Losing the Earth: The Decade We Almost Stopped Climate Change

From the NYTimes:

“The first suggestion to Rafe Pomerance that humankind was destroying the conditions necessary for its own survival came on Page 66 of the government publication EPA-600/7-78-019. It was a technical report about coal, bound in a coal-black cover with beige lettering — one of many such reports that lay in uneven piles around Pomerance’s windowless office on the first floor of the Capitol Hill townhouse that, in the late 1970s, served as the Washington headquarters of Friends of the Earth. In the final paragraph of a chapter on environmental regulation, the coal report’s authors noted that the continued use of fossil fuels might, within two or three decades, bring about “significant and damaging” changes to the global atmosphere.”

Pomerance had one big question about the coal report. If the burning of coal, oil and natural gas could invite global catastrophe, why had nobody told him about it? If anyone in Washington — if anyone in the United States — should have been aware of such a danger, it was Pomerance.”

 

Read MoreLosing the Earth: The Decade We Almost Stopped Climate Change
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Black Land Matters

Modern Farmer:

By  

“…In 1920, before the Great Migration drew some six million African Americans to cities such as Chicago and New York, 14 percent of the farm owners in this country were black, at a time when only 10 percent of the population was. Collectively, those one million individuals owned 15 million acres of land. Over the ensuing decades, however, these farmers left agriculture at a rate three times faster than their Caucasian counterparts, and by 1992, the percentage of U.S. farms owned by African Americans had dwindled to less than one percent…”

“Soul Fire Farm has operated on a sliding-scale CSA model that encourages affluent customers to subsidize boxes of organically grown produce and pastured chickens for less fortunate capital-region residents. The initial goal, as Penniman defines it: “We wanted, straight up, to deliver fresh, high-quality food to our people at prices they could afford.”

“…Turner considers the proliferation of black-run urban farms a positive trend, he notes that these growers rarely hold the deed to the land they work. “I support the efforts to turn vacant lots into community gardens,” he explains, “but that’s not going to create an inheritance for generations to come. The way to achieve parity in this country is by owning a piece of the rock.”

“…Fannie Lou Hamer. A sharecropper evicted for registering to vote in 1962, Hamer raised enough capital to gradually establish the 680-acre Freedom Farm Cooperative in Sunflower County, Mississippi, a refuge of sorts for evicted tenant farmers. By owning the land, and being her own boss, Hamer became impervious to the scare tactics of white employers: “She and others like her were able to take a role in the front lines of voter registration drives, were the first to sign petitions, and didn’t hesitate to speak up at NAACP meetings.”

“Penniman launched “Uprooting Racism in the Food System,” a four-day workshop she describes as “training to de-program white people in positions of power or influence—someone who might hold public office or direct a nonprofit.”…The workshop gets them to stop thinking of racism simply as interpersonal meanness, like using the N-word, and to recognize the ways it’s been baked into our structures.”

 

 

Read MoreBlack Land Matters
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Update:More Accurate English Translation of SingTao on Rivington House “Care Vigil”

From SingTao’s Keenan Chen:

Working on a better translation!! But for now:

“Worrying Hua’s further “aristocraticization”

August 08, 2018, 22:24 New York

Worrying Hua’s further “aristocraticization”

 

Many residents used chalk to write a variety of demonstration slogans on the pavement.

Our reporter Chen Yutai reports from New York

Worried about the further “aristocratization” of Manhattan’s Hua Tuo, nearly 100 community members came to the Rivington House in Roosevelt Park on the afternoon of the 8th to hold a “Vigil” demonstration, asking the city government and real estate developers to ” Recovering the life, let this building that has been providing education or medical services to the community for more than 100 years, and continue to exercise it as the “mission” of public facilities.

On the evening of Wednesday, residents of various districts hanged a full ribbon at the “Levinton House” and nearby railings, or wrote various slogans in chalk on the pavement, demanding the administration of Bai Sihao and real estate development. The business retains this building.

Has provided treatment services for AIDS patients

Among them, Kathleen Webster is the initiator of this “vigil” demonstration and the head of the community organization Neighbors to Save Rivington House. She said that she had had a dialogue with developers earlier this year and is expected to continue the dialogue in the next few months. Therefore, she hopes to exert pressure on the city government and developers as much as possible. She said: “The Vanke company is the world’s largest real estate developer. They don’t need this land at all. But there are so many elderly and low-income people in our community. I need the “Levinton House” transformation. Become an old man’s building.”
The 6-storey, 145,000-square-foot “Levinton House” was completed in the late 19th century. It was originally the site of the PS 20 public school, but it was converted into an AIDS treatment center around 1990. AIDS patients provide treatment and services.
Developers acquire and renovate the luxury building
Zheng Zheng, who participated in the demonstration on the same day, said that he grew up near the “Levinton House” and recalled that many patients in wheelchairs were seen passing by every day and were pushed down to the front of the door to enjoy the cold. He said: “Those patients have always been well taken care of here.”
However, as the number of hospital admissions dropped significantly, many beds were vacant, causing the health centre to be closed in 2014. The community originally hoped that the building could be converted into a home for the elderly, but it was later discovered that the city government had “sneakly” removed the contractual terms that restricted the use of the building only as a non-profit-making health service facility, enabling Vanke Enterprises. Vanke (USA) Holdings, together with New York local developers Slate Property Group and Adam America Real Estate, acquired the building and plans to transform the property into a luxury building with 100 apartments.
Zheng Zheng hopes that the historic “Levinton House” will continue to maintain its role in providing public services. He said: “This building has always provided extremely important care services to the community, and we continue to it.”

 

 

 

Translation for Singtao Daily News

 

Concerned about the further “aristocracy” of Chinatown in Manhattan

 

Nearly 100 community members came to the Rivington House in Roosevelt Park in the afternoon of the 8th to hold a “vigil” demonstration, demanding that the city government and real estate developers “rescind the order” and let this 100 years building continue to provide education or medical care service for the community.

Late Wednesday evening, residents of many districts hung ribbons on the Rivington House and nearby railings, or chalked up various demonstration slogans on the pavement, demanding that Bill De Blasio government and property developers keep the building to help with treatment services for AIDS patients.

 

Among them, K Webster one of the initiator of the vigil and part of the community organization Neighbors to Save Rivington House. She said she had held talks with developers earlier this year and expected to continue. Therefore, she hopes to exert pressure on the city government and developers as far as possible. “Vanke is the world’s largest real estate developer and they don’t need it at all,” she said. But there are so many elderly people and low-income people in our community. There is an urgent need for Rivington House to be transformed into an elderly building (for those in need of care as seniors).

The 6-storey, 145,000-square-foot Rivington  House, originally the site of the public school PS 20, was completed in the late 19th century, but was converted into an AIDS sanatorium around 1990 to provide treatment and services to thousands of AIDS patients.

 

Developers buy and transform luxury buildings

 

Zheng Hao-wei, who participated in the demonstration, said he grew up near the Rivington House and recalled seeing many patients in wheelchairs and being pushed to the door for a cool ride every day when he passed class. “Those patients have been well taken care of here,” he said.

But with the number of hospitalized sanatoriums declining dramatically, many beds were vacant, leading to the closure of the sanatoriums in 2014. Community members had hoped the building would be converted into a nursing home, but it was later discovered that the city government had quietly lifted the terms of the contract, which had limited the building to non-profit-making health services, and that Vanke (USA) Holdings had contracted with Slate Property Group, a local developer in New York, and Adam America Real Estate bought the building together and planned to transform it into a luxury building with 100 apartments.

Zheng hoped that the historic Rivington House would continue its role in providing public services. “The building has been providing vital care to the community and we continue to provide it,” he said.

 

 

 

Read MoreUpdate:More Accurate English Translation of SingTao on Rivington House “Care Vigil”
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NYTimes: Bike Polo in Sara Roosevelt Park

 

Andrew Gombert for The New York Times

NYTimes:

Their Kingdom for a Bike: It’s Polo on Two Wheels

“They call it “the pit.” On a shady asphalt lot between Chrystie and Forsyth Streets on the Lower East Side, a young man in glasses and a faded tank top walked around with a leaf blower, sending twigs, grit and debris into its far corners.”

Best quote:

“The players at the pit remain devoted to each other and to the sport, but also to just having a good time. “At the end of the day,” Ms. Flores said, “you rode your bike in circles all day with your friends and had fun. How many adults our age wouldn’t want to do that?”

Andrew Gombert for The New York Times

Read MoreNYTimes: Bike Polo in Sara Roosevelt Park
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Updated: From the Bowery Alliance of Neighbors: Gardens & Graveyards Walk

M’Finda Garden

 

When  Sunday, September 23, 11:30am     FREE!         

Where    Meet at Merchant’s House Museum 29 East 4th (btwn Bowery & Lafayette)

RSVP Required:  merchantshouse.org/calendar/reservations       Space limited!

 

Dear Friends and Neighbors,

We cordially invite you to join us for a unique experience.    

RSVP Required  (See below)

Gardens & Graveyards Walk

A reflective guided stroll through idyllic, often hidden green spaces

of Little Italy, Noho, Bowery & the Lower East Side 

Tour will visit graveyards and gardens, many not often open to the public, as well

as the sites of the long-vanished Vauxhall Gardens and the Second African Burial Ground.

M’Finda Garden    

                                                                                                                                                               

Participants/Sponsors

Bowery Alliance of Neighbors

Elizabeth Street Garden

Liz Christy Garden

Merchant’s House Museum

M’Finda Kalunga Garden

New York City Marble Cemetery

New York Marble Cemetery

St Patrick’s Old Cathedral

 

M’Finda Garden 

Read MoreUpdated: From the Bowery Alliance of Neighbors: Gardens & Graveyards Walk
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Rally Against Landlords’ Assault on Tenants Rights – Tomorrow 

From TenantsPAC

Wednesday, August 29, 2018

12:00 Noon

Steps of City Hall

Lower Manhattan

The Rent Stabilization Association is suing Michael McKee, Tenants PAC, Met Council on Housing, and the Real Rent Reform Campaign.

“Come tell the landlords that we will not be silenced, censored or intimidated by their bullying tactics!”

 They will be joined by City Council Speaker Corey Johnson, former Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito, and other city & state officials.

“Wear a hat – this is an outdoor event, and the weather forecast is for hot. Bring water. We plan to make this a short rally so folks can get out of the sun.”

 

For more information:

(212) 577-7001

action@tenantspac.org

 

 

 

Read MoreRally Against Landlords’ Assault on Tenants Rights – Tomorrow 
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United Nations: Climate Change and Health

We could probably do a bit more?

Key facts

  • Climate change affects the social and environmental determinants of health – clean air, safe drinking water, sufficient food and secure shelter.
  • Between 2030 and 2050, climate change is expected to cause approximately 250 000 additional deaths per year, from malnutrition, malaria, diarrhoea and heat stress.
  • The direct damage costs to health (i.e. excluding costs in health-determining sectors such as agriculture and water and sanitation), is estimated to be between USD 2-4 billion/year by 2030.
  • Areas with weak health infrastructure – mostly in developing countries – will be the least able to cope without assistance to prepare and respond.
  • Reducing emissions of greenhouse gases through better transport, food and energy-use choices can result in improved health, particularly through reduced air pollution.

Climate change

Over the last 50 years, human activities – particularly the burning of fossil fuels – have released sufficient quantities of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases to trap additional heat in the lower atmosphere and affect the global climate.

In the last 130 years, the world has warmed by approximately 0.85oC. Each of the last 3 decades has been successively warmer than any preceding decade since 1850(1).

Sea levels are rising, glaciers are melting and precipitation patterns are changing. Extreme weather events are becoming more intense and frequent.

What is the impact of climate change on health?

Although global warming may bring some localized benefits, such as fewer winter deaths in temperate climates and increased food production in certain areas, the overall health effects of a changing climate are likely to be overwhelmingly negative. Climate change affects social and environmental determinants of health – clean air, safe drinking water, sufficient food and secure shelter.

Extreme heat

Extreme high air temperatures contribute directly to deaths from cardiovascular and respiratory disease, particularly among elderly people. In the heat wave of summer 2003 in Europe for example, more than 70 000 excess deaths were recorded(2).

High temperatures also raise the levels of ozone and other pollutants in the air that exacerbate cardiovascular and respiratory disease.

Pollen and other aeroallergen levels are also higher in extreme heat. These can trigger asthma, which affects around 300 million people. Ongoing temperature increases are expected to increase this burden.

Natural disasters and variable rainfall patterns

Globally, the number of reported weather-related natural disasters has more than tripled since the 1960s. Every year, these disasters result in over 60 000 deaths, mainly in developing countries.

Rising sea levels and increasingly extreme weather events will destroy homes, medical facilities and other essential services. More than half of the world’s population lives within 60 km of the sea. People may be forced to move, which in turn heightens the risk of a range of health effects, from mental disorders to communicable diseases.

Increasingly variable rainfall patterns are likely to affect the supply of fresh water. A lack of safe water can compromise hygiene and increase the risk of diarrhoeal disease, which kills over 500 000 children aged under 5 years, every year. In extreme cases, water scarcity leads to drought and famine. By the late 21st century, climate change is likely to increase the frequency and intensity of drought at regional and global scale(1).

Floods are also increasing in frequency and intensity, and the frequency and intensity of extreme precipitation is expected to continue to increase throughout the current century(1). Floods contaminate freshwater supplies, heighten the risk of water-borne diseases, and create breeding grounds for disease-carrying insects such as mosquitoes. They also cause drownings and physical injuries, damage homes and disrupt the supply of medical and health services.

Rising temperatures and variable precipitation are likely to decrease the production of staple foods in many of the poorest regions. This will increase the prevalence of malnutrition and undernutrition, which currently cause 3.1 million deaths every year.

Patterns of infection

Climatic conditions strongly affect water-borne diseases and diseases transmitted through insects, snails or other cold blooded animals.

Changes in climate are likely to lengthen the transmission seasons of important vector-borne diseases and to alter their geographic range. For example, climate change is projected to widen significantly the area of China where the snail-borne disease schistosomiasis occurs(3).

Malaria is strongly influenced by climate. Transmitted by Anopheles mosquitoes, malaria kills over 400 000 people every year – mainly African children under 5 years old. The Aedesmosquito vector of dengue is also highly sensitive to climate conditions, and studies suggest that climate change is likely to continue to increase exposure to dengue.

Measuring the health effects

Measuring the health effects from climate change can only be very approximate. Nevertheless, a WHO assessment, taking into account only a subset of the possible health impacts, and assuming continued economic growth and health progress, concluded that climate change is expected to cause approximately 250 000 additional deaths per year between 2030 and 2050; 38 000 due to heat exposure in elderly people, 48 000 due to diarrhoea, 60 000 due to malaria, and 95 000 due to childhood undernutrition.

Who is at risk?

All populations will be affected by climate change, but some are more vulnerable than others. People living in small island developing states and other coastal regions, megacities, and mountainous and polar regions are particularly vulnerable.

Children – in particular, children living in poor countries – are among the most vulnerable to the resulting health risks and will be exposed longer to the health consequences. The health effects are also expected to be more severe for elderly people and people with infirmities or pre-existing medical conditions.

Areas with weak health infrastructure – mostly in developing countries – will be the least able to cope without assistance to prepare and respond.

WHO response

Many policies and individual choices have the potential to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and produce major health co-benefits. For example, cleaner energy systems, and promoting the safe use of public transportation and active movement – such as cycling or walking as alternatives to using private vehicles – could reduce carbon emissions, and cut the burden of household air pollution, which causes some 4.3 million deaths per year, and ambient air pollution, which causes about 3 million deaths every year.

In 2015, the WHO Executive Board endorsed a new work plan on climate change and health. This includes:

  • Partnerships: to coordinate with partner agencies within the UN system, and ensure that health is properly represented in the climate change agenda.
  • Awareness raising: to provide and disseminate information on the threats that climate change presents to human health, and opportunities to promote health while cutting carbon emissions.
  • Science and evidence: to coordinate reviews of the scientific evidence on the links between climate change and health, and develop a global research agenda.
  • Support for implementation of the public health response to climate change: to assist countries to build capacity to reduce health vulnerability to climate change, and promote health while reducing carbon emissions.
Read MoreUnited Nations: Climate Change and Health
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Community Policing in Sector B (SDR Park & Blocks in Either East/West)

 

Appreciations to Captain Yao and our local community officers PO Bozzo & PO Urena and for Community Policing.

All present reinforced the idea of forging an honest and real partnership between the community and police to make our neighborhoods safer for everyone.

The goal seemed to be to create a place where no one gets targeted by racism, sexism, their age, their physical or mental abilities or status, not criminalized for poverty, etc. and no one is permitted to engage in destructive or threatening behavior towards anyone else nor permitted to persistently erode the quality of life for others.

A short introduction by Captain Yao on the concept of Community Policing:

Then officers Erena and Bozzo led the meeting:

PO Urena Enrique.Urena@nypd.org (929) 334-9607

PO Bozzo Joseph.Bozzo@nypd.org (917) 455-0917

Quarterly meetings with the neighborhood like this one are planned (there are also monthly Community Council meetings at the 5th precinct – typically the last Wednesday of each month at 7 PM 5th precinct – 19 Elizabeth Street near Canal Street).

Introductions by everyone with a short description of who we are why we came.

An array of issues were aired. Here are the issues we heard:

Speeding and idling cars.

Speeding bikes on the pathway without regard for pedestrians, wheelchairs, children, elders, etc especially on the Chrystie Street two-way bike lane.

Complaints (not without compassion) re: street homeless in need of mental health services [non-existant?]. Some present a danger of violence, some create an atmosphere of intimidation especially to those who are vulnerable due to size, strength, etc.

Many complaints about loud, drunk parties in various locations in Zone B (officers have those exact locations). Some due to bars letting out, some not.

Many complaints about drug dealing in various locations in Zone B. (officers have those exact locations).

 

Solutions proposed:

 

Police will come back having solved or addressed the issues raised.

Police will make policing entities in areas they don’t have jurisdiction aware of the difficulties (such as subway).

Officers will rotate meeting sites from northern section to middle section to  Southern section.

 

Call 911 if it is an emergency – Don’t be afraid to call this number!

Call Officers Bozzo and Urena.

Call 311 if it is more of a nuisance issue – no life in immediate danger. The City responds to the issue that gets the most 311 calls. You can also do this on-line https://www1.nyc.gov/311/ or on Twitter @311

You will get a complaint #. Send the 311 complaint # to the Community Board 3 office – the office will follow-up.

LED lighting in troubled areas

Open 24/7 bathrooms in SDR Park – hire security to monitor them.

Asked by an attendee for the PO’s to go out and meet more of the small businesses.

Fund mental health options for those who are street homeless.

Acknowledge and support the homeless who are merely trying to survive and often are helping out in the park or elsewhere.

There is a block association forming on Stanton Street..

Map of “Sector B

Read MoreCommunity Policing in Sector B (SDR Park & Blocks in Either East/West)
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