USM National Green Campus
News Archive
Week of April 4, 2011
News from Across the USM Campuses
April 2011 - Towson
University Earth Month Events - To celebrate,
the Office of Civic Engagement along with the Environmental Initiatives
Sub-Committee, TU Goes Green, and the University Bookstore have planned a
series of fun and exciting events aimed at saving our planet! For more
information on any of these events please e-mail Jillian Koller at jkolle1@students.towson.edu
April 5th - "Education
Opportunities in Sustainability at College Park" - Dr.
Bruce James, Director, Environmental Science and Policy Program will discuss
education opportunities in sustainability along with the status of the
sustainability minor and sustainability education as part of the weekly lecture
focusing on sustainability and the University of Maryland, College Park. The
lecture will take place from 5:00- 6:15pm at the School of Architecture,
Planning, and Preservation, in the Auditorium, Room 0204, on the UMCP campus. This Lecture is one in a series
offered during the Spring Semester as part of ARCH 289i, Smart Growth Goes to
School. The series is co-sponsored by the Campus Office of Sustainability. The
event is free and open to all. For more information, contact Christine Cestello
Hinojosa at 301-405-6286, or at hinojosa@umd.edu.
April 8th - Dr. Kurt Stephenson, Virginia
Tech? Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics??- "Stormwater Economics
in Urban Settings: Benefits, Costs, and Uncertainties." This seminar,
sponsored by the Center for Urban Environmental Research and Education, will be
held on Friday at 2:00pm in the Technology Research Center, Room 206, on the
University of Maryland, Baltimore County campus, and is free and open to the
public. Registration is not required. Visitor parking passes for the TRC lot
may be purchased for $4.00 in the CUERE office in TRC 102/105 on the UMBC
campus shortly before seminar. ?
April 10th (10pm) and April 11th (2am)?-
University of Maryland Center for Environmental
Science's new Maryland Sea Grant Film Examines "Who Killed
Crassostrea virginica? The Fall and Rise of Chesapeake Bay Oysters." This fresh perspective examines conflicting claims about
the calamities that struck down some of the world's richest oyster grounds.
Three particular groups come to the forefront -- the watermen who fish the
oysters, oyster farmers who grow them and scientists who study them. Recent
research and long-forgotten historical archives shed light on and re-evaluate
the groups' roles. This film is a part
of the 2011 Chesapeake Bay
Week series of television programs.
University of Baltimore
Environmental Sciences Summer Academy - August 2011 - The 2011
University of Baltimore Environmental Sciences Summer Academy is for high
school students, and is led by Stanley Kemp and Wolf Pecher, both lecturers in
the University's Division of Liberal Studies and experienced environmentalists.
The program consists of two off-campus field trips, laboratory work and a
number of related classroom activities. As many as 14 students will be selected
to participate. Among the opportunities presented to them will be field studies
of two of Maryland's key ecosystems: the urban watershed known as the Jones
Falls, and the singularly inspiring Chesapeake Bay-the nation's largest estuary
and home to more than 300 species of fish, crab and shellfish. Applications are
now being accepted.
Candlewick
Press Earns Environmental Stewardship Award (Salisbury University Press
Release, 3/31/11)
Get a
Charge Out of New UMD Electric Car Charging Stations (UM Newsdesk;
University of Maryland, College Park; 3/31/11)
University of
Maryland Named One of 20 Bike-Friendly Campuses (By Arlette Philogene; UM Newsdesk; University
of Maryland, College Park; 3/30/11)
Women
of the Storm urge Congress to devote BP penalties to coastal restoration
(By Jonathan Tilove, NOLA.com, 3/29/11)
[Article quotes Dr. Donald F. Boesch, President of the University of Maryland
Center for Environmental Science and a member of President Obama's Gulf Oil
Spill Commission]
State of Maryland News
April 7th - Creating
8-80 Cities: Walking, Cycling & Public Places for All, with Gil Peñalosa,
executive director of 8-80 Cities, from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Bain Center, in
Columbia, MD. Peñalosa is passionate about vibrant and healthy communities. As
the commissioner of Parks, Sport and Recreation for the City of Bogotá,
Colombia, Peñalosa's team initiated the "new Ciclovia" - car-free Sundays -
today an internationally-recognized program that sees more than 1.3 million
people walk, run, skate and bike along 75 miles of Bogotá's city roads. Registration is desired but not required
to attend this presentation. To register, or to find out more information,
please respond via e-mail to Event.RSVP@ColumbiaAssociation.com. The Bain Center
is located at 5470 Ruth Keeton Way in Columbia. Hosted by the Columbia Association, for more
information, contact Sheila L. Green at 410-715-3171. [PDF]
Gardening
with an edge: Raised beds help
beginners grow vegetables one square at a time (By Susan Reimer, The Baltimore Sun, 4/1/11)
Lawmakers
weigh incentives for trash-burning energy plants: Environmentalists oppose legislation (By Timothy B. Wheeler, The Baltimore Sun,
4/1/11)
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USM Environmental Sustainability and Climate Change Initiative
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Baltimore's
first electric-vehicle charging stations debut: Another 65 state-funded plug-in stations due by June (By Timothy B. Wheeler, The Baltimore Sun,
3/31/11)
Report:
Maryland falling short on energy-saving goals: PIRG says mismanagement by regulators led to slow progress (By Liz F. Kay, The Baltimore Sun, 3/30/11)
O'Malley
offers further compromise on wind (By Julie Bykowicz, The Baltimore Sun -
Maryland Politics, 3/30/11)
Going
less green on lawns to help the Bay (By Tim Wheeler, The Baltimore Sun - B'More Green Blog, 3/28/11)
National and International News
The
Truth, Still Inconvenient (By Paul Krugman, The New York Times - Opinion,
4/3/11)
Hexavalent
Chromium: Tap Water Industry Knew About Brockovich Chemical For Years, Reports
EWG (By Joanna Zelman, The Huffington Post - Green Blog, 4/4/11)
Oil
Rises to 30-Month High on Libya Conflict; OPEC Output Slides (By Ann Koh
and James Paton, Bloomberg News, 4/1/11)
Preparing
for a Warmer Planet (Reported by Ira Flatow, NPR - Science Friday, 4/1/11)
Saudi
Arabia to Target Solar Power in $100 Billion Energy Plan (By Anthony
DiPaola, Bloomberg News, 3/31/11)
Obama's
latest vision on energy security: Obama's grab-bag
approach, forced by political reality, contains a bit of everything - oil
drilling, nuclear, renewables, even coal. But the unifying goal is still less
US dependence on foreign oil. (By The Monitor's Editorial Board, The Christian Science Monitor - The
Monitor's View, 3/31/11)
President
Obama calls for one-third cut to oil imports (By Steven Mufson, The Washington
Post - Business, 3/30/11)
Obama
Lays Out Plan to Cut Reliance on Fuel Imports (By John M. Broder, The New
York Times, 3/30/11)
Less
than 50 Years of Oil Left, HSBC Warns (By John Collins Rudolf, The New York
Times - Green Blog, 3/30/11)
An
Energy Plan Derailed by Events Is Being Retooled (By John Broder, The New
York Times - Energy and Environment, 3/30/11)
FACTBOX-Energy
issues facing the White House (Reported by Ayesha Rascoe, Roberta Rampton and
Timothy Gardner; edited by Sofina Mirza-Reid, Reuters UK, 3/30/11)
Japan
Nuclear Crisis: Setbacks Mount In Leaking Plant (By Mari Yamaguchi, The Huffington Post - World
Blog, 3/30/11)
Cleaner
Cars, Less Foreign Oil: A Path to Economic Prosperity and Oil
Security (By John Podesta, Carl Pope, Gene Karpinski; Center for American Progress - Energy and Environment, 3/30/11)
Sea
Turtle Deaths Anger Mississippi Residents (By Rocky Kistner, NRDC as
reported by The Huffington Post - Green Blog, 3/29/11)
You
Saw the Movie; Now Here's the Book (By Justin Gillis, The New York Times -
Green Blog, 3/29/11)
BP
Employee Loses Laptop Containing 13,000 Oil Spill Claimants' Personal Data
(The Associated Press as reported by The Huffington Post - Green Blog, 3/29/11)
BP
Managers May Face Manslaughter Charges Following Gulf Oil Spill: Bloomberg
Report (By Tom Bergin and Dominic Lau, Reuters London,
3/29/11)
Visions of an
Interconnected Europe: Plans for more
efficient transport would connect Europe's road, rail, air and water networks,
cut dependence on oil imports and reduce greenhouse gas emissions (The European Commission - Transport and
Travel, 3/28/11)
Obama
tells government to prepare for climate change, whether Congress likes it or
not (By Jess Zimmerman, Grist.org - Politics Blog, 3/28/11)
Pedaling
away from the health care crisis (By Elly Blue, Grist.org - Biking Blog,
3/28/11)
Record
gas prices blamed on peak oil: Manitoba
pump price has never been higher in March (By Mychaylo Prystupa,
CBC News [Canada], 3/28/11)
Japan's
Fukushima: incorrect readings, radioactive water found in tunnels: A string of conflicting reports, alleged safety mishaps, and
miscalculated radiation readings have added to confusion and unease in Japan
surrounding the nuclear situation. (By Gavin Blair, The Christian Science Monitor, 3/28/11)
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