Posts Tagged ‘Sierra Club’

Eco-Serve During Your Spring Break

Tuesday, February 24th, 2009

     ”Everthing would be great and everything would be good, if everybody gave like everybody could…”                                      ~My Morning Jacket~

As we all know, we have got to change our world.  And it won’t be one person changing the world; it has to be a collective action.  If we all do a little, the result will be a domino effect of positive change, the quintessential butterfly effect. 

So where can you begin?  With spring break just around the corner, I think this week-long vacation is a perfect opportunity for some community work.  I don’t mean you have to devote your entire, valuable and rare vacation time to service.  But maybe an afternoon of that free week?  Or even a day?  Imagine the change that could happen if all the university students across the country did a little service work during their spring break.  The results would be uncountable. 

Okay, so what are your options?  Well there are service trips, such as Enchanting Challenge’s Educational Ecological Service Trip to Tulum, Mexico.  There are also wonderful service trip opportunities through your university, Break Away, Sierra Club, and Habitat for Humanity

And if you can’t give your whole break to service?  Don’t worry–there are PLENTY of shorter-term options.  In yesterday’s post we talked about Leave No Trace eco-service projects you can get involved with, such as educational workshops and/or partnership initiatives with hiking groups and state park services.  Leave No Trace focuses on natural restoration, placing nature as the highest priority on our to-do list.  On their website they have the beautiful Frank Loyd Wright quote: “I believe in God, only I spell it Nature.”  If Mother-Earth is your bag, I recommend contacting Leave No Trace today!

leave-no-trace1(photo taken from the Leave No Trace website)

Another great place to go for eco-service is your state’s department of conservation!  Most of the 50 states have a Department of Conservation, and most of those departments ask for service work to help them accomplish their environmental goals.  For example, the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources asks its citizens to help them in their forest clean-up efforts.  On their website they give their residents the following message:

We can only return our forests to their natural state if we work together to combine our time, energy, and resources to remove existing trash and stop the dumping in our forests.

pa-conservation(photo taken from the PA Department of Conservation and Natural Resources site)

Once again, a call to collective action.  No one can do it alone.  If you think you would like to help your state in its wildlife restoration efforts, I encourage you to visit your state’s department of conservation website and notify them of your desire to help!

Even if you feel that Leave No Trace and/or your state’s department of conservation do not offer programs just right for you, they may be able to point you in the right direction.  Another great resource to check out is the Sierra Club, as the organization has chapters in all 50 states and all of those chapters have lots of local opportunities for you to devote as little or as much of your time as you please. 

Below is a list of some great eco-service initiatives in the US.  Unfortunately, they are state-specific, so are not applicable to all of our readers, but it can help give you an idea of what is out there.

Get Outdoors Nevada (NV)

get-outdoors-nevada1

Adventure Camp with the Colorado Youth Program (CO)

adventure-club

Keep El Paso Beautiful (TX)

Kids of the Bay (CA)

kids-for-the-bay

Kids vs. Global Warming (CA)

“Kids Adopt-A-Beach” Cleanup Day (CA)

Village of Round Lake Beach Beautificiation Program (IL)

 

Back to School…Time to Plan Spring Break!

Monday, January 26th, 2009

Last Tuesday and again today students are trickling back to school to begin the Spring 2009 semester…Which means that spring breaks all across the nation are about to be planned.  This year, check out some service trip options and/or some ways you can travel in an ecologically-friendly way–I promise it can be just as much fun as a crazy trip to Cabo and just as exotic as any Caribbean cruise.  So many people do not choose service trips and ecological trips simply because they do not have the information.  Well, no excuse: here it is! 

Your first step: check with your school’s service office and/or study abroad office: chances are they have an alternative spring break program.

Your second step: if your school does not have a service office and/or their study abroad programs do not coordinate service spring breaks, check out the following websites for all-inclusive information on service spring breaks around the world:

Alternative Spring Breaks          Council on International Educational Exchange             Idealist.org  

For a more narrow, specified field, check out the following information.

  • If you have a craving to build houses over spring break, research Habitat for Humanity opportunities. 
  • If you have a craving to help marine life, research the Oceanic Society opportunities. 
  • If your dream is to volunteer in Africa or in Mexico, check out the Visions in Action site.
  • If your corazon is in South America, visit the GIC site.
  • To help combat racial and social economic injustice, visit the Global Citizens Network site (hurry, applications for 2009 trips are due by February 15th!).
  • If community development is your forte, research Cross-Cultural Solutions.
  • If the environment is your passion, check out Sierra Club opportunities.
  • If volunteering with your family is your niche, visit Idealist.org’s family volunteer page.

If you research these links and ultimately decide that a service trip is just not for you, or rather you find that there aren’t any service trips that you can find in your dream destination, do not worry: you can still make your spring break ecologically-friendly.  By travelling in an environmentally-respectful way, you can travel in a way that is kind to the environment, and kind to your destination’s economy.  So you can still do good as you have fun over spring break! :-)

Lonely Planet guidebooks caution their readers to “tread lightly, travel responsibly and enjoy the serendipitous magic independent travel affords.  International travel is growing at a jaw-dropping rate, and we still firmly believe in the benefits it can bring–but, as always, we encourage you to consider the impact your visit will have on both the global environment and the local economies, cultures and ecosystems” (from their Brazil guidebook).   Lonely Planet sums it up beautifully: while it is now more accessible to travel around the world, we need to be aware of our footprint as we cross these frontiers.  With a little research, a little planning, and a little caution, this is quite feasible to do.

A great starting point I can offer for travelling responsibly is to visit the Responsible Travel website.  It offers pre-arranged tours, from biking through the Atlas Mountains, to staying in quaint cottages in Eastern Europe, to trekking through the jungles of Borneo, all in an environmentally-responsible way.  The site also offers information on how to offset your carbon useage during your travels, how to buy eco-friendly travel gear, and also how to volunteer when you travel (I had to throw that in there).  It is a great site, and I recommend it for any traveller, especially the up-and-coming spring-breaker.

Suerte, and good luck with planning your 2009 spring break! If you have any specific questions, feel free to make a comment on the blog, and we will get right back to you with the specific information that you need.

Going Green and Giving Green

Wednesday, January 21st, 2009

 

A Green U.S.A.

 

In the words of Thomas Friedman, “Green is the new red, white, and blue” (Hot, Flat, and Crowded, 173).  Everywhere I look, I feel that statement reinforced.  From the President’s inaugural speech to his website, he underscores our need to turn to renewable energy and to stop abusing resources.  Take a little spin around his Energy and Environment webpage and right away you will be struck by its headline and first bullet point:

New Energy for America

  • 5 million green collar jobs

The United States’ presidential administration is resolving to solve our energy problems.  Unbelievable!  And it’s not just the US.  A recent BBC headline read, “Tories Plan ‘Energy Revolution’.  Now, if that doesn’t catch your eye!  The article summarizes the British government’s plans to minimize their gas and oil imports as well as their carbon emissions, while maximizing their energy effectiveness (i.e., harnessing energy and channeling it without wasting it).  This article is not only an interesting read, but also a great reminder that this green movement is international, and will continue to become more and more international as time goes on.

 

With the new political focus comes an ensuing response from the educational, economic, and professional sectors to face the facts and go green. 

 

Green College

 

Let’s start with education.  I found a comprehensive list of environmental academic majors called (appropriately) Enviro Education Majors , and its contents blew my mind.  There is everything from Agricultural Science to Ecotourism to Population Studies to Zoology, and everything alphabetically in-between.  Whatever you are interested in, it now comes in green.  What is also really interesting is that even if you do not major in an environmentally focused field, there are a number of academic courses and programs you can take to give you the tools needed to direct your knowledge and your field of focus towards that of helping the environment.   For instance, for architecture and design majors, there is LEED, Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design, a certification program that teaches students how to design and rate buildings on their environmental efficiency. In addition, for every major, there is the Green Corps, a volunteer organization directed at running environmental campaigns to promote and pass environmental policy.  Any college graduate can enroll in their training school and learn the tools to become an environmental activist.  For more details, visit their website.

 

Green Careers

 

As for jobs, well just look at the aforementioned Presidential task: the creation of 5 million green collar jobs.  Just like academic majors, these jobs cover the range of professions, from environmental law to sustainable farming—something for everyone.  And it is not as if you need to be a scientist to have a green collar job.  The environmental era is ushering in brand new products and systems that need to be engineered, manufactured, and sold.  Take for instance, the business of windmills.  Suddenly, a relatively new business like the windmill industry is in demand and thus in dire need for people to make the product and for people to sell the product.  In an article on the online journal Science, Robin Arnette brings to light the fact that “Over the last 2 decades, research and investment in sustainable energy have increased dramatically. Wind power, meanwhile, has become one of the fastest growing sources of electricity generation in the United States and the world” (click here to read the full text).  This means that thousands and thousands of windmill turbines are being installed in the US and abroad, which means that thousands and thousands of people are needed for all the components, from the windmill’s initial building to its final installation (click here if you are interested in either an internship or career in wind energy). 

 

Such jobs are becoming so necessary and so popular that there are now a number of colleges and universities that offer academic programs in wind research.  In her article, Robin Arnette lists the following programs:

  • Texas Tech University Wind Science and Engineering Research Center
  • University of Massachusetts Center for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
  • University of Utah Wind Energy Research Program
  • MIT Laboratory for Energy and the Environment
  • Illinois Institute of Technology Energy and Sustainability Institute

And we are only talking about wind energy jobs in these examples!  I wanted to give you a little taste of the depth of opportunity behind each green job, as there are literally hundreds and thousands of new careers being created to fit the rising tide (no pun intended) of necessary environmentalism.  For a list of some of the most pressing green jobs and how to become qualified for them, visit the Green Opportunities website. 

 

A Green Economy

 

As always comes with booming jobs comes the potential for a booming economy.  Some companies have made enormous profits from producing environmentally sustainable products, such as the wind power company Vestas (visit their site here).  These companies have shown innovation, ingenuity, and dedication to developing what is necessary, and largely still, unavailable; they have filled a desperately needed niche.  Just as there is an untapped green job market, there is an untapped green economy, and it has the power to be great.

 

Green Service Trips

 

So with all of this excitement buzzing around the green world, how, you may ask, can you serve in a green way?  If your college or university offers service trips, it probably offers environmental service trips.  If however, your college or university does not offer service trips, or does not offer environmental service trips, I highly recommend that you check out what the Sierra Club has to offer.  The Sierra Club is a national environmental activist group that, among other tasks, coordinates eco-friendly service trips where volunteers are accompanied by Sierra Club aficionados, and together they work to restore natural habitats.  On their website, they describe their service trips as

ranging “from helping with research projects at whale calving grounds in Maui to assisting with archaeological site restoration in New Mexico. Usually, service trip participants team up with forest service rangers or park service personnel to restore wilderness areas, maintain trails, clean up trash and campsites, and remove non-native plants.”  For an up-to-date list of Sierra Club environmental service trips, click here.

 

Sierra Club

 

Who wouldn’t want to go to tropical Maui and work with exotic animals?  Who wouldn’t want to go to the mysterious deserts of New Mexico and work to restore parts of unbelievable history?  A green service trip will really help to heal the world in an environmental way, and also, it is absolutely fun.  In the end, it could also eventually lead you to a career in one of the emerging green fields, which also can be absolutely fun and absolutely always rewarding.