Archive for January, 2010

Recycling can be useful!

Sunday, January 31st, 2010

This video is simply brilliant.  While you may not find the use of bottles as a building material particularly useful in your neck of the woods, it is a great concept.  Imagine what a little design help could do to make this even more beautiful.  I especially love the light!

Recycle this!

Saturday, January 30th, 2010

I saw something similar to this on television. Surprising that we can recycle styrofoam, but who does? I wish we had programs for this kind of thing in Ohio.

Give me hopes…seven of them.

Saturday, January 30th, 2010

One of the problems in the world is the lack of some peoples to make a living. We all know that most of the goods imported from countries in Eastern Asia are made in sweat shops. People of all ages, children to adults work long hours in horrible conditions, so that we Westerners can have cheap t-shirts and running shoes. We like being able to buy inexpensive coffee, so we support a system where peoples along the equator harvest coffee beans for pennies a day. I could go on a soap box and talk all day about how the world is exploiting so many less developed countries while destroying much of our own economy and the environment along the way. If you are bracing yourself for the usual rant, hang on, as I am going to spare you. Instead, I wanted to talk about a company that is doing a lot to change this system for the better. It gives me hope that we can truly change things.  The company is called Seven Hopes United.  Their mission is clear:  help make the world better by supporting efforts to help impoverished peoples on all 7 continents by selling handmade goods of artisans who earn a living wage, all with the least impact on the environment.  Their website is very informative and tells more about their efforts, but here is a lead in:

Seven Hopes United aspires to enrich the lives of communities worldwide through providing a means to a living wage for thousands of artisans and their families, while moving forward to build an alternative market based on the dignity and worth of all people. Seven Hopes United specializes in marketing fairly-traded handmade gifts, jewelry, home decor and personal accessories from producers around the globe. Seven Hopes United supports a trading partnership aimed at obtaining sustainable development for excluded and disadvantaged producers by operating according to fair trade criteria, and investing a portion of our proceeds back into their communities.

At Seven Hopes United, we believe that above all else, our business should be based on respect:

  • Respectful of ourselves and our own personal commitment to integrity.
  • Respectful of basic human rights and the dignity and worth of all people.
  • Respectful to our environment by reducing our carbon footprint, and promoting a sustainable lifestyle.
  • Respectful of our commitment to invest in disadvantaged communities, and provide a living wage to our employees and producers.

I am a big believer in fair trade as a way to help promote world peace. I think more can be done to stabilize the planet’s governments and economies by eradicating poverty and disease than can ever be done with guns and ammo. If no one had to worry about food, shelter, or medicines, why would there be radical uprisings? I also believe that we should start now to show countries that are following us into the modern global market place that there is away to support themselves without destroying the planet or its peoples. So how can you help? Think clearly about the products that you buy and support Fair Trade products. Companies like Seven Hopes United have done all the hard work.  By buying from their site you can be assured that you are doing the right thing and you can buy some unique gifts!  For example…

You can buy hand carved wooden figures from Africa.  These help support local artisans who hand carve these goods and make a decent living doing it.  The wood they use is harvested in a sustainable manner and the money raised helps support conservation efforts, either directly or by giving locals another means to make a living other than by poaching gorillas or destroying the natural habitats of endangered animals.

Many of their products are made using common recycled goods.  These programs encourage the collection of waste products and trash and help keep their environment litter free.  These goods come from around the globe from places like Nepal and Kenya, and are made from common goods like plastic wrappers and pop cans that otherwise would be tossed out.

 I encourage you to check out the Seven Hopes United website to see more of the cool goods that can be purchased to help make the world a better place.  You can even start a gift registry, so your next wedding can do wonders to help the world (how many blenders do you really want anyway?) You can find things like carvings, baskets, jewelry…like these cool bracelets.  They’re made from flip flops.  Ever wonder what happens when you leave a flip flop on the beach?  Many of them float back up on other beaches around the world.  In Kenya, a unique combination of currents drives thousands of flip flops from around the world onto the beach.  What a better way to use them, than by making attractive jewelry out of them?  Those folks who collect this “garbage” are paid a living wage and the beach benefits from their efforts.  I LOVE this idea. The next time you are giving a gift, think about giving a gift of hope along with something physical.

Live simply… Try Simple Mom!

Friday, January 29th, 2010

Whether you are a blog follower or not, you should at least stop by this site. It is called Simple Mom and its tag line is “Live simply, stay sane. Life hacks for home managers.”  Now I am not a parent, but I was turned on to this blog by my friend and fellow blogger Prasti over at Here to There.  Not a big surprise, because Prasti and her husband are raising their children to be different.  They are striving to teach their kids better values than consumerism-things like stewardship and living better by living more simply.  I love seeing some of the ways that they teach their children-teaching them the letters through series of craft projects and such.  Since i have no plans to have children of my own, I love to live vicariously through others.  Knowing that the real healing of the earth will be done by the next generation, I am always pleased to see others trying to pass along the right ideas to their kids.  Enter Simple Mom and the blog post I enjoyed reading called 9 Ways to Encourage your Kids to live Simply.  it is a great article with some simple, yet practical tips for raising your children in a manner that focuses on things other than consuming goods.  There are some great tips for everyone here, even if you don’t have kids of your own.  I especially like the idea of encouraging the use of the right words and keeping down on clutter so that you can appreciate what you do have.  Give it a read, it is worth your time!

IS YOUR EMPLOYER MAKING YOU SICK?

Friday, January 29th, 2010

One of the key factors in recent labor contract negotiations with 650 supermarket janitors who work for the grocery store chains Save Mart and Safeway in Northern California is green cleaning standards including safer cleaning products.

From Supermarket News:
“The Service Employees International Union (SEIU) Local 1877, which is negotiating with Save Mart Supermarkets and four service contractors employed by Safeway, cites an internal survey showing that conventional cleaning products used by the supermarket janitors have caused them to suffer from a variety of ailments, including skin irritations, respiratory difficulties and possible long-term health problems. The union has proposed that employers commit to the use of “environmentally friendly chemicals” certified by non-profit group Green Seal. Last week, about 50 janitors staged demonstrations outside of two Safeway stores here, calling on Safeway’s janitorial contractors to implement green cleaning standards.”

Although the store chains have had no past medical claims from the janitors directly linked to the use of harsh chemical cleaning products, the janitors are using their health as a bargaining tool. They marched in front of stores carrying signs reading “no green cleaning, no contract”. No doubt the chains feel this is just a gimmick to build customer sympathy, but the janitors seem very serious.

How green is your restaurant?

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

I was looking through the EcoWatch Journal the other day-a great publication, by the way, and highly recommended.  I was reading a great article about Crocker park and how it does not recycle.  In case you do not know, Crocker Park was a combination live, work, shop community built in Westlake, Ohio.  The idea was to take the concept of a “lifestyle center” which is the name for an outdoor mall, usually constructed to look like a city, and add to it.  They added office space and residential units.  This essentially made Crocker Park a miniature town.  I love the development.  It is constructed like many developments in the Seattle Metro area.  Being more than just shopping, the residents and office dwellers have restaurants, art events, town square activities and there are places to sit and just watch the world go by.  That is why I was so disappointed to hear that this one of a kind development did not offer recycling to its residents or its commercial tenants.  It is bad enough for retail and offices, but when you throw busy, popular restaurants like the Cheesecake Factory into the mix, and you have a lot of materials that are going into the landfill.

There are heroes to celebrate.  Many of the employees of places like Trader Joe’s actually collect their own recycling and take it home or to drop off stations on their own time.  This is the kind of dedication that we need to make real change in the region.  For the management team at Crocker Park, though, it is more of business as usual.  It truly is a shame, too, because a recycling program could actually save them money.  It cost less in garbage fees to have someone take all of the glass, plastic, and paper out of the mix.  Charities actually make money on paper waste, and some churches have included can and bottle collection in their fundraising programs.  Why then, would a company whose job it is to make money bypass the obvious and pay more to have their trash hauled away.  It is plainly laziness and shortsightedness at its best.  If you think of all the recyclable waste generated by restaurants and bars in a major metropolitan area, the need for commercial recycling is more important than a residential one.  Let’s face it, vodka doesn’t come in a biodegradable bag and McDonald’s uses tons of paper goods.

On the other end of the spectrum, comes The Greenhouse Tavern.  Now if you are the type that like to read this blog, then you already know about The Greenhouse Tavern.  You know about the design features, like rescued reused barn boards and the poured concrete bar with glass from their own bottles.  You know about their efforts to celebrate local ingredients and use fresh local foods.  You must know about how Chef Jonathan Sawyer is creating delicious dishes and promoting fine cooking in the region.  You probably know about  the plans to add a greenhouse to the roof to be the only restaurant in the region who grows their own herbs and maybe the first at all inside a major city.  What should know that they are the first Certified Green Restaurant in Ohio.  But what you may not know are some of the things that they do to get that designation.  The highlight for me is the attention paid to waste.  In order to recycle in that little slice of restaurant heaven (E 4th), they had to convince someone to give up their valuable parking spot to accommodate a dumpster.  Then to keep from adding to the waste stream outside their doors, they looked at to go containers and doggy bags.  From an email that I received:

At The Greenhouse Tavern we take our green restaurant certification very seriously.  We use a sugar cane photodegradable to go box.  It is compostable and can be tossed in your garden.  We do not offer to go silverware or napkins.  We recycle and reuse all of our glass.

Now, The Greenhouse Tavern sits in Cleveland, in a downtown location, in a city that doesn’t offer full curbside recycling.  Still, these guys show such a commitment, that it puts the restaurants of Crocker Park to shame.  If any one of the major tenants at Crocker demanded recycling within the project, the management would cave and offer it.  Still, no one even tries.  So how green is the restaurant that you like to go to?  Have you asked?  I say skip the trip out to the burbs and keep you money flowing to those businesses who are doing the right thing…

My new favorite T-shirt at C.L.E. Clothing Company

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

During the holidays, I wrote several posts highlighting local companies.  One of my favorites is the C.L.E. Clothing Company.  I love their fun and relaxed designs, and their insistence on highlighting the pride that all of us who live in Cleveland should feel about our beautiful city.  I wanted to interview them, but they were so busy this past holiday season that they even opened a shop at Strongsville Mall.  Now that the bunting is down and most people are through with shopping and decorations, I had the chance to interview the folks at C.L.E.  President Obama spoke last night about the small business people who take risks that are the backbone of our economy.  Here is one small business that is doing a great job.

What made you decide to start this business?

Well, people are always coming up with ideas, and people are always saying “hey that could be a t-shirt” well….we are also people and also have ideas for t-shirts, we just put our foot down and some cash down  and started a t-shirt company. It started out as a creative outlet from our day jobs that was also fun to do, then it kind of exploded into a success….which is also very fun!

Why Cleveland themed merchandise?

Clevelanders have great civic pride, and we see the glimmer of what Cleveland could be as a City. We see the restoration and updates of neighborhoods and downtown areas as well as the attention we’re getting nationally for that effort as well as the foodie movement here. We wanted to be a part of the positive movement going on, just using t-shirts as our vehicle. The T-Shirt is Pop-Culture’s greatest vehicle for marketing….as our slogan says…we’re “Spreading Cleveland Pride….One T-Shirt at a Time” and that’s what we’re trying to do.

Has the community been supportive?

The response from the community has been immensely supportive. We just celebrated our 1 Year anniversary over the Holidays, and it seems like every event or local boutique we go to we sell out. Our greatest enjoyment is having a connection with someone through our t-shirts, that and its fun to watch people come to our table at events and point to the shirts and say…” I have that one, and that one, and that one, and that one….Oooh! I want that one.” That just hits us right here (pointing to the heart) it’s so cool to have that kind of reaction to something as simple as a T-shirt.

Where can people see and buy your designs?

visit http://cleclothingco.com/ and make sure to follow our blog http://cleclothingco.blogspot.com/ and twitter @cleclothingco

What makes your products different?

We think we’re doing fun, hip, cute (can I say that?) and positive designs. We always try to stay creative in our approach to our designs, whether it’s the full design or the tiniest detail.

Where do you see your company going in the future?

We’re always evolving. We’re always coming up with new ideas and ways to stay creative and 10 steps ahead of the next guy….only time will tell you’ll just have to wait and see.

Do you have new designs coming in 2010?

Plenty…..you’ll just have to wait and see….but the “recyC.L.E.” design will most likely come out this year.

Do you plan on staying in Cleveland?

We’re not prophets….just a Graphic Designer and a Sales Engineer, living life and having fun doing it….time will tell….I might move to Bath when I’m 40…it’s nice out there in the woods, plus it’s really close to Swenson’s which has the best Cheeseburgers ever, and we’ll fight anyone who says different, but anyway C.L.E. Clothing Co. will always have it’s base in Cleveland, where it grew up.

Do you have plans for a brick and mortar location?

the thought has crossed our mind….but again, you’ll just have to wait and see…

Zero Landfill announces 2010 Akron season!

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

Zero Landfill is doing great things.  Not only do they divert materials from landfill (nearly 150 tons so far), but they provide materials for use by local artists and educators in NE Ohio.  Taking a look at the way that the local schools have been forced to cut back on arts programs due to budget constraints, the work of Zero Landfill takes on new meaning in context of the value it provides to our educators and our youth.  I was happy to see this announcement in my inbox today about the start up of the 2010 season in Akron.  So those of you with samples and assorted bits be mindful of how you can help save the planet while helping out the local arts.

zl logo

Pollinate and Harvest Dates

zl harvest 1

ZeroLandfill Akron

Every Saturday in February

Feb 6  ::  Feb 13  ::  Feb 20  ::  Feb 27

12:00 – 3:00 pm

30 N. High Street – Downtown Akron

Architects, interior designers and graphic designers pollinate by dropping off your specification materials.

Artists and educators come to harvest creative supply items including fabric, carpet, ceramic tile, glass and wallcovering samples, three ring binders and papers.

ZeroLandfill Akron thanks our 2010 project sponsors Mocha Maiden, IIDA Cleveland Akron City Center, InterfaceFLOR and Taxel Image Group.

ZeroLandfill, a project of BeeDance, LLC

Cleveland, Ohio 44113

Is “Green” your mantra, mindset, or buzzword?

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

I know I am the oddball in the room.  That is fine.  I accept it.  I am that weird guy who has his own name tag, tries to bring his own cup, and often will not take your business card, because I don’t want more paper.   That’s fine.  I don’t mind being different from everyone else, and I don’t mind being the weird one in a group.  I also don’t expect others to be like me.  That being said, I have been to 2 separate sustainability events that were hosted by the local chapter of the USGBC, and it amazes me that people do not even think about their trash or their transportation.  I am that crazy person that drinks draft beer if a location doesn’t recycle, or who takes his juice bottle home.  But when I go to an industry event promoting sustainability, I at least expect people to recycle.

When I last went to Greenbuild, the entire event recycled.  They even had most of the garbage stations manned on the first day to instruct people that their coffee cups are compostable and go in one can, their water bottle is recyclable and that very little actually goes into the garbage.  Care was taken to provide cups made from sugar cane and water was available by the glass, not by the bottle.  At local events, though there is often not even a recycling bin.  We went to an event where a new park was being dedicated.  A building was being taken down and a new green space was going to be created along the towpath.  They provided refreshments, but there was no place to recycle the pop cans or water bottles that we being given out.  Funny, when the whole point was to support new green space and land re use.  So they were a little short sighted.  At least this was not a sustainability event.

So, two events hosted by the NE Ohio chapter of the USGBC.  Both attended by building industry professionals.  Both had recycling bins stationed near the garbage.  Both were well attended.  Both had piles of recyclables in the trash.  I get it when the food is served with plastic forks and you don’t know if they are recyclable or not, or if the plates can be recycled because there are food remnants attached.  But for pete’s sake, if you are going to a “green” event why would you not take the care to toss you glass bottle into the bin on the right that is inches away?

Sustainability and green are not new concepts.  In fact, most of the basic ideas that we are promoting these days were big in the 1970s.  Remember driving less, cause you could only get gas on certain days of the week?  Remember the push for the bottle deposit?  Carter put solar panels on the White House.  Even the “Give a hoot, don’t pollute” campaign is decades old.  But much of the progress that we made in the 60s & 70s was replaced by consumption and consumerism of the end of the 20th century.  Now everyone seems to be on board again.  While the USGBC has been around for nearly a decade, and the building concepts that were behind its formation even older, it has only been the last couple of years that we are seeing the idea of building more sustainable becoming mainstream.  As was said in a presentation today, if  Wal-Mart is doing it, then everybody better be doing it.  But in a room full of building professionals who aspire to do better, why is there obvious recyclables in the trash?  It makes me wonder if this is more about business as usual.

Since buildings account for nearly half of all CO2 emissions,  any reason to build greener is a good reason.  That being said, when we are most concerned about just ourselves, the results are often fleeting.  Are we doing the right thing, because it is important, or because we are trying to find a “leg up” in a tough economic time?  Are we creating real lasting change, or like the fuel efficient cars of the past, are we just waiting for our chance to start buying Hummers again?  As a business, as a  household, as an individual are you using ‘green” as your buzzword, or is it a way of life?  These are the things I wander when I see the parking lot of a green event filled with SUVs and the trash full of aluminum cans.

Why we cannot feed the world.

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

Population explosion.  Drought.  Famine.  Politics.  These are all the reasons that people around the world go hungry every day, right?  Wrong.  The real reasons why we cannot feed the world’s population is waste.  We throw away too much food.  We overproduce foods that we will not be able to consume, and then we truck food all across the globe for no good reason.  And we are greedy.

It is always easy to point the finger at someone else and say it is their fault.  The truth of the matter is that we are all to blame.  We have all led to the current mass production of food and the need for mechanized farms.  At one time, most of the food that we consumed was grown on small family farms.  It was produced locally.  And farming was a career to be proud of.  When did things change?  Slowly, the family farm was replaced by large scale corporate giants.  These conglomerates began squeezing out the family farm in pursuit of the almighty dollar.  And consumers loved it.  Let’s face it, how much will you really pay for a tomato?  Will you pay $5 a pound if it means that it was grown on a small farm, provided living wages to all employees without exploiting them, and used farming practices that were less harmful to the environment?  While we like to all think we would, the lack of these tomatoes in the local grocery says quite simply that the majority of Americans will not.  Furthermore, most cannot.  If you can, well more power to you, but how many of the stocks or mutual funds in that IRA of yours are drawing their profits from the likes of Monsanto (in my opinion the anti-christ of the farming world) or Dole (the devil of worker mistreatment)?  I live on a budget and thus am guilty as anyone else.  And I like pineapple, on occasion (so you know of another brand besides Dole?)  As we are slowly squeezing out the family farm, we are dumping more food onto the American marketplace so fast that we have to find new ways to use it.  We are sweetening everything with corn, feeding it to cattle and other livestock, and now trying to make biofuels and dishes out of it.  Corn is not really a sustainable product, it just makes massive farms a lot of profit.

The result of all this cheap food on the market?  Stamping out starvation?  No.  Instead, we Americans are simply throwing it away.  I have heard it said that we already produce enough food to feed every person on the planet.  So why aren’t we?  Americans are wasteful gluttons.  First off, we throw out a lot of food.  It is estimated that we throw out 50% more now than we did in the 70s.  Studies say that amounts to between 30 and 40 percent of all the food produced in this country.  A lot is lost at the production and manufacturing level, but at least half of this wasted food is tossed out at home by consumers.  I was sure that this was over estimated, until I really took a hard look at our own household.  Two people living in one house find it hard to eat the food we buy, and it is even worse for someone who lives alone.  Packages of food are too large for small households, and shopping is often inconvenient.  It has become harder and harder to shop more often and buy less things.  I am watching our consumption very closely, but we still have leftovers that do not always get eaten, produce that goes bad before it really ripens or foods that get freezer burn.  The results are probably right on the mark.

Besides the waste in food itself, there are more ramifications to these studies.  More wasted food means more wasted fossil fuels in their production and transport.  Growing excess foods means we use more and more water-a growingly scarce commodity.  To top it all off, our supply chains no longer make sense.  We import apples to Ohio from Washington state, new Zealand, etc. while we have plenty of farms right here to supply our local apple needs.  In fact, I have been told that only 1% of all food produced in Ohio actually is consumed here.  Michael Polin (Deep Agriculture) told how we import butter cookies from Denmark, and export butter cookies to Denmark when we could just exchange recipes.  If we could fix some of these inequities in the supply chain, we could use the saving to transport excess foods to those places where it is needed to feed those who are starving.  But then there is no profit in that.

Then there is the health problems in this country.  Diabetes is on the rise, as well as heart disease and obesity.  Many contribute the excess of food production as  contributing factor to these problems.  Manufacture and marketing of food products is big business in America, and we will work extra long hours to avoid cooking our own food and to provide Twinkies to our family.  We wold rather drive through a McDonald’s than buy and prepare our own food.

The lack of clean water and steady food supplies has lead to starvation, instability, and unrest in many parts of the world.  At the same time, we are tossing out tons of food every year (more than $48 billion worth).  The rest of the world is suffering and we sit back and gorge ourselves.  No wonder so many other countries hate us.  At the same time, envy of our lifestyle has led to the desire to add more meat to the diets in other countries.  This leads to more conversion of global rain forests to grazing lands to support cattle.

So in the scheme of things, war, famine, drought population have less to do with our ability to feed the world’s population than our own wasteful ways.