Toxics now, IRE conference later

smokestacks6

Since right now I’m technically still on vacation, I’ll delay my stories about the IRE conference until Thursday or Friday when I get back to Ohio. Right now I’m in Boston seeing what there is to see, eating and drinking what there is to eat and drink, with a friend who just graduated from MIT.

But this morning I ended up making posts to Facebook and Twitter about a(n apparently) favorite subject of mine lately, toxics. Why not share with readers here, as well?

This is a thrilling find for me: The Toxic 100.

Compiled by investigators at a UMass think tank, the site provides raw and analyzed data from the EPA and can help you find whether your beloved hometown company is really a dirty scumbag.

Along the same lines, I encourage you to visit The Smokestack Effect, a USA Today report I learned of (at the IRE conference) by the project’s editor, Blake Morrison.

It overlays EPA data about toxic and carcinogenic air emissions with the locations of just about every school in the country — and you can add your own if you don’t see it on there. It ranks each of the 128,000 schools by percentile of how polluted the air is, around (and likely in) them.

The project got started when USA Today heard of a school closing in Cincinnati and obtained data from EPA to rank air quality in different areas around the country. Quickly the paper found that something like 435 schools actually had worse air quality than the one that closed in Cincy. Not many of those 435 have closed yet, and a large percentage of them are in low-income areas.

But if your child or small sibling attends a school in the top 20 percentiles, it’s generally harmful to health, said Morrison. Personally, I wouldn’t send my (future) children to a school in the top 30.

Last but not least, remember the Better World Shopper book that gave us information about products’ impacts on society and the environment? Now it’s hit Web 2.0.

I’ve been fascinated by bar-code scanning technology and its potential for us to retrieve information from the Internet about products — really about any object in the “real world.”

Now the concept behind the Better World Shopper (although not the same group) is fueling a living website called GoodGuide. According to this New York Times article, the site’s 3Gs iPhone (That is, the new iPhone model to be released Friday) application will be able to scan bar codes to get you info about products on the fly.

Talk about awesome. Think of the impact on society if we all shunned products that destroyed us and the Earth. As long as good investigative journalism is retained, compaies won’t be able to keep that stuff a secret in order to make windfall profits.

I had shied away from replacing my current phone with an iPhone out of distaste for consumerism. But if the iPhone itself battles unchecked consumerism in all other areas of my purchasing, doesn’t that justify it? Maybe. Short of Wendell Berry’s idea of a “local economy,” I think this is the best device yet for making the world a better place. Annie Leonard would be proud. (See her Story of Stuff here and on the left sidebar.)

Recent work

Been awhile since I’ve posted; about the same time I stopped posting, school let out for the summer. Since then I must have been preoccupied by work at News Journal… but also with personal stuff.

My reporting gig is only 20 hours a week. It’s a good thing I don’t have many expenses. I’ve been learning quite a bit, though. Like how to take care of a bedridden grandfather. It’s not easy.

How about some samples of my work?

Burn story thumb

May 23, 2009 — Allegedly, a boy’s mother stood by and watched as the babysitter burnt all her son’s fingers as a “punishment” for smoking. The babysitter later told this to a woman she had never met, and, voila, landed herself in jail. I interviewed the whistleblower.

Currently I have been investigating pollution in Clinton County. The EPA is a veritable treasure trove, and as of yet they’ve never given me any problems getting information. The question is finding the information I want. EPA is so divided, broken up into a million different parts and jobs and filing systems and online systems.

It seems impossible to navigate at times, but I think I just made a contact who can help me slog through the muck. She used to be an environmental journalist, but now she works for Ohio EPA, helping environmental journalists find the information they need. Cool job, huh?

Expect a detailed report on pollution in and around Wilmington in the next several weeks, as I’ll be out of the office 5 days for a conference and my investigative stuff has to be wedged into my normal coverage itinerary.

Speaking of the conference, I hope to blog it (and tweet it) along the way. It starts next Thursday, June 11, and it’s the big annual conference for the premier investigative reporting society in the U.S., Investigative Reporters and Editors. Basically hundreds of awesome reporters getting together and hearing speeches by some of the best. I hear Bob Woodward, of Watergate fame, is speaking.

CU/Green on the PR benefits of itself

CU/Green: Things Cedarville University should consider doing in order to be good stewards of the Earth.

PR Blitz

  • First and foremost we should remember we toil to take care of the environment, not to promote ourselves. But the PR department should also know their promotion could be as much a public service to the non-CU-population as it is marketing. What I mean is, people need to know that Christianity wholeheartedly backs the idea that the Earth should be well cared for. People need to know that it’s not just leftist protesters but many intelligent social conservatives who love nature and want to keep it — for our progeny and for its own inherent worth. Also I think in terms of “public service” when I envision CU serving as a force for more specific education, teaching our community about how to “green” their own lives.
  • That was the caveat — this is the fun part. I guarantee that if CU implements a third of my myriad suggestions over the past 8 days, our school could be featured on national news outlets. I can hear it now: The Christian University with the best student satisfaction is also the first ultra-green Christian University. If everyone has the talking points down (through lots of simple but fun internal educational materials), the media will come away with the exact story we want them to come away with. Get with Dr. Mark Gathany and Prof. Ryan Futrell, who teach the Honors Seminar “Reading and Writing the Literature of the Natural Environment” to help put together the philosophical justification about why Christians need be concerned with a healthy Earth. About how this so transcends partisan politics because it’s a Biblical mandate.  (The great thing is, that’s true — we’re not spinning it out of thin air. There’s scholarship behind it.)
  • I mentioned it before, but a huge part of CU/Green should be engagement with our local community — Cedarville Village specifically, but we could also focus on Greene County as a whole. Media organizations eat this up… maybe because it’s just the right thing to do. For example, once we all learn how to weatherize buildings, we can help do it for residents of the Village and save them some money on heating and cooling bills. And we can help Energize Clinton County, in the DHL-affected zone. Look how much media attention they’ve been getting. As Quinnipiac University has become the school for polling, we can become the school that turns the tide of public opinion in regards to Christians’ relationship to the environment.

CU/Green on everyday stuff

CU/Green: Things Cedarville University should consider doing in order to be good stewards of the Earth.

Okay, not all household chemicals are as hazardous as those trained to be withstood by the U.S. Army, as shown here. But some are close, and our government continues to let us use them! Flickr photo from Army.mil. CC.

Okay, not all household chemicals are as hazardous as those trained to be withstood(....) by the U.S. Army, as shown here. But some are close, and our government continues to let us use them! Flickr photo from Army.mil. CC.

Healthy personal choices

  • get rid of the rat poison around the buildings, maybe replacing it with natural alternatives
  • Replace all cleaners and solvents with environmentally-friendly ones. Maybe contract with Seventh Generation or Biokleen. Make sure we’re not using products with chlorine, ammonia, phosphate, petroleum solvents, harmful alcohols or other VOC’s, butyl, glycol ether, or those tested on animals or that use animal ingredients.

Educational paraphernalia

  • Set a requirement for using WebCT and other digital means for the majority of coursework. Ideally the only things that would be printed are those things that are absolutely, positively needed on paper. (Dealings with certain outside entities comes to mind.) This could mean getting faculty and graders e-readers like the Kindle. And, of course, any paper that is used should get stored for long-term or recycled.

CU/Green on our refuse

CU/Green: Things Cedarville University should consider doing in order to be good stewards of the Earth.

Spy Hill landfill. Flickr photo from D'Arcy Norman. CC.

Spy Hill landfill. Flickr photo from D’Arcy Norman. CC.

Recycling

  • mandate recycling of all recyclables, in all buildings. Why make it a hard rule? First, rules aren’t resented here as much as it may seem. Lots of people didn’t mind the dress code. (And this rule actually caters to the crowd that usually resents rules, so you’re covered there.) Second, we’ve had recycling available in some places for years — it hasn’t been used at a high capacity. Rules are one way of teaching. A huge part of CU/Green is an educational experience: learning why and how we should take care of the planet. But a mandate will require many more receptacles (and likely bigger ones) — essentially one next to every garbage can. And we’ll have to have a contract that allows all recyclables, like the Village has (or better).

Composting

  • We should start with the easiest switch — the cafeteria. Make sure we’re using compostable paper napkins and combine them with all food garbage. A harder project will be getting airtight receptacles for the dorms, but we can do that later. We’ll have to save our gathered leaves and some grass clippings to use when we need to adjust the composition for optimal heat. If we don’t use the compost on our own farm, it can be sold — or, better yet, given away to a nonprofit farm like the one being planned for Wilmington, Ohio. They’ll be giving all their produce from a 10-acre farm to food pantries.

Waste disposal

  • Reduce, Reuse, Recycle. Those are in descending order of importance, and nowhere on it does “throw away” appear. If we find we buy stuff that we eventually just throw away, maybe we should rethink what we’re buying in the first place. This concept is so contrary to American thinking at this period in history, but it wasn’t always this way.

CU/Green on good air and energy

CU/Green: Things Cedarville University should consider doing in order to be good stewards of the Earth.

 Wind turbines in Italy. Flickr photo from Sebastiano Pitruzzello. CC.

Wind turbines in Italy. Flickr photo from Sebastiano Pitruzzello. CC.

Indoor air quality

  • …is notoriously poor. Installing air cleaners may be just too expensive when trying to do the rest of this, especially considering the near-equal benefit of periodically opening windows, using HEPA-filtration vacuums on carpets, and getting plants that filter the air, like daisies and English Ivy. Take this into consideration when picking plants, and maybe switch out those vacuums we can afford to replace, with directions to get HEPA as the old ones wear out. Encourage window-opening for a minimum of 5-10 minutes per week.

Renewable energy

  • CU should develop a partnership with the village to get a wind farm for electric power for the both of us. Sound outrageous? Cedarville’s mayor, Dr. James Phipps (a Comm Arts prof), had tried to get wind power for the village a couple years back. It seemed all a go, but it fell through because the company we were working with decided they had bigger fish to fry — as in, they had too many projects going at once to bother working with us. However now, since the recession has hit, renewable energy companies are scrambling for work. Sounds to me like an opportune time to resume the quest.

Energy conservation

  • Eliminate incandescent lights on campus. I know they’re mostly gone anyway, but let’s put the nails in the coffin. Buy a few cases of normal-sized ones and donate them to students and profs still using incandescent lamps.
  • turn building lights off at night when no one’s using them. This would seem like a no-brainer. What about making the campus look nice? We can show people pictures of lighted buildings at night, with an explanation that “we don’t do this anymore — it’s stupid.” I think everyone’ll respect that.