Archive for the 'Environment' Category

Austin companies make mowing eco-friendly

Austin Amercian-Statesman
By Asher Price

Long polluting, lawn mowing is getting converted from gas-powered to electric-powered.

Mowing lawns is not, conventionally, an environmentally friendly activity.

One hour of tending the lawn with a gas-powered mower produces as much pollution as driving your car for four hours, according to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality.

But a few Austin companies are now trying to make quick lawn mowing the next frontier in the green movement.

Rolling the dice on catastrophe

International Herald Tribune
By Michael Lewis

It was Aug. 24, 2005, and New Orleans was still charming. Tropical Depression 12 was spinning from the Bahamas toward Florida, but the chances of an American city’s being destroyed by nature were remote. An entire industry of scientists who calculate the likelihood of various natural disasters had set the odds: A storm that destroys $70 billion worth of insured property should strike the United States only once every 100 years. From Miami to San Francisco, the nation’s priciest real estate faced beaches and straddled fault lines; its most vibrant cities occupied its most hazardous land. And virtually no one fully understood the true odds.

“Worlds greatest city of the arts and outdoors” living up to its name

Downtown Eugene. By Flickr user Kevin Crumbs. From: http://www.flickr.com/photos/crumbs/KVAL.com
By Elissa Harrington

DOWNTOWN EUGENE - Eugene has picked up the motto “World’s greatest city of the arts and outdoors.” City leaders are trying to figure out if it’s living up to its name.

Today the City of Eugene got a report card in the arts. The cultural policy review was better than most years but it creativity still has room to grow.

Wednesday, officials looked over an annual report for the arts. Required number of productions? Check! High number of attendees?Check! Good economic impact? Big check! In fact, according to today’s spreadsheet, performing arts pulled in more than 6 million dollars last year.

Bamboo Commercial Use Gains Attention

NPR
By Wendy Kaufman

The bamboo being used commercially comes from plantations in China. Horticulturalists think that someday it could be grown in the USA. It is an eco-friendly crop typically grown without chemicals and pesticides. It’s used commercially for everything from floors to blue jeans.

BP Touts Greenness, Then Asks to Dump Ammonia

Advertising Age
adage.com
By Jean Halliday

Oil Giant’s Image Could be Tarnished by Move to Increase Discharge Levels

CHICAGO (AdAge.com) — “We’d like to have them live up to their advertising.”

That remark came from Sudhu Johnston, chief environmental officer for the city of Chicago, in response to oil giant BP applying for — and receiving — a permit from the state of Indiana to dump more toxic discharges from its Whiting, Ind., refinery into Lake Michigan.

Fatal collision raises questions about fast boats, crowded lakes

The Boston Globe
Associated Press

HARRISON, Maine –A lake collision in which one boat was sliced in two by a large, high-powered speed boat is spurring a discussion about whether steps need to be taken to better protect boaters on Maine’s lakes and ponds.

Investigators haven’t determined the cause of the fatal collision a week ago on Long Lake, but the size of one of the boats raised eyebrows.

Explosives found buried in backyard

 A large brick of C4 plastic explosive and other explosive devices were found buried Saturday in the backyard of a mobile home near West Florida Hospital. From: pensacolanewsjournal.com Escambia County Sheriff's Office Pensacola News Journal
By Sean Dugas

Neighborhood evacuated after man finds C4, grenade in garden

A large brick of C4 plastic explosive and other explosive devices were found buried in the backyard of a mobile home Saturday near West Florida Hospital.

Escambia County sheriff’s spokesman Glenn Austin said Chris Bruner, who lives in the 8400 block Lawton Street off Johnson Avenue, was digging in his yard to plant foliage about 1 p.m. when he found a metal Charles Chips potato chip can.

When Bruner opened the can, he found one pineapple-style hand grenade, a block of plastic explosive and detonator cord inside. He immediately called law enforcement officials, Austin said.

What happened to Northwest Arkansas

Waltons.Wal-Mart is one of the most celebrated American businesses of all time. College students spend entire semesters studying the company’s supply-chain system. Founder Sam Walton is celebrated as one of the world’s greatest business leaders.

But popular opinion about Wal-Mart is rapidly changing. Anytime you become as successful as Wal-Mart, you are going to make enemies. Once, rated as the “America’s Most Admired Business” two years in a row by Fortune Magazine, Wal-Mart slipped down to the 19th spot in 2007.

So what’s driving down Wal-Mart’s popularity?

Wal-Mart’s critics claim that Wal-Mart stores hurt small communities. It puts local small merchants out of business, puts a strain on the local pubic infrastructure and pollutes the environment.

And some of Wal-Mart’s biggest critics are right in the company’s back yard. Northwest Arkansas.

Boomtown

The largest retailer in the world operates its corporate headquarters in the Northwest Arkansas city of Bentonville. In 1970, Bentonville was a tiny town of 5,508 people. Back then, Wal-Mart had only 18 stores in the region. Today, Wal-Mart has nearly 7,000 stores under its corporate umbrella worldwide and Bentonville’s population has swelled close to 30,000.

Bentonville’s growth has had a ripple effect in the Fayetteville-Springdale-Rogers Metropolitan Statistical Area, commonly referred to as the Northwest Arkansas region. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the region added more than 90,000 new residents from 2000 to 2006. That’s nearly 13,000 people a year. The Census Bureau projects the 2007 population to 438,000. Up from 347,045 people in 2000.

The majority of growth is related to Wal-Mart suppliers. To help “facilitate” good business with Wal-Mart, many suppliers have set up shop near the Wal-Mart headquarters. Procter and Gamble, Motorola, Nestle Purina, General Mills, Kelloggs, and many others have established satellite corporate branches in the region.

But Wal-Mart is not the only driver of the area’s population boom. Springdale is home of the world’s leading producer of poultry and beef, Tyson Foods. Lowell, which sits halfway between Springdale and Rogers, hosts the nation’s largest publicly owned truckload carrier, J.B. Hunt. And, Fayetteville is home to the state’s largest University, The University of Arkansas.

But like the many people who criticize the effect that Wal-Mart Stores have on small communities, many are also critical of the effect that big businesses have had on Northwest Arkansas.Northwest Arkansas.

“It’s turned into cement city,” says Elkins resident Mary Lightheart. In May 2000, Lightheart received national media attention from an act of civil disobedience. After Fayetteville City Council members approved a building permit, ignoring the city’s tree ordnance, that allowed a grove of 225-year-old oak trees to be cut down to make way for a strip-mall, she staged a sit in. The 53-year-old grandmother climbed up one of the trees in the grove and refused to leave. She stayed there for three weeks.

The grove was still cut down and the strip-mall was built. But, Lightheart’s protest set in motion a series of events that led to the mayor and many city council members losing their office.

Springdale residents have also been vocal about the uncontrolled growth in their city. Springdale Minister Josh Jenkins was passionate enough about the issue to start a website, springdalevotes.com. The website aims to inform fellow Springdale citizens about livability issues and hold city officials accountable for the decisions they make.

Springdale incumbent city council member Jessie Core is running on a platform of improving city streets and creating a sign ordnance to reduce the size and height of signs used by businesses.

Most public officials in the region, if they want to stay in office, make an effort to listen to their voters. But most lack the influence to effect projects beyond their city borders. And, this is really uncharted territory that most small cities never face - uncontrollable growth.

On the surface, things that appear to be solutions turn out to be part of the problem. Case in point: Interstate-540. Built in 1999, it’s intended purpose was to serve as a North-South by-pass, west around the major cities of Fayetteville, Springdale and Rogers. Supporters of the interstate claimed that it would keep the traffic out of those cities. Instead, businesses are sprouting up along the interstate. Causing even more traffic than before.

“Business interests are quickly making matters worse. Rogers is the leading offender,” said Art Hobson in an editorial in the Northwest Arkansas Times. “Developers plan to make a bundle out of lining I-540 with seven huge new shopping malls and a hospital complex.”

Now, traffic jams are a common site along the interstate and public officials have proposed two solutions: another North-South bypass further west or, expanding I-540 to eight lanes.

As George Santayana once said, “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”

The Future of the Region

 

The Chamber’s of Commerce in the Northwestern Arkansas cities are quick to point out all the benefits of living in the growing region. They are more than happy to advertise the region as the retail capital of the world. They pitch the region as having a growing economy with high paying jobs and all the conveniences of the big cities but in a the quiet country setting.

Northwest Arkansas has a lot in common with the boomtowns of Old West. It grew rapidly and had a tremendous influx of money and people in a very short amount of time. Like the boomtowns of the Old West, it’s now struggling to meet the needs of the people rushing into the area.

It also shares another common characteristic of the boomtowns of the Old West. Boomtowns usually relied on just one resource to fuel its economy. Most of the time it was mining. For Northwest Arkansas, its the retail industry. As long as the retail industry does well, so will Northwest Arkansas.

 

But many fear that all the great qualities that bring people to the region are quickly eroding. People go to Northwest Arkansas to get away from traffic, noise and pollution. They like the idea of having a high-paying job and low cost-of-living. But Northwest Arkansas is rapidly become that which everyone there was trying to escape.

Scientists puzzled over fish tag that traveled 7,700 miles

The Seattle Times
By Craig Welch
Seattle Times environment reporter

Bird researcher Dale Whaitiri was on an island off southern New Zealand examining the stomach contents of a baby seabird when an electronic device the size of a grain of rice spilled from the bird’s gullet.

The monitoring tag had been planted years before in a juvenile steelhead — on the Columbia River in the Pacific Northwest. But this chick was too young to fly — let alone eat fish.

The discovery has launched a tale of scientific intrigue spanning 7,700 miles across the Pacific Ocean. How did the tag wind up in a fat, flightless bird about to be eaten by Maori tribesmen? And of the millions of seabirds — called sooty shearwaters, or “titi” by the Maoris — how did Whaitiri manage to poke this one’s belly?

13 dead as Japan endures hottest ever day

DNA India
AFP

TOKYO: The temperature hit an all-time high in Japan on Thursday with the extreme summer heat bending train rails and killing at least 13 people this week, officials said.

The mercury shot up to a record 40.9 degrees Celsius (106 degrees Fahrenheit) Thursday afternoon in central Gifu prefecture and Saitama prefecture near Tokyo, the weather agency said.

Dozens of headless walruses found on Alaska’s beaches

Rocky Mountain News
By Mary Pemberton
Associated Press

ANCHORAGE, Alaska - Dozens of walrus carcasses have washed up on beaches this summer, many missing their heads and ivory tusks.

While rotting, headless carcasses are not uncommon along beaches in western Alaska in the summer, the number of carcasses washing up in Norton Sound has prompted an investigation by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

Federal authorities don’t know if a crime has occurred, said Steve Oberholtzer, a special agent in Anchorage. But he said investigators are looking into two possibilities: Either someone who is not an Alaska native is poaching walruses or Alaska natives are not salvaging enough of the animals.

Tiger Woods announces 1st American course in mountains of North Carolina

International Herald Tribune
Sports
The Associated Press

TRAVELERS REST, South Carolina: Tiger Woods plans to design his first American course in the mountains of North Carolina.

The Cliffs at High Carolina will be located near Asheville, North Carolina, and will allow only walkers, something Woods said was key to the deal.

Woods wants to let the scenic land dictate the layout and hopes the course gives golfers a fair test and a chance to connect with nature.