Tuesday, November 30, 2010

The Mystery of Squirrels on Governor's Island

(By Jenna Kelly)




Shane Snipes is in New York and interviews Katherine, an art fellow at the Governor's Island Summer Program. Katherine incorporated nature and the environment into her artwork. She explains to Shane that she was raised by scientists and was always really interested in the scientific aspect of life. Although, catering to her creative side, she needed to combine art with her love for science, as research would not have been fitting for her. She says her art is always a mix of research tools. Katherine feels that the combination of science and art is a confusing abstraction at times but this confusion has the beautiful capability of creating a new relationship with which we can all look at and understand the world. Katherine talks a lot about squirrels in her interview. She has done a lot of research about squirrels and how they came to be on Govenor’s Island. She has conducted some fascinating studies and incorporates interesting features of their habitat, food, and lifestyle into her art. 

Shane picks up on the importance of observing the seemingly ordinary things around us with a new sense of fascination and wonder. Shane also mentioned that he feels as he is picking up a pallet of color all over the country as he learns about the beautiful things people are doing in the US to try to make it a better and greener place. 

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Hazan Works to Connect Religion to Sustainability

(By Priyanka Kotadia)

Religion is deeply rooted in our society and religious leaders have profound effect on their followers. People especially follow religious preachers when structuring their everyday life. With such knowledge young religious leaders are beginning to integrate messages of ‘green living’ into their religious practices. Jake Wilkenfeld-Mongillo and Molly Dunn, rabbis and founders of Hazan, discuss their take on environmental issues with Shane Snipes.

 Hazan is a Jewish organization based in New York City; its primary purpose is to educate and assist Jewish communities in living a sustainable life. Mr. Mongillo and Ms. Dunn assert that any type of movement must begin from within and in a smaller scale to ultimately have a larger impact on the world. Therefore, their organization has a primary focus in the Jewish community, which the directors are personally connected to. They note that people are divided into groups, and conveying messages to them becomes less challenging when one paints the message into the group’s perspective. They have attempted to redefine the meaning of Kosher for the Jewish community. Mr. Mongillo states that Kosher means, “ritually fit,” but the popular media often construes the practices of Kosher preparation with non-sustainable ways. Hazan grants loans to farmers around the state to educate their followers about how their food is prepared and its source. The organization directly relates such measures to the messages in Torah, which stresses the importance of knowing the source of one’s food. It is smaller changes like this that will make people think about their actions and their immediate impact on the environment.

They effect change in three ways: 

1.  Through the direct human impact of our programs; 
2.  By supporting the American Jewish environmental movement and the Israeli environmental 
movement;
3.  Through thought-leadership (writing, speaking, teaching, campaigning). 

The following values underpin their programs: 

1.  A strong commitment to inclusive community; 
2.  A strong commitment to volunteer involvement and leadership development; 
3.  Multi-generationality; 
4.  Being Jewishly serious and deeply engaged with the world around us; 
5.  We believe in reaching people where they are and not where we might like them to be.


The message of saving our earth and environment is simple. Every one of us can paint the message in our language to make every single person understand it. 

Drilling for Marcellus Shale-- What are the Consequences?

(By Matt Connolly)

Marcellus Shale, a sedimentary rock comprised of untapped natural gas reserves, has been accumulating approximately 7,000-10,000 ft. below the earth's crust for over 300 million years. Only recently, however, drilling companies intent on securing the precious resource have been offering landowners high prices for the right to drill on their land. But is drilling so deep beneath the earth’s crust safe for the environment?

CatskillMoutainKeeper.org
Drilling companies depend on a process called hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, a method of directional drilling that allows access to deposits of deep shale from a horizontal position. Fracking involves injecting millions of gallons of water and sand and sometimes up to 600 different chemicals into a well at high pressure in order to fracture shale deposits and facilitate natural gas flow through fissures in the rock. Drilling companies of the natural gas industry are not required by law to disclose the chemicals they use in the drilling process. However, scientists have found compounds such as benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene and xylene near well sites. These compounds are classified as VOCs or volatile organic compounds, and pose threats to drinking water supplies. Wastewater polluted with VOCs is constantly evaporating as drilling takes place, mixing with diesel exhaust from trucks and generators; together, the VOCs and diesel exhaust form ozone plumes that pollute the air and can travel over 200 miles.

Gas wells have sprung up throughout Pennsylvania and Southeastern New York, and companies continue to secure drilling locations dangerously close to Delaware River and the Catskill Watershed, the main provider of New York City’s drinking water. The government has not addressed the potential harms involved in drilling for natural gas. While natural gas is important for our energy needs, we must ensure that the way we reach shale deposits does not have a negative effect on the environment and human health. 

Filmmaker Josh Fox spent some time traveling around the U.S. to document the effects of drilling on everyday citizens and the environment. He has captured his interesting and shocking experiences in his documentary “Gasland,” winner of the Jury Prize at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival:

"When filmmaker Josh Fox is asked to lease his land for drilling, he embarks on a cross-country odyssey uncovering a trail of secrets, lies and contamination. A recently drilled nearby Pennsylvania town reports that residents are able to light their drinking water on fire. This is just one of the many absurd and astonishing revelations of a new country called GASLAND.”

Visit Catskill Mountain Keeper’s website for information on drilling in the Catskill region: