Remember in recent years, when the Sierra Club got that pledge from School Board candidates at the Richmond Crusade for Voters candidate forums.
Hopefully, this will lead to more LEED buildings.
This music video may not be everybody’s cup and tea, but it will take all sorts of media to raise peoples’ awareness of climate change. Which is why I am very thankful to my friend Kenny (of 804Noise fame) for showing me the link.
Find out more at The Danger Global Warming Project.
Recently, some local bloggers went to a Chick-fil-a opening to get some free coupons and then blogged about it. I left a comment that I hope they can appreciate and take in good spirit:
Thats quite a feat. I have heard about events like this and seen some mildly entertaining documentaries about them- “Hands On A Hard Body”, anyone?
But one thing I feel compelled to mention is the environmental problems associated with the cheap chicken that Chick-fil-a and other fast food chains serve. Massive chicken farms in places like Virginia’s Eastern Shore are poisoning the Chesapeake Bay and other bodies of water with stormwater runoff that is full of chicken pee and poop. Its a real problem that is killing the Bay.
I don’t mean to be a total kill joy, and I too enjoy a good chicken sandwich from time to time, but its something that people need to be educated about so that they can lobby their political representatives to fix. The fast food corporations keep the farms as independent agents so that they can wash their hands of it, so to speak, while the farmers claim they have raise massive amounts of chickens to stay competitive and solvent.
In short, I understand and in a sense admire your quest for cheap chicken, but something does need to change overall to save the environment.
I probably should have left a link to the PBS documentary Poisoned Waters too, but like I said, I did not want to be a total kiiljoy either. It’s not easy to point to the environmental dangers of fast food. Chick-fil-a recently sponsored their annual charity dodgeball tournament at the downtown Richmond convention center- part of me wanted to put together a team to either play in it or picket it.
As anyone who has attended recent local events knows, this program is needed in Richmond.
Imagine these on the refurbished Diamond. Or how about in Scott’s Addition?
Someone forward this to Ed Eck and the West Cary Street Revitalization Committee.