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Earth Day

4/29/2016

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Picture
Earth Day is officially on April 22, but public celebrations take place on the closest Saturday and Sunday. This year there was very little fanfare about Earth Day. 


     History of Earth Day
Gaylord Nelson, a Wisconsin senator, after seeing the Santa Barbara oil spill in 1969, had the idea for a national Teach-In on the environment. Seeing the very effective college campus activism against Vietnam, he wanted to involve college activists as much as possible, and thought that week was the best one for them. On April 22, 1970, the first Earth Day took place in the United States, and the country came out in force. Out of this movement was born the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (E.P.A.) that same year, a much respected organisation in North America. Later came the Clean Air act (’70), Clean Water act (’72), and Endangered Species act (’73). In 1990, Earth Day went global and 141 countries participated. The elder Bush declared it a national holiday, but it is not a Federal Holiday, it is in the same category as Halloween or Mother’s Day. By 2001, 184 countries participated.


     Political Relevancy
Of course, the danger with having one Earth Day per year is that some people will attribute as much importance to it as they do to Halloween, and after the kids do the face painting in the park the whole family drives back home to barbecue burgers from beef raised in the former Amazon, eat them on styrofoam plates, even though they are home, and drink their bottled water! People groan when they hear 'every day is earth day'.
Overlapping dangers are that it becomes set in stone, loses relevancy, is no longer publicly controlled, and becomes an entity in itself, like a corporation. Witness how Earth Day is trademarked in Canada, as is the logo. Trademarking Earth Day is like trademarking the Happy Birthday song, or the knowledge of  First Nations anywhere in the world -- and they’ve all taken place. It is very interesting to see the evolution of Earth Day in the U.S. -- there were originally 2 main organizing groups with different values, tactics, and sponsors. 
    
Perhaps one important point to remember on Earth Day is that 130 species become extinct per DAY, that’s 1,000 times faster than natural extinction rates -- 70% of plants on earth are threatened with extinction. 

The theme recently is on encouraging us to plant trees. This is starting to follow the same pattern as with pollution and recycling, where the onus was put on the individual and the household: mandating, legislating, and policing individual and household recycling, while leaving huge gaps and loopholes where the bulk of the problem really sits - with construction, industry, and corporations. We wouldn't all need to go out and plant trees, if governments did the job we pay them for of protecting the environment, and corporations didn't clear cut, strip mine, and frack.

Check out:

https://earthday.ca/     and             http://www.earthday.org/earth-day/

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                     ECO-audit.ca                   Your green blueprint

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Workplace Bullying

4/12/2016

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Workplace harassment litigation is on the rise in Canada in the last few years: experts estimate 40% of Canadians are bullied at work. Together with victims of gender and 'race' (see our Glossary) discrimination, as well as of discrimination in other prohibited areas, victims of bullying are being left without other avenues besides the courts. Being unionized does not necessarily help. Some Canadian institutions, including crown corporations, federal public security organizations, and big-box stores, have recently been rocked by accusations of harassment, bullying, gender discrimination, or worse, sexual assault.

In British Columbia, workers would be hard pressed to take comfort in the 'new'  anti-bullying rules that came into effect in November of 2013. Lawyers themselves state Canadian legislation lacks teeth, and, as with sexual assault, targets are re-victimized whether they go to court or not. The pattern is that victims lose their jobs (or quit to save their health), but bullies don't, employers don't act, and victims have difficulty finding other employment, having been branded 'troublemakers'.

Tell your bullying story, and hear so many others in the room tell theirs, especially among women. This would indicate an epidemic.
According to a 2014 survey by the Workplace Bullying Institute in the U.S.:
  • 31% of workplace bullies are women
  • 68% of them target other women
  • female targets of female bullies lose their jobs 89% of the time
  • 72% of employers deny, rationalize or defend the abuse

Unlike schoolyard bullies, who target those deemed 'inferior', workplace bullies actually target those deemed 'superior'. Apparently, workplace bullies act out of insecurity, and target co-workers they feel threatened by (consciously or unconsciously), such as those with higher qualifications, more experience, or better social skills. In Canada, EQ, emotional intelligence, remains something only talked about, but not screened for in hiring.

         Check out this story covered by the CBC:

http://www.cbc.ca/news/business/workplace-bullying-a-major-concern-in-canada-says-woman-who-sued-wal-mart-1.2673109

   and the Workplace Bullying Institute for all kinds of information and help:

http://www.workplacebullying.org/    


                  ECO-audit.ca                   Your green blueprint

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CRUISES

4/4/2016

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Cruises are very popular on the West Coast. They are a relaxed way to enjoy the pristine coast, the fresh air, the wildlife. Are you aware, however, that cruise ships are heavily polluting and hardly regulated? Canadian regulations are practically non-existent, and more relaxed than the United States’.
It is left up to each company to upgrade what they want. Ships routinely dump oily bilge water, food waste, graywater, sludge, garbage, and, yes, toilet sewage too. Companies differ in their level of polluting and ships in each company differ as well. The best thing you can do is choose a ship that minimally pollutes.   

       Get a hold of these facts - how could cruise ships not pollute?
         • Your average cruise ship travelling in B.C. carries 3,000 passengers and crew!!
         • About 300 cruise ships travel between B.C. and Alaska per year
         • Per year that’s about one million passengers and about 12,000 crew
         • These ships’ emissions and discharges are virtually unmonitored, and their wastewater is virtually untreated
         • Now you do the math!
         • Besides the serious pollution of marine environments, there is also air pollution, and beach pollution when all the junk washes ahore -- don’t go swimming when you dock!
         • The incinerators and the high-sulphur fuel used discharge 3 times more carbon emissions than aircraft, trains, and passenger ferries
         • The contamination of marine environments with bacteria, contaminates shellfish -- don’t eat shellfish when you come home!

     Six years ago, Schwartzenegger put a definite end to cruise ship dumping in California waters. Why can’t Canada do the same? Why can’t we protect the Georgia Straight and the Inside Passage?

      Get all your facts before you book, to truly have a peaceful vacation. Check out these sources:

                 The Canadian organization Georgia Strait Alliance:      
                                 
http://georgiastrait.org/     

                 Oceana, http://www.oceana.ca/en       and

      Friends of the Earth with their excellent Cruise Ship Report Card, to help    you choose the best ship:
                  http://www.foe.org/cruise-report-card


                                        Happy Cruising!


                    ECO-audit.ca                   Your green blueprint

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