TESTING THE EPA STUDY
Performance by Bellafiore, Eccles and Lau
https://vimeo.com/149147117
Wednesday, December 16, 2015
Monday, December 14, 2015
Karen Higgins (Co-President of National Nurses Unitied) speech at Climate Rally in Boston December 12, 2015
We are here today to take a stand against inaction. Today is about justice; social justice, justice on the job, and just climate action to protect all of our futures. Too many times, we’ve let inaction win out. We have allowed the slow and steady degradation of unions as a result of inaction. And despite the recent talks in Paris, our unwillingness to take meaningful action on climate change means that everyone on Earth continues to suffer its dire consequences. . But today we take a stand. Today we say no to apathy. We say no to inaction. How do we do this? We do it by calling for leadership. We need leaders to step up at the federal, state, and local level. We need leadership to come from right here Massachusetts has shown leadership on issues like gay rights, health care and worker rights We need this kind of leadership again, now more than ever. There will be no climate justice, social justice or job justice without it. Without strong leadership we cannot ensure the health and well-being of our children and grandchildren. Climate change, unchecked, will devastate our future. Its impact is far-reaching, its health implications are enormous. As nurses we see this every day. We see the rates of childhood asthma and other respiratory illnesses are on the rise We know that air and water contamination has caused higher instances of cancer. We have seen thousands of people lose their lives to harsher and harsher natural disasters. All of us being here today demonstrates that we are committed to taking the necessary action to make the changes we need. We are committed to a $15 an hour minimum wage, to passing a national, singlepayer healthcare law, and to creating a truly clean energy economy that is good for job creation and our planet. Now is the time for us to lead. We must make these changes for ourselves and for future generations. Our actions can influence millions. Together we can leave our world in better shape than how we found it. That would be justice.
Saturday, August 29, 2015
Jay Critchley as Provocateur
An Evening with artist Jay Critchley
Doors open at 6 PM with Artist talk at 7 PM followed by discussion.
Doors open at 6 PM with Artist talk at 7 PM followed by discussion.
event for Don't look away! exhibit@mobius
Jay is a Provincetown-based conceptual and multi-media artist and activist whose work has traversed the globe, showing across the US and in Argentina, Japan, England, Spain, France, Holland, Germany and Columbia. He founded the controversial patriotic Old Glory Condom Corporation and was recently featured on LOGO TV and BBC/UK. His recent NYC show was reviewed in the New York Times, The New Yorker and the Village Voice. His first museum survey was held at the Provincetown Art Association/Museum, and will travel to Florida Atlantic University in 2016. The 2015 Provincetown International Film Festival featured his videos, including the HBO award-winning “Toilet Treatments”.
He has taught at the Museum School at Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and has had artist residencies at: Harvard University; AS220, Rhode Island; Harvestworks, NYC; Williams College, MA; Real Art Ways, Hartford; Milepost 5, Portland, OR, Fundacion Valparaiso, Mojacar, Andalucia, Spain, and CAMAC, Marnay-sur-Seine, France.
He founded the Provincetown Community Compact, which runs artist residencies, and the Swim for Life AIDS/women’s health benefit, which has raised $4M and is scheduled for September 12, 2015.
Don't look away! exhibit
Tuesday, August 25, 2015
Wednesday, August 12, 2015
Thursday, August 6, 2015
Wednesday, August 5, 2015
PRESS RELEASE FOR UPCOMING ART EXHIBITION
An exhibition of art will be presented at Mobius, 55
Norfolk Street, Central Square, Cambridge entitled DON’T LOOK AWAY! (www.mobius.org).The exhibit will run from September 12 through September
20 with gallery hours from 12-5 PM on weekends and by appointment. There will
be an opening reception on September 12 from 6-9 PM.
A special
event on Saturday, September 19 will be held from 6- 9PM with renowned public
artist and provocateur Jay Critchley. He will present and discuss environmental
art from his recent retrospective at the Provincetown Museum of Art.
The
DON’T LOOK AWAY! exhibit is the outgrowth of a process between artists and
environmentalists examining their own system of thought. Over several months,
they have practiced an experimental form of dialogue that attempted to address
questions arising from the overwhelm of climate disruption. Artists Margaret
Bellafiore, Lydia Eccles, Milan Kohout, Claire Lau and Judy Werlin, with
support from writers Steve Wineman and John Pitkin, have responded with developing
a variety of work including writing, sculpture, painting, video and
performance. They have struggled with issues of hope and despair, social
activism, fracking, and the larger underlying dynamics of what makes a healthy
society. Much of the work will be interactive as the artists are interested in having
viewers participate by adding to the work.
A
closing reception will be held on Sunday, September 20 from 12-5 PM. A public
dialogue will be held. Activists who are protesting the expansion of the
Spectra gas pipeline in Weymouth, West Roxbury and Dedham will participate in
this collective reflection.
HEALTH RISK from gas compressor by Dr. Curt Nordgaard
The
North Weymouth compressor station: An unacceptable health risk
Prepared by Curtis Nordgaard, MD Msc
Resident Pediatrician, Boston Children's Hospital /
Boston Medical Center
What
health conditions are associated with compressor station emissions?
-Particulate
matter 1,2: Asthma, heart attacks, diabetes
-Benzene
3 : Leukemia, bone marrow suppression
-Formaldehyde
4,5: Asthma, several types of cancer
-Nitrogen
oxide 6 Produces hazardous ground level ozone, an asthma trigger associated
with respiratory tract irritation and infection
Do
compressor stations emit dangerous levels of these pollutants?
-Benzene
levels have been measured near compressor stations that far exceed
cancer-causing
Thresholds.
Formaldehyde levels can exceed cancer-causing thresholds up to at least a half
mile away from compressor stations8
Do
residents living near compressor stations notice compressor emissions?
-Residents
living near compressor stations report severe headaches, sinus problems, and
throat
irritation
more often than residents living further away.
Would
additional emissions make a difference?
-Six industries in the Fore River Basin accounted
for 84 periods of federal pollution standard violations in the past 3 years, in
addition to their baseline operating pollution. -Significant background
emissions increase the likelihood that additional emissions will reach toxic or
carcinogenic levels
Why
haven't we heard more about compressors and health risks before?
-Many
compressor stations are built in rural areas near much smaller populations,
where fewer
people
are exposed to the pollutants and the health risks are therefore lower.
What
additional health risks will we accept in our communities so that Spectra can
build a
compressor
station?
-A
child with leukemia?
-A
parent or sibling with a heart attack?
-A
neighbor in the Emergency Department with an asthma attack?
If
we value the health of our communities, our families, and our children, then we
must
acknowledge
that increased risks of asthma, heart attacks, and cancer are unacceptable.
1 http://epa.gov/ncer/science/pm/
2 Solimini et al. BMC Public Health 2015 15:70.
3 http://www.epa.gov/IRIS/subst/0276.htm
4 Dannemiller et al. Indoor Air 2013 23(4):285.
5 http://www.epa.gov/IRIS/subst/0419.htm
6
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov/cgi-bin/sis/search2/f?./temp/~pm6jsl:1
7 Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. (2010).
Barnett Shale Formation Air Monitoring Projects.
8 Macey et al. Environmental Health 2014, 13:82
9 Steinzor et al. New Solutions 2013, 23:55
10 www.echo.epa.gov
Saturday, August 1, 2015
GLOBAL TRAUMA
What do you do when you feel overwhelmed by what is happening to
the planet earth? You know, the place where we all live.
Photo: Margaret Bellafiore
What if you have been reading Bill
McKibben, Elizabeth Kolbert and Barbara Kingsolver? Oil and Honey, The Sixth
Extinction and Migrant Behavior, in that order. Not very hopeful stuff.
Apocalyptic, actually. A dark future where water is either scarce or poisoned
or both. Where air is foul and hard to breathe. Where bees collapse and crops
fail. Where wars start because some people have what they need and others
don’t. It becomes a sort of trauma.
In 2007, Bill Mc Kibben and his
Middlebury College students started www.350.org as a way to do something about
this. They picked 350 as that was the number of carbon dioxide molecules in parts
per million that scientists all over the world had agreed was the safe upper
limit in the thin “skin” around the earth, our atmosphere. Any more would heat
up the planet to a level that could drastically change life as we know it.
Only six years later, scientists measured the CO2 in the
atmosphere to be 400 parts per million, probably for the first time in more
than 3 million years of Earth history. And the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere
is continuing to rise at about 2 ppm every year. Those college kids could never
have forseen that.
Well, wait a minute. We had a really
cold winter last year. This heating up can’t be happening, right? We breathe
out carbon dioxide. It can’t be that bad for the environment, right? And trees
use it. It can’t really heat up the whole planet, can it? My older brother told
me recently the earth has not increased in temperature. Huh? The data on this
is complex. I am not about to get into an argument with him-especially if I am
a guest in his house and he is feeding me dinner.
Photo: Margaret Bellafiore
But the oceans are warmer whether he
agrees with me or not. When storms move over warmer water, they become more
powerful. I get that. Like Hurricane Sandy. When it moved over the Atlantic in
October 2012, the ocean was two degrees warmer than normal. But this is just
“cyclical,” right? Tell that to my niece’s friends who have still not recovered
physically or psychically from the fourteen foot storm surge that suddenly came
up flooding their Staten Island home and submerging their car? They couldn’t
even drive away from it. They had to run from their house, in the dark with
water up to their chests to higher ground.
And the seas continue to rise. Where
does all the melting ice from the glaciers go? I have seen that. What will
happen to island communities? Or cities on the shore? Like most of our cities
world wide!
There have been warmings before.
Take the Permian Era where the earth was six degrees warmer than present. You
know what happened? A die off. Ninety percent of the earth’s living things
died. Gone. Gone Gone. It takes time to recover from a die off. A long time. It
only took millions of years for the ten percent that was left to become what we
have now. Well, that’s ancient history. That happened three hundred million
years ago. Not to worry, right?. That sort of thing isn’t happening now, or is
it? Fifty percent of the coral polyps in The Great Barrier Reef have gone
extinct in the last thirty years. That fast? Huh? Gone. Gone. Gone.
Carbon dioxide drives global warming. Scientists have agreed to another safe limit: the temperature of the earth cannot increase by more than two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit). What do we do? Do we stop breathing out? Or do we look at how much is being released by the fossil fuel companies? Fossil-fuel companies currently have about 2,795 gigatons of carbon already contained in their coal and oil and gas reserves, and they do plan to use it. That much release of carbon dioxide is five times higher than the set limit of 565 gigatons. Scientists have agreed to that number of carbon and no higher, would keep Earth from heating up to the treacherous increase of 2 degrees Celsius.
Carbon dioxide drives global warming. Scientists have agreed to another safe limit: the temperature of the earth cannot increase by more than two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit). What do we do? Do we stop breathing out? Or do we look at how much is being released by the fossil fuel companies? Fossil-fuel companies currently have about 2,795 gigatons of carbon already contained in their coal and oil and gas reserves, and they do plan to use it. That much release of carbon dioxide is five times higher than the set limit of 565 gigatons. Scientists have agreed to that number of carbon and no higher, would keep Earth from heating up to the treacherous increase of 2 degrees Celsius.
OK, as soon as we start talking in “gigatons,” we loose everyone
because no one can wrap their minds around one billion tons. Eyes glaze over.
People turn away. As a result, it is a lot easier to deny the whole thing and
while we are at it, we will deny the fact that we had anything to do with it. I
get that, too. Maybe that’s what’s driving my brother’s thinking (or lack of).
Maybe that’s why there are so many climate deniers.
Photo: Margaret Bellafiore
If present emission rates stay at
their present level, (31 gigatons globally in 2011 and rising), the outside
limit of 565 gigatons will be reached by 2028.Hmmm…How old will I be then? Or
more importantly, how old will my grandchildren be? Now, this is traumatic. But
don’t the oil tycoons like the Koch Brothers have grandchildren too? It is
sheer madness that they keep sucking oil out of the earth for profit or is it
just greed? How much is a healthy planet worth? Not all billionaires share
their lunacy. The Rockefeller family just announced they are divesting from oil
and tar sands mining. Anyone can see it is a bad investment.
I will be stuck in trauma unless I
start doing something about it. Take action. Even Mary Pipher (The Green Boat)
doesn’t hold out for any solution any time soon. And she writes that it might
really be too late to do anything about reversing the damage done by all of us
on this place where we all live. Nevertheless, she is quite pragmatic in her
own decision to stay positive and take action. I have begun to see this as the
way out of this global trauma. I am taking actions and joining with others (350 mass.org and www.sustainablesouthshore.org) who feel as I do. Last week I marched in NYC with 400,000
others in an amazing cry out for action, the People’s Climate March. Can you
imagine what this sounded like? Four hundred thousand voices shouting “Hey,
Hey! Ho, Ho! Fossil Fuel Has Got To Go!” over and over and over as we marched
down the Avenue of the Americas (how fitting a street name!).
I feel a lot better now and less traumatized.
Margaret
Bellafiore is a Mobius Artist Group member
(www.mobius.org). She became interested in the subject of trauma when she
interviewed returning veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan to college life for
her sound installation at Mobius, Combat to Campus, the Voices of Veterans. In
2012 she wrote about this experience for the American Association of University
Professors. (http://www.aaup.org/article/combat-campus#.U9_isvldWSp) Bellafiore
recently worked on writing projects with student veterans at Bridgewater State
University where she teaches art. She also wondered if there was a connection
between the denial people have to interpersonal violence and the way society
responds to climate change.
Thursday, July 30, 2015
Wednesday, July 29, 2015
Bill McKibben writes about the Pope's letter on the environment
http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2015/aug/13/pope-and-planet/
Monday, July 27, 2015
Tuesday, July 21, 2015
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