Monday, Jul 6, 2009

workaround

workaround

SMTWTFS
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Green Drinks of summer

By Jennifer Holder

McKeown is wearing a papier mache hat to illustrate that a fluorescent light bulb uses less electricity than an incandescent bulb.

June 30, 2008

Unfortunately the rainy weather did not cooperate with the organizers of the first Green Drinks of the summer on June 11. So, instead of meeting on the patio of Birchbark Café in Minneapolis, the group of approximately twenty energy conservation enthusiasts huddled together inside the café for their environmental happy hour.

For more information, visit the Clean Energy Resource Teams Web site or contact Diana McKeown at dmckeown@greeninstitute.org for more information about Green Drinks.

Green Drinks is held on the second Wednesday of the month through September, and is hosted by the Metro Clean Energy Resource Teams (CERTs) Network, coordinated by The Green Institute. The group coordinator, Diana McKeown, said the goal of holding the themed happy hour, “is to have speakers share actions and examples you can take to be part of the solution.”

“The average Minnesotan has a carbon footprint of over 50,000 pounds per year, which is above the national average,” Neely Crane-Smith, Energy Challenge Coordinator at Center for Energy and Environment, told the Green Drinks gathering on June 11.

McKeown has believed in being part of the solution since she was a little girl. Whenever she would throw anything in the garbage, her father, who was one of eleven children, would chide her with, “there is no such as thing as waste.” She developed “an incredible guilt for wasting anything;” but her father also instilled in her the habits of reusing and recycling.

With her family today, husband and two girls aged 11 and 2, McKeown continues to reuse and recycle. For example, she carries a reusable bag with her at all times; she buys as much as possible from the neighborhood cooperative; she buys milk in returnable glass bottles; and she bikes to work. Her older daughter is responsible for separating the recyclables at home. McKeown and her family also eat and shop locally to support businesses in the neighborhood and reduce transportation. “We have everything in our neighborhood [Seward] that we need. We really try to say local.”

MeKeown graduated from the University of Minnesota in 1995 with a degree in environmental studies. She loved the combination of environmental policy and politics in her 14 years of work at Clean Water Action. Her interest in global warming issues led to her becoming one of a thousand people across the country trained by Al Gore to do his slide show. She says that experience “really brought home the need for me to work in the community on energy conservation and global warming issues.”

McKeown now works with The Green Institute, a partner of CERTS. She will be holding an informational meeting about Metro CERTs Network in St. Paul at the Rondo outreach library on July 7th. The CERTs project, launched in 2003, is connecting people with the technical resources needed to identify and implement community-scale energy efficiency and clean energy projects. Coordinating Green Drinks is one of community activities that McKeown has undertaken to educate the community about environmental issues.

Jennifer Holder contributes regularly to the TC Daily Planet and the Minnesota Spokesman-Recorder.

Comments

Post new comment

The Twin Cities Daily Planet encourages readers to submit comments voicing their views in a constructive and civil fashion. The editors reserve the right to edit comments for length and clarity, and we may decline to publish comments that advertise services or goods, take an intemperate tone, or that contain potentially libelous allegations.
The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
1 + 7 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.

workaround

Stories We're Working On

In progress

These are some of the stories we are working on. We invite and encourage you to contribute to these stories, or to suggest other stories that you would like to see covered.

REPORTER’S NOTEBOOK | North Minneapolis We’ll tell you what the judge decides on the flurry of lawsuits around last winter’s Jordan Area Community Council controversy as soon as the decision is made (probably the week of July 6). What do you think about what’s been going on at JACC, in Jordan, and around the Northside? Tell us what you know – and what you think we should be covering.

REPORTER’S NOTEBOOK | Background checks bar park volunteers
Minneapolis parks have recently tightened enforcement of rules about background checks for volunteers. But does the “systemic bias of the criminal justice system” mean that many African American males will be barred from serving as volunteers? We want to hear your ideas.

REPORTER’S NOTEBOOK | Hmong Freedom Celebration and Sports Tournament Coming up this weekend! We’re looking for community input about the sports tournament, your experiences at the tournament, how it has changed over the years, what the gathering of Hmong from around the country and around the world means, and any other thoughts you might have about the weekend.

MORE »

MUSIC | Black Blondie and Foxy Tann knock 'em dead at the Uptown Pride Block Party

The Uptown Pride Block Party on June 26 was an LGBT Pride Week affair, but you didn’t need to be lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender to get with it. For that matter, you didn’t have to have a dime in your pocket. All you had to bring was the willingness to enjoy a damned good time. MORE »

We get comments

Recent comments

MOVIES | Johnny Depp and Christian Bale in Public Enemies: Michael Mann doing what he does best: Austin Kennedy – I don’t mind independent pictures using HD video ‘cause they don’t have enough money for film, but when a major studio is making a multi-million dollar picture (and a period piece at that), shoot the friggin’ thing on film. No excuse! MORE »