Power Down Week: Save the Date, Save Some Energy by Sura, February 3

Folks from Transition Milwaukee are in the initial stages of planning “Power Down Week.” This will be a week of people working, playing and living in community, more or less off the grid. The week starts on Summer Solstice (Monday, June 21) and goes through Sunday, June 27, 2010.

This event is open to all levels of participation. Choose your challenges, or go all the way off the grid. As Sarah Moore writes, “Power Down Week will be a game, a challenge, a dare, a drill. It’s real and it’s play. It will be hard, it will be fun. It’s workshops, it’s a conference of neighbors, it’s the best staycation you will ever have.”

We will bike, walk and bus. We will cook and bake in solar ovens. We’ll shut off our computers, turn our refrigerators into ice boxes, and exchange our cell phones for a 24-hour central communications headquarters. We will attempt to eat locally grown, organic food.

We will call back the spirit of our ancestors and call forth the spirit of a future generation who will discover new ways to power our world, free from our current addiction to oil, coal and nuclear power which are destroying our planet.

We will find better ways. More creative ways. Ways that may take longer, but which build stronger relationships and deeper understanding of the way things work.

You decide how far you want to go: Help with planning, attend or host events, join in on the challenges, or lead others in a tour, a demonstration or a reskilling.

This is a community event. All people on all levels are welcome. The challenge will be living without things we’re accustomed to. The game will be discovering the fun of closer human interaction, of doing things in community, and of learning new skills that will change us for the rest of our lives. These will be experiences to remember!

If you have any area of skill or just an interest, let us know. We are looking for both leaders and learners. Examples include: building solar ovens, knitting, darning socks, weaving classes, broom making, slingshot making, beekeeping, food fermentation, composting, making hand crank or bike generators for radios, mills or whatever.

The heart of the event will happen in Riverwest, but we’ll also be arranging for tours all over Milwaukee.  If you have favorite  sustainability or natural environment places or projects, let us know.

We will attempt doing all of this without money changing hands, by using the new Milwaukee Area Time Exchange, time for time. Please sign up now.

And last, this will be one long party! Look for the creative side: poetry reading by candle light, human powered fun, yoga, group solar showers, backyard bonfires and drum circles. Planning has just started — join us for the fun of dreaming it up!

To get involved call (263.1513) or email Sura, or Sarah Moore (372.3824)

Greening Milwaukee – Get a Free Tree by Sura, December 28

I spoke to a constituent a couple of days ago about the driveway of a new development in his neighborhood. The effect of that driveway was to make street parking less available (therefore netting no new parkings spaces), and the destruction of a 75 year-old Maple tree.

An irony when we are considering the potential effects of the Emerald Ash Borer on the city’s trees, and the overall need for a greater tree canopy in the city.

We need a stronger city plan to ensure the health of our urban forest, You can get a free tree from Greening Milwaukee

Trees
- Provide shade in the summer
- increase our property values
- Reduce our energy bills
- Help block harmful ultraviolet rays
- Increase our ability to concentrate
- Absorb carbon dioxide and emit oxygen, cleaning the air we breathe
- Reduce our reliance on air conditioners
- Reduce water runoff that lead to sewer overflows (green is always better than concrete or asphalt)
- Provide a home for birds and other wildlife

and make us all happier.

P.S. We need city trees on Holton St.

Berkeley going solar – city pays up front, recoups over 20 years by Sura, November 1

Here’s a win-win creative concept for the environment and cost savings — have the city fund changes through low interest loans that are cheaper to pay back than the energy cost.

Berkeley going solar – city pays up front, recoups over 20 years

Berkeley is set to become the first city in the nation to help thousands of its residents generate solar power without having to put money up front – attempting to surmount one of the biggest hurdles for people who don’t have enough cash to go green.

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