This showed up on the E-magazines latest email issue.
http://www.emagazine.com/earth-talk/greener-ways-to-frack-for-natural-gas/
--
Paul Wilson
Sierra Club
504 Jefferson Ave
Charles Town, WV 25414-1130
Phone: 304-725-4360
Cell: 304-279-1361
"There is no forward until you have gone back" ~Buddha
"In all things of nature there is something of the marvelous" ~ Aristotle
Coal continues to dominate global carbon
emissions<http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_environment/~3/QEY…>
Posted: 18 Nov 2013 04:31 PM PST
Despite explosive growth in renewable energy consumption, continued strong
growth in coal consumption has further consolidated coal as the dominate
source of carbon dioxide emissions.
Global carbon emissions set to reach record 36 billion tons in
2013<http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_environment/~3/IVJ…>
Posted: 18 Nov 2013 04:31 PM PST
Global emissions of carbon dioxide from burning fossil fuels are set to
rise again in 2013, reaching a record high of 36 billion tons - according
to new figures from the Global Carbon Project. The biggest contributors to
fossil fuel emissions in 2012 were China (27 per cent), the United States
(14 per cent), the European Union (10 per cent), and India (6 per cent).
The projected rise for 2013 comes after a similar rise of 2.2 per cent in
2012.
--
Paul Wilson
Sierra Club
504 Jefferson Ave
Charles Town, WV 25414-1130
Phone: 304-725-4360
Cell: 304-279-1361
"There is no forward until you have gone back" ~Buddha
"In all things of nature there is something of the marvelous" ~ Aristotle
Two for one in solar power: New process could revolutionize solar energy
harvesting<http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_environment/~3/V82…>
Posted: 17 Nov 2013 12:57 PM PST
A process that could revolutionize solar energy harvesting has been
efficiently demonstrated in solution for the first time.
--
Paul Wilson
Sierra Club
504 Jefferson Ave
Charles Town, WV 25414-1130
Phone: 304-725-4360
Cell: 304-279-1361
"There is no forward until you have gone back" ~Buddha
"In all things of nature there is something of the marvelous" ~ Aristotle
Wow! This is awful.
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Sean Sarah <sean.sarah(a)sierraclub.org>
Date: Fri, Nov 15, 2013 at 2:15 PM
Subject: NEWS: EPA Weakens Key Water Protections In Kentucky
To: Sean Sarah <sean.sarah(a)sierraclub.org>
*Link to release: *
https://content.sierraclub.org/press-releases/2013/11/epa-approves-weakenin…
*Link to EPA Decision: *
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B4xljUDF_SgsTzdLYzlLdVo3VjQ/edit?usp=shari…
*For Immediate Release: *November 15, 2013
*Contact: *Sean Sarah, Sierra Club, 330 338-3740 sean.sarah(a)sierraclub.org
*EPA Approves Weakening of Water Protections in Kentucky *
*Washington, DC – *Today, the Environmental Protection Agency allowed the
Kentucky Department of Environmental Protection to change how toxic
selenium pollution from mountaintop removal mines is measured for the
purposes of determining compliance with the Clean Water Act. Selenium,
which causes significant biological damage to fish native to the waters of
Appalachia, is a toxic pollutant discharged from valley fills into rivers
and streams below mountaintop removal sites. The EPA-backed changes to how
Kentucky measures selenium pollution allow the state to rely on an
impractical and complicated test of tissue samples from fish rather than
the current practice of directly sampling the water discharged below
mountaintop removal mines and other selenium sources. EPA’s capitulation
gives a free pass to industry and will allow unacceptably high levels of
selenium pollution to continue flow into Kentucky’s waterways.
*In response Bruce Nilles, Senior Director of the Beyond Coal Campaign at
Sierra Club, issued the following statement:*
“We are deeply disappointed that the EPA approved Kentucky's request to
weaken protections against water pollution from mountaintop removal mines.
A straightforward approach has been replaced with a highly complicated
system that will be hard to enforce, and could allow mountaintop removal
companies to mine without accountability for the environmental destruction
they force on the communities of Appalachia. In addition to being
impractical to enforce, Kentucky’s fish-tissue standard is weaker than a
Bush-era proposal that the scientific community emphatically rejected
because it would not protect sensitive fish and other wildlife.
Mountaintop removal mining is one of the most destructive forms of resource
extraction; polluting hundreds of miles of streams and actively destroying
our mountain heritage. It is critical that community groups,
environmentalists and the people of Appalachia do everything we can to stop
attempts by mountaintop removal companies and their political friends to
roll back the inadequate standards currently in place. Today, the EPA
failed in their commitment to protect our natural spaces and clean water.
They’ve allowed Kentucky to change the rules of the game and stack the deck
against communities across the region.
The EPA has let the people of Appalachia down, allowing an even more
aggressive assault on our clean water protections, in a region where coal
pollution has already devastated water quality and endangered public
health. It’s time to enact real reform that puts a halt to this most
devastating form of mining.”
*###*
--
Cheers,
Sean Sarah
Regional Communications Manager (NE, SE)
Sierra Club, Beyond Coal Campaign
O: 202 548-4589
C: 330 338-3740
--
Jim Sconyers
jimscon(a)gmail.com
304.698.9628
Remember, Mother Nature bats last.
This may be on interest to energy activists in WV. WV Public Radio this
morning interviewed Carl Irwin (he is with WVU's National Research Center
for Coal and Energy) on an energy conference being held in Morgantown this
week to promote renewable energy, and he talked extensively about co-firing
wood with coal in power plants.
Is that something we are for or against?
JBK
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Joshua Ruschhaupt <joshua.ruschhaupt(a)sierraclub.org>
Date: Wed, Nov 6, 2013 at 9:12 PM
Subject: Re: Sierra Club co-signed a letter in opposition to federal tax
subsidies for biomass power facilities that burn trees
To: CONS-FRED(a)lists.sierraclub.org
--------------------------- cc:Mail Users-----------------------------
** Remember to DELETE the 'Sender: ...' lines above before REPLYing **
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Nice letter! Please tell me you sent a copy of this to Senator Udall, who
is a major supporter of biomass. The letter didn't specify which Senator
it was addressing. Let me know what the distribution of this letter was.
I will keep and use this letter during the legislative session here in CO
when the inevitable biomass bill comes.
Warm regards,
Joshua Ruschhaupt
Sierra Club Rocky Mountain Chapter Director
USPS: 1536 Wynkoop St., 4B, Denver, CO 80202
UPS/FedEx/other: 620 16th St., Ste 300, Denver, CO 80202
Physical address through early Jan. 2014: 620 16th St., Ste 300, Denver, CO
80202
303.454.3362
www.rmc.sierraclub.orgwww.facebook.com/sierraclubrmc
P.S. Get your Winter
Gala<http://action.sierraclub.org/site/Calendar?view=Detail&id=170321>
tickets
before they sell out!
On Wed, Nov 6, 2013 at 11:23 AM, Doris Cellarius <doris(a)cellarius.org>wrote:
> --------------------------- cc:Mail Users-----------------------------
> ** Remember to DELETE the 'Sender: ...' lines above before REPLYing **
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> I apologize if you have already seen this but it is relevant to the issue
> of burning trees for energy that Joshua has asked about.
>
>
>
> Hi all,
>
>
>
> Here is another resource for forest protection work, and it is also
> relevant for climate activism. The Sierra Club and thirteen other
> environmental organizations (incl. Center for Biological Diversity,
> Greenpeace, and NRDC) have co-signed a letter in opposition to federal tax
> subsidies for biomass power facilities that burn trees or other forest
> material. The letter has some very useful information in it, so I
> recommend it as a resource for Club activists working on forest and climate
> issues. In addition to highlighting the dangers to forests, the letter
> discusses the carbon emissions from biomass facilities, and also notes that
> subsidies for biomass pull limited federal funds away from supporting less
> environmentally damaging energy alternatives. The letter can be viewed at:
>
>
> http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/campaigns/debunking_the_biomass_myth/pdf…
>
>
>
> Best,
>
> Douglas Bevington, Chair
>
> National Forest Team
>
>
> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - To
> unsubscribe from the CONS-FRED list, send any message to:
> CONS-FRED-signoff-request(a)LISTS.SIERRACLUB.ORG Check out our Listserv
> Lists support site for more information:
> http://www.sierraclub.org/lists/faq.asp
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - To
unsubscribe from the CONS-FRED list, send any message to:
CONS-FRED-signoff-request(a)LISTS.SIERRACLUB.ORG Check out our Listserv Lists
support site for more information: http://www.sierraclub.org/lists/faq.asp
The last of EPA's originally scheduled listening session on the proposed
carbon standards is today in Philadelphia, but I suspect that a few
additional ones will be scheduled closer to home.
JBK
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Frank Zaski <frankzas(a)aol.com>
Date: Wed, Nov 6, 2013 at 1:22 PM
Subject: Re: [Coal Volunteers List] from High Country News; Pro-coal
arguments win the day at Denver EPA hearing on CO2 regulations
To: verena_owen(a)prodigy.net, pjgrunt(a)gmail.com,
coal-volunteers-list(a)sierraclub.org
Here are a few more talking points:
*Surveys** find more citizens are concerned about global warming and want
government and business action to address it.* Examples:
*Americans*' Concerns About Global Warming on the Rise
http://www.gallup.com/poll/161645/americans-concerns-global-warming-rise.as…
More than half of people in *Columbus* say that more should be done about
global warming at all levels of government
http://environment.yale.edu/climate-communication/filtered/?action=add_filt…
Poll Shows *Latinos* Overwhelmingly Support Obama Call For Action on
Industrial Carbon Pollution http://www.nrdc.org/media/2013/131017.asp
*Michigan*: 63% opposed the government shutdown that would interfere with
the EPA developing standards to reduce the carbon pollution from the
nation's power plants.
http://www.usclimatenetwork.org/hot-topics/climate-polling
(There is a lot of other climate research in this site.)
*Negative climate change impacts on the Midwest*
ANN ARBOR—Climate change will lead to more frequent and more intense
Midwest heat waves while degrading air and water quality and threatening
public health. Intense rainstorms and floods will become more common, and
existing risks to the Great Lakes will be exacerbated.
http://ns.umich.edu/new/releases/21105-climate-change-
to-profoundly-affect-the-midwest-new-report-says
More climate change impacts on the Midwest from the draft National Climate
Assessment report:
Decreasing agricultural productivity, habitats for many tree species driven
northward, disruptions to forest ecosystems, .. degraded air quality, ..
change in the range and distribution of important commercial and
recreational fish species,.. increased invasive species, declining beach
health, .. harmful blooms of algae, to name a few more.
http://ncadac.globalchange.gov/download/NCAJan11-2013-publicreviewdraft-cha…
*Global warming impact allergies*. Dr. Weber predicts that Michigan will
see *more ragweed* in the fall because we don't get a killing freeze as
early as we used:
http://www.myfoxdetroit.com/story/21809196/could-global-warming-impact-alle…
Higher levels of CO2 benefits the growth of *poison ivy* whose growth and
potency has doubled since the
1960s<http://www.post-gazette.com/stories/news/health/climate-change-is-making-po…>,
With CO2 rates expected to rise from 400 parts per million to 560 ppm in
the next 30 to 50 years, it could double again. The enhanced poison ivy
won't just threaten humans; it could also kill trees at a faster pace.
http://www.weather.com/home-garden/garden/poison-ivy-growing-out-control-th…
*Moose die off* because climate change allows the survival of many more
parasites. Moose are the upper Midwest equivalent of polar bears.
http://greatlakesecho.org/2013/10/22/fears-rise-about-possible-moose-die-of…
*Methane: *Also mention to the EPA that more needs to be done to reduce
methane emissions. The International Panel on Climate Change’s (IPCC)
latest report finds that methane is *34 times* stronger a heat-trapping gas
than CO2 over a 100-year time scale and *86 times* more than CO2 over 20
years.
http://americanenergycoalition.com/2013-news/natural-gas-is-more-harmful-th…
-----Original Message-----
From: Verena Owen <verena_owen(a)prodigy.net>
To: pjgrunt <pjgrunt(a)gmail.com>; Coal Alerts <
coal-volunteers-list(a)sierraclub.org>
Sent: Wed, Nov 6, 2013 11:04 am
Subject: Re: [Coal Volunteers List] from High Country News; Pro-coal
arguments win the day at Denver EPA hearing on CO2 regulations
The good news is that there is still time to go to one of the listening
sessions EPA is holding: DC, Dallas and Seattle tomorrow and Chicago and
Philadelphia on Friday! Let's show up and tell EPA we want strong and just
carbon standards and why we need them.
Verena
I know that the sessions in Lenexa,KS and San Francisco were great:
RESIDENTS CALL FOR STRONG CARBON POLLUTION LIMITS FROM EXISTING POWER
PLANTS
Clean air advocates testify at regional EPA office in Lenexa
Monday, November 4, 2013
Contact:
Alison Flowers, 303-246-6297, alison.flowers(a)sierraclub.org
Glen Hooks, (501) 744-2674, glen.hooks(a)sierraclub.org
*Lenexa, KS* -- Today residents from Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska and Iowa
testified at the regional Environmental Protection Agency office in Lenexa,
calling on officials to enact the strongest possible limits on pollution
levels of the carbon pollution that disrupts our climate, threatens our
communities and that is linked to life-threatening air pollution like the
smog that triggers asthma attacks. Traveling hundreds of miles, clean air
advocates, including health professionals, community leaders and residents,
attended the Environmental Protection Agency's public listening session for
its upcoming proposal of carbon pollution protections from coal and
gas-fired power plants.
“Hundreds of people like me took time off of work and brought their friends
and families to speak out in favor of strong protections against climate
pollution today,” said *Larry Lazar, a former climate change denier turned
climate action leader from Eureka, Mo., who attended the listening
session. *“The things we love most about the Midwest are at risk. It's time
to wake up and put these life-saving safeguards in place.”
Coal and gas-fired power plants emit more than 2.3 metric tons per year of
carbon pollution, approximately 40% of total U.S. energy-related carbon
pollution. Carbon pollution is the main contributor to climate disruption,
which costs Americans both economically and environmentally. Last year
alone, Americans spent over $140 billion as a result of devastating
droughts, raging wildfires, tragic floods, record heat and powerful storms
- $1,110 per American.
“If the clean air protections are strong enough, then rich fossil fuel
companies will no longer get a free pass to pollute,” said *Glen Hooks,
senior campaign representative for the Sierra Club Beyond Coal campaign.* “They
won't be able to dump unlimited amounts of climate pollution into our air
anymore.”
"The need for action by EPA has never been more urgent," said *Andy Knott,
campaign representative for the Sierra Club Beyond Coal campaign in
Missouri.* "From droughts to floods to violent storms here in the Midwest,
the evidence of climate disruption and its impacts on people, the economy
and public budgets is undeniable. In 2011 and 2012, Missouri ranked 7th in
the nation in federal disaster recovery spending at $2.5 billion. Missouri
also has a long way to go to reduce its contribution to climate disruption,
as 80% of its electricity comes from coal. We call on EPA to adopt strong
safeguards that reduce power plant carbon pollution.”
The proposed safeguards would also protect families from dangerous air
pollution like toxic mercury and dirty soot.
EPA listening session includes stroller parade of concerned parents
Tuesday, November 5, 2013
Contact:
Nathan.Landers(a)sierraclub.org
SAN FRANCISCO, CA - The Environmental Protection Agency Region 9 office in
San Francisco was full to capacity today as the agency hosted an official
listening session to hear from Bay Area residents on a nationwide proposal
to limit carbon pollution from power plants. Coal and natural gas power
plants are the country's biggest source of greenhouse gas emissions causing
storms, droughts and wildfires, and other climate problems that have
affected millions of Americans. These plants currently have no legal limit
on the amount of carbon pollution they can emit into the air.
The event began with a “stroller parade” of determined moms and dads with
kids in tow demanding stronger carbon pollution protections, and it
included a press conference with representatives from the Sierra Club,
Climate Parents, the California Wind Energy Association, Union of Concerned
Scientists, San Francisco Board of Supervisors, and the San Francisco
Department of the Environment.
*Sierra Club Executive Director Michael Brune issued the following
statement:*
"The Environmental Protection Agency must propose strong and just
standards that can curb this dangerous carbon pollution and put us on a
path toward cleaner and more stable sources of energy. We cannot afford
weakened or watered-down protections.
"Power plants are responsible for 40 percent of total U.S. energy-related
carbon pollution, which fuels the increased frequency of extreme weather.
My hometown in New Jersey was caught in the path of superstorm Sandy, and
my family is not alone in suffering the pain of an unraveling climate—these
storms, wildfires, droughts, and record heat waves are affecting the lives
of millions of people across the country. Carbon pollution is also linked
to dangerous air pollution like the smog that triggers asthma attacks. The
EPA has a moral and legal imperative to limit these unchecked emissions as
a threat to public health.
"These new standards should be a call to action for U.S. innovation in
clean energy. Solar and wind technology have grown by leaps and bounds in
just a few short years, and these clean energy technologies are ready to
provide inexpensive power and create jobs across America. We have the
potential to build a clean energy economy here at home that will clear our
air and water and provide more equitable economic opportunities for
thousands of U.S. families."
Background:
The EPA’s listening sessions are the first public effort to get input from
key stakeholders across the country, including here in San Francisco. This
proposal for cleaning up existing coal and natural gas power plants follows
September’s announcement of a carbon pollution standard for new power
plants. The San Francisco listening session is one of 11 scheduled
nationwide to ensure input from all Americans.
Power plants are responsible for 40 percent of the carbon pollution in the
U.S. that causes climate disruption. Coal plants alone are responsible for
one-third of U.S. emissions.
------------------------------
*From:* Paul Wilson <pjgrunt(a)gmail.com>
*To:* Coal Alerts <coal-volunteers-list(a)sierraclub.org>
*Sent:* Wednesday, November 6, 2013 9:37 AM
*Subject:* [Coal Volunteers List] from High Country News; Pro-coal
arguments win the day at Denver EPA hearing on CO2 regulations
Got this issue yesterday from the HCN email list. fyi, paul
Pro-coal arguments win the day at Denver EPA hearing on CO2 regulations
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Emily Guerin<http://www.hcn.org/@@search?portal_type%3Alist=Blog+Post&Creator=eguerin&so…>
|
Nov 04, 2013 11:12 AM
<http://www.hcn.org/@@search?portal_type%3Alist=Blog+Post&Creator=eguerin&so…>
At 5 a.m. on Oct. 30, coal miners and residents of Moffat County,
Colorado, gathered
at a McDonald’s in
Craig<http://www.craigdailypress.com/news/2013/oct/25/moffat-county-residents-wil…>
for
a pancake breakfast before boarding buses to Denver chartered by Peabody
Coal. They were headed to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s listening
tour,<http://www2.epa.gov/carbon-pollution-standards/public-listening-sessions>
in
which the agency travels around the country seeking input on its new
regulations for existing coal-fired power plants, which it plans to release
next June. The EPA already debuted its proposal for new power
plants<http://www2.epa.gov/carbon-pollution-standards/2013-proposed-carbon-polluti…>
in
September, and has since turned its attention to drafting rules for
existing plants, which could have a much more profound effect on the coal
industry, and on emissions, given that few new coal plants are being built
anymore.<http://www.hcn.org/blogs/goat/dispatch-from-a-colorado-coal-confab-where-ne…>
Craig’s economy is highly dependent on coal – there are three near-by mines
and a large coal plant – so naturally, people wanted to tell EPA Region
Eight Administrator Shaun McGrath, EPA Region Eight Air Program Director
Carl Daly and other officials how carbon dioxide regulations would affect
them. They were joined in Denver by boilermakers, coal company executives,
trade groups and politicians from other coal-dependent areas around the
West, many of whom took the EPA to task for scheduling its listening
sessions far from areas like Wyoming and West Virginia where coal is mined
and burned.
[image: EPA co2 hearing
map]<http://www2.epa.gov/carbon-pollution-standards/public-listening-sessions>
Jessica Unruh, a North Dakota state senator who works in the lignite coal
industry, told the EPA that its choice of meeting locations
“disenfranchises from the process people whose livelihoods will be directly
affected.” And House Republicans went so far as to accuse the EPA of
selective listening. “EPA conspicuously failed to schedule any listening
sessions in states where electricity price increases may be the highest as
a result of the agency’s (new regulations),” reads a blog post from the House
Energy and Commerce Committee
website.<http://energycommerce.house.gov/blog/obama-administration-shuns-communities…>
But,
as political news website *The
Hill*notes<http://thehill.com/blogs/regwatch/energyenvironment/327589-gop-epas-regulat…>,
the tour does include “states that produce large amounts of coal. The tour
includes dates in Illinois, Texas and Pennsylvania – which all ranked in
the top ten <http://www.nma.org/pdf/c_production_state_rank.pdf> as
recently as 2011, according to National Mining Association figures.”
The distance didn’t seem to stop many coal industry employees from making
the long trip to Denver last week, with speakers hailing from Montana,
Wyoming, North Dakota and Minnesota.
Over the course of the day-long session, a few themes emerged:
*Local economic impacts*
A number of retirees from Wyoming and Montana, some of whom had worked in
the coal industry, said they were worried about the price of electricity
rising if the EPA further regulates coal plants. Regulations “usually cost
the consumer in the end,” said Carl Dickerson, a coal miner from Wyoming
who said he spoke up at the Denver listening session “for his family.”
Many others were concerned about the loss of jobs in coal and related
industries if plants shut down rather than install the expensive carbon
capture technology that would allow them to continue operating. Some
workers worried they wouldn’t be able to transition to jobs in natural gas
if coal power is regulated out of existence. “If natural gas replaces coal,
we’ll experience tens of thousands of lost jobs in maintenance workers like
myself,” said Jason Small, a union boilermaker from East Helena, Mont. (As
*HCN* has reported
before<http://www.hcn.org/issues/44.19/economics-not-environmental-regs-are-batter…>,
low natural gas prices are a major contributor to that fuel’s popularity,
not just the EPA’s regulation of coal emissions).
*Asset stranding*
Utility and trade group representatives worried new carbon dioxide
regulations would force the closure of plants that had just spent lots of
money to comply with previous EPA regulations on mercury, nitrous oxide and
sulfur dioxide. (For more on asset stranding, read “Will stricter emissions
limits mean stranded assets for
investors?”<http://www.hcn.org/blogs/goat/stranded-assets-and-climate-deniers>)
Wade Boeshans, who traveled from North Dakota to represent the Lignite
Energy Council, told the EPA his members “have invested hundreds of
millions of dollars in improved technology that is at risk of being
stranded if your regulations are not flexible or appropriate.” And because
so many of North Dakota’s power plants are mine-mouth, meaning they are fed
by a single coal mine that has no other buyer, a power plant shut down
would also strand investments in coal mines.
*Singling out coal*
A number of speakers who supported carbon dioxide regulations criticized
the EPA for targeting coal-fired power plants for their contributions to
climate change while giving natural gas a free pass. Kathleen Bailey, who
described herself as “a concerned citizen,” asked EPA not to “be a natural
gas promoter,” citing the many ways in which natural gas and oil extraction
pollutes ground and surface water. “I am very concerned that you will be
promoting the conversion from coal plants to natural gas plants rather than
helping clean coal,” she said.
*“A drop in the bucket”*
Many coal supporters worried any reduction in U.S. carbon dioxide
emissions will be insignificant because China and other countries will
still be burning lots of fossil fuels. But Denver resident Josh Phillips
refuted those claims, arguing that “the U.S., and specifically Colorado,
has a chance to lead here in reducing carbon emissions.” That pioneering
sprit, he said, is what “made our country great.”
Listening to their comments, the arguments of the pro-coal types seemed to
carry the day. They definitely won the epic travel award, coming in from
much further than the majority of the pro-regulation speakers. They also
were not just interested citizens; they represented companies, utilities
and industry groups. Environmental and renewable energy groups made a
somewhat poor showing, leaving self-identified private and concerned
citizens from Denver to make their arguments. Or perhaps they’re just
waiting for the EPA to visit San Francisco or Seattle next week, when
they’re much more likely to be the majority in the room.
*Emily Guerin is a correspondent for* High Country News. *She Tweets*
*@guerinemily*.
--
Paul Wilson
Sierra Club
504 Jefferson Ave
Charles Town, WV 25414-1130
Phone: 304-725-4360
Cell: 304-279-1361
"There is no forward until you have gone back" ~Buddha
"In all things of nature there is something of the marvelous" ~ Aristotle
--
To access the Beyond Coal Campaign Resource Portal, go to:
https://sites.google.com/a/sierraclub.org/beyond-coal-resource-portal/
To sign up for this list, email becki.clayborn(a)sierraclub.org with the
subject and message "SUBSCRIBE #coal-volunteer"
---
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--
To access the Beyond Coal Campaign Resource Portal, go to:
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To sign up for this list, email becki.clayborn(a)sierraclub.org with the
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--
To access the Beyond Coal Campaign Resource Portal, go to:
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To sign up for this list, email becki.clayborn(a)sierraclub.org with the
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FYI, Some good news from around the country.
JBK
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: jeff tittel <jeff.tittel(a)sierraclub.org<mailto:jeff.tittel@sierraclub.org>>
Date: Wed, Nov 6, 2013 at 9:56 AM
Subject: RE: Election Night! Clean Sweep for the Climate. Hell YES!!!
To: Michael Bosse <michael.bosse(a)sierraclub.org<mailto:michael.bosse@sierraclub.org>>, Bruce Nilles <bruce.nilles(a)sierraclub.org<mailto:bruce.nilles@sierraclub.org>>
Cc: #Coal <coal-list(a)sierraclub.org<mailto:coal-list@sierraclub.org>>, Cathy Duvall <cathy.duvall(a)sierraclub.org<mailto:cathy.duvall@sierraclub.org>>, Melissa Williams <Melissa.Williams(a)sierraclub.org<mailto:Melissa.Williams@sierraclub.org>>, GAS-LEADERSHIP-TEAM(a)lists.sierraclub.org<mailto:GAS-LEADERSHIP-TEAM@lists.sierraclub.org>, Eric Huber <eric.huber(a)sierraclub.org<mailto:eric.huber@sierraclub.org>>
In New Jersey all incumbent Democratic Senators Won ,Christie went hard after 4 of our Champions all won close races .Democrats maintain 24-16 lead and one of our strongest envronmetally assembly person was elevated to the Senate .In the Assembly Dems will lost 1 seat and he was bad on the environment , there are 2 races that are too close to call -they are strong enviro's that currently trailing but could still win based on provisional ballots. Assembly worse case 45 - 35 democrat.We passed a minimum wage ballot question 60%- 40 % and local open space referendums passed.On the governors race Christie Big win is not as big as media plays it about 500,000 democrats stayed home. Christie got only 5% more votes the 4 years ago and about the same number of votes as Corzine when he won in 2005 or McGreevey in 2001.He won mostly because , you have paid off the democratic bosses/ construction unions to support you and you have week incompetent candidate that you outspend 20 to 1 not including $25 million in TV ads paid by government promoting you.
Jeff Tittel, Director
NJ Sierra Club
145 W Hanover St
Trenton, NJ 08618
609-656-7612<tel:609-656-7612>: phone
609-656-7618<tel:609-656-7618>: fax
________________________________
From: Michael Bosse [mailto:michael.bosse@sierraclub.org<mailto:michael.bosse@sierraclub.org>]
Sent: Tuesday, November 05, 2013 11:57 PM
To: Bruce Nilles
Cc: #Coal; Cathy Duvall; Melissa Williams; GAS-LEADERSHIP-TEAM(a)lists.sierraclub.org<mailto:GAS-LEADERSHIP-TEAM@lists.sierraclub.org>; Eric Huber
Subject: Re: Election Night! Clean Sweep for the Climate. Hell YES!!!
A solid assist from Gas in Colorado's Front range where we also invested and won 3 out of 4 fracking ballot initiatives.
Fort Collins and Boulder passed extensions to their fracking morotoriums, Lafayette Colorado amended its charter to ban fracking. In Bloomfield (small suburban area between Denver and Boulder) we are currently behind 49% to 51%.?
We were outspent in these races by about 90 to 1.?
http://www.denverpost.com/breakingnews/ci_24460947/900-000-spent-four-color…
On Tue, Nov 5, 2013 at 8:44 PM, Bruce Nilles <bruce.nilles(a)sierraclub.org<mailto:bruce.nilles@sierraclub.org>> wrote:
We won the VA Gov's race against a climate denier, we won against Xcel who tried a ballot initiative to stop Boulder from seizing the grid so they could provide 100% clean energy, and we won all four county races in Whatcom County, the site of the massive coal export facility in NW Washington. ?Coal took a drubbing from coast to coast. ?So delicious.
"We shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing grounds, we shall fight in the fields and in the streets, we shall fight in the hills; we shall never surrender...."
--
Bruce Nilles
Sierra Club
415-977-5640<tel:415-977-5640> (o)
608-712-9725<tel:608-712-9725> (c)
www.beyondcoal.org<http://www.beyondcoal.org>
twitter: @brucenilles
--
___________________
Michael Bosse
Deputy National Program Director
Sierra Club
(415) 977 5681<tel:%28415%29%20977%205681>
--
Scott Elkins
Director of Grassroots Effectiveness
Sierra Club
Minneapolis, MN
NEW 612-259-2442<tel:612-259-2442> (w)
612-720-0793<tel:612-720-0793> (c)
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