision soon to get in shape, take care of personal matters andgenerate sponsors. Fallon wrote me: “The march is unprecedented in scope, and the timing could not be better as many committedclimate activists pushto get America to the tipping point where we actually embrace the changes needed.”

The website for the Great March for Climate Action says its goal is to change the heart and mind of the American people, elected leaders and people across the world into acting now to address the climate crisis. The march is scheduled to depart Los Angeles on March 1, 2014, with 1,000 marchers walking nearly 3,000 miles to Washington, D.C., to inspire action to resolve the climate crisis.

State Sen. Rob Hogg,

D-Cedar Rapids, has been a vocal proponent of Iowans taking the charge to prevent further climate change. He has authored the book “America’s Climate Century” that appears essential reading to Iowans wanting to deal with this pressingissue. Hogg wrote me: “Across our state, Iowans are connecting the dots between climate change and a series of recent disasters — record flooding in 2008, 2010 and 2011, extreme storms, the drought of 2012, and the erratic weather we have experienced this year.

“More Iowans are taking action to fight climate change, too, by conserving energy, building green buildings, investing in fuel efficiency and electric vehicles, and expanding our use of wind, solar, geothermal and biomass.

“Beyond that, Iowans are speaking up, telling our elected officials and candidates that it is time to take climate action. Groups like Green Dubuque, Sustainable Independence, 100 Grannies for a Livable Future, the Indianola Green Team and Citizens Climate Lobby are all asking our elected officials to support policies that promote sustainability.”

It’s no longer enough to just do what we can on an individual level.

I used to feel pretty good that my wife drives a Prius, that my Honda Civic gets 40 mpg on the highway, that we recycle at home and in the office, that we support local agriculture and organic farming with a share in a CSA (community supported agriculture), and that we’ve changed over all our lightbulbs to compact fluorescent lamps (CFL).

But that’s clearly not enough.

A professor of nutrition

at Des Moines University, David Spreadbury, doesn’t mince words about what needs to be done to prevent worsening of climate change.

He calls for a “Manhattan Project” (the name first used to describe the U.S.’s race to build an atomic bomb) on alternative energy to turn our country and planet around.

He advocates for a project “with the focus of brains, resources and human input on renewable solar thermal energy and its distribution” and says an area equivalent to 12 percent of Nevada could satisfy all electrical needs in the U.S.

Spreadbury notes that European medical journals rate climate change as the number one emerging health issue in the world.

Let’s take the good doctor’s advice and push our government — at the city, state and federal levels — to make the changes we need to make as leaders in the world, to sustain and prevent further climate change.

We owe this to all children and their children’s children. The time to act is now.

Rob Hogg

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Pat Bowen op ed for CCI Sep 22 – 2015

Iowa CCI celebrates 40 years of putting people first

2015 marks Iowa Citizens for Community Improvement’s 40th birthday as a statewide, community-power, people- power organization that tackles tough issues and gets things done for everyday people.

There aren’t too many community organizations like CCI that have been around for 40 years, going on another 40!

So we’re celebrating with a big event Oct. 2-3 in Des Moines, and it’s open to the public.

We’re calling it our 40th Birthday Bash, and we’re making it a big deal, with big-name movement doers and thinkers standing shoulder- to- shoulder with rank-and-file CCI members.

We’re expecting more than 400 people to attend, many of them from different parts of the state and from various backgrounds, but all like-minded when it comes to working hard to make our communities more just, more democratic and fighting for: Government of, by and for the people, not just big-money corporations and an economy that works for everyone, not just the wealthy few, the 1 percent.

We’ll be lifting up a broad set of economic, environmental and racial justice issues, all connected to the general theme of “Putting People and Planet First.” And, our 40th Birthday Bash will be held as Iowa Caucus season is in full swing, giving it added significance on the national stage. We want to leverage this national buzz to highlight game-changing strategies, elevate a bold progressive vision for our communities and the country, and move people to think beyond business-asusual politics. The convention will be inspiring, energizing, informative and action- packed — and help launch another 40 years of putting people first.

Please mark Oct. 2-3 on your calendars and tell your friends. We want you there!

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Bag committee at New PI – Photos (1 Sep 2015)

bag committee at New PIStore mgr Gus, Becky Ross, Patti Swick (New Pi), Donna Rupp, Maureen Arensdorf, Gay Mikelson, Pat McGee

bag committee at New PI 2 bag committee at New PI 3

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Chemical Aerial Applications

Insist the Board of Supervisors not allow chemical aerial applications

David Charles 4:22 p.m. CDT August 17, 2015 Press-Citizen

The local farmers have been re-enacting the sneak attack on Pearl Harbor for most of the summer now. Just a few years ago, they would have done it once and been satisfied, but now they want to do it over and over again because of the bug population explosion occasioned by aerial spraying of pesticides (Nature abhors a vacuum). According to the Iowa State University agricultural website, the users of crop dusting services have about a 75 percent chance of losing money because of the cost of the chemicals and aerial application. The site also mentions the actual benefit to crop yield is somewhat disputable and certainly not verifiable.

Even gambling addicts realize a one in four chance of coming out ahead is not particularly advantageous, even if you are making lots of money. But you say, “I am not on the farm escalator of increasing production costs driving the need for greater yields, which in turn incurs greater costs with no fixed return on investment like the utility industry.” And I respond that killing off the creatures that eat the insects you are trying to kill is going to be problematic in the long run.

My dad spent three years in the jungles of the South Pacific getting bombed every day when he was about the age of a college student (college students only get bombed three days a week now). Judging from how much time he spends re-living those years in his mind, he may not be exaggerating. He never fails to react when the yellow planes fly over the house. This is no surprise because he can actually hear the plane with sound pressure levels over 100 dB measured at ground level. Plus a plane flying about 50 feet over your house tends to focus your attention no matter how little is left of it. His movements suggest he spent some time behind an anti-aircraft gun during those war years although it’s hard to believe looking at him now. Good thing he’s too feeble to find a real gun or there might be one less yellow air plane.

The more you investigate the practice of aerial application of pesticides and fungicides, the nastier it appears when stacked-up against the benefits. We should insist the Johnson County Board of Supervisors adopt the ISU recommendation and not allow aerial applications of these chemicals within 750 meters of human habitation to avoid prolonged contamination. If the decision is left to the democratic process, it will be a minority seeking a marginal financial gain opposed to a majority not wishing to have measurable amounts of pesticide and fungicide in their urine.

Keep in mind I was a long-time advocate of generating electrical power with the combustion of coal, despite the fact it releases measurable amounts of heavy metals into the atmosphere that eventually collect in the fatty tissues of mammals. But we have lots of relatively cheap coal and our lifestyle depends on low cost energy, so go ahead and hate me when you develop neurological disorders — it seemed like the right thing at the time.

For years the electrical industry used transformer oil with PCBs added by the vendors as a fire retardant. PCBs were a cheap solution to an electrical hazard even though they mimic dioxins in their effect on humans. The maximum allowable level of PCBs in drinking water is now zero and these compounds make farm chemicals look like Kool-Aid. Just like putting lead in gasoline — marginal gain with enormous environmental consequences.

If you don’t believe these aerial applied chemicals are toxic, ask one of the farmers who contracts these services to take a swallow of the stuff they are spraying. They would respond that spraying it all over Johnson County is not the same as drinking it. They would be correct if they didn’t live and work here. Ask a nuclear power plant worker which is worse, a chronic exposure to radiation or a cumulative exposure to tiny amounts over time. They would tell you that you don’t want to be exposed to any radiation.

Dad is scanning the sky to the south as he swivels his imaginary gun mount. His hearing has improved remarkably this summer and I’d swear there is an uncharacteristic steely glint in his eyes. At least he’s finding some benefit in aerial spraying.

Writers’ Group member David Charles lives and writes in Sharon Center.

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Education ICPL 8-15-15

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Ann Christenson 14 Aug 2015

Ann Christenson op ed August 14, 2015

Poll: Locals place value on education

Was it backlash from Governor Branstad’s recent veto of the Iowa Legislature’s education bill or simply Iowans’ long, strong regard for the importance of learning? When asked to choose their preferences for tax spending from seven categories, people at the 2015 Johnson County Fair voted resoundingly for education.

At the People’s Coalition for Social, Environmental and Political Responsibility booth, fair-goers used kernels of corn to select among Economic Development (including jobs), Environment (including renewable energy sources), Health Care, Veterans’ Benefits, Nuclear Disarmament & Diplomacy and Military (excluding Veteran’s Benefits), in addition to Education.

Nearly 900 fair-goers over the age of 16 voted with four kernels each. The four could be used in any way the voter desired — all in one category or spread out over several.

Education was a decisive first with 938 votes; environment took a distant second with 650. Of the 3,516 votes cast, veterans benefits and health care were in a near tie, 538 and 528, respectively. Economy (375) and military (300) lagged, while diplomacy (187) trailed far behind.

This admittedly non-scientific poll was conducted Monday through Thursday of the fair by coalition member organizations: 100Grannies. org, PEACE Iowa, Iowa Physicians for Social Responsibility and Veterans for Peace. The voting machine was a clever device designed and built by 100Grannies member Donna Rupp.

Although 26.7 percent of votes went for education, a peek under the category nametag revealed that only 5 percent of federal 2014 taxes was spent on education. While only a meager 8.5 percent votes supported the military, in reality an overwhelming 34 percent of federal expenditures go to the Pentagon budget, nuclear weapons production and foreign military assistance.

Does the appearance of the environment in second place signal a trending acceptance of climate change and humanity’s role in it? As health care and veterans’ benefits go hand-in-hand, are folks asking for something more than the Affordable Care Act and Medicare/Medicaid? Does the placement of diplomacy deep in the cellar reflect a public sense that diplomacy doesn’t work?

These questions and more may be pondered and debated endlessly, but one other question stands out: Do our elected officials pay any attention to the people?

We wonder.

Ann Christenson of Iowa City is a member of 100Grannies.org.

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