oregon archives - planet forward - 克罗地亚vs加拿大让球 //www.getitdoneaz.com/tag/oregon/ inspiring stories to 2022年卡塔尔世界杯官网 sun, 19 mar 2023 20:19:47 +0000 en-us hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 faces of the climate march: oregon //www.getitdoneaz.com/story/faces-of-the-climate-march-oregon/ wed, 16 oct 2019 17:07:24 +0000 http://dpetrov.2create.studio/planet/wordpress/faces-of-the-climate-march-oregon/ giselle herzfeld, 22, chats about the global climate strike movement, 350 colorado, and her work getting reed college students involved in the portland climate march.

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i recently had the opportunity to sit down with 22-year-old giselle herzfeld and chat about the global climate strike movement. picture a bright sunny day, a rare occurrence for portland, oregon, with fall colors just beginning to turn and a crisp, but refreshing, breeze in the air. herzfeld catches your eye with her all-black attire, leather jacket, and combat boots. once you get to talking with her, you will notice her cautious smile, light energy, and passionate personality. 

herzfeld initially got involved in the 2019 global climate strike scene through her internship work at 350 colorado. 350 is an international grassroots organizing group that tackles climate issues. after developing skills with 350 colorado and collaborating with 350pdx, the portland, oregon, branch of 350, herzfeld played an instrumental role in getting reed college students to attend the portland climate march. her objective: get as many reed college community members as possible to participate in the climate strike and show up to the climate march. 

herzfeld spearheaded a petition that circulated reed’s campus and called for the college president to shut down the school in recognition of the climate strike. she, along with other students, managed to obtain 676 signatures, equivalent to nearly half of the students currently enrolled at reed college, in support of the petition. other organizing that occurred in the weeks leading up to the event included plastering the campus in posters, coordinating transportation to the strike, and banner and poster making for the march itself, among other logistical details to make the day of the march smooth sailing. 

herzfeld felt compelled to join the movement and help organize due to her increasing anxiety about climate change.

“i was going to school and learning about all the problems in the world—politically and economically and environmentally. and i was learning about all these problems but i was so busy with school that i wasn’t doing anything. so i was locked in on-campus learning things that were making me extremely depressed and terrified, with no outlet and no time to actually do anything about it. so over the course of last semester, i got increasingly anxious and [was] just in a really, really bad place–to the point where there was one night that i had like a six-hour panic attack,” herzfeld said.

herzfeld took all this energy and applied to the influential 350 colorado internship the day following her panic attack. speaking up and helping out really was not a choice for herzfeld; it was an obligation. 

“we don’t have time, we have to,” she said. “this is a moral responsibility. this is the future of the planet. what else is there to fight for? you know?” 

the organizing does not end with the end of the climate march for herzfeld. 

“i’m really excited about the future. i’m honestly finding it really hard to even concentrate on schoolwork at this point because all i want to do all the time is just organize,” she said.

she plans on connecting all the colleges in portland to create a coalition of environmental organizers to try and organize and share ideas and resources. she wants it to become “the cool thing for colleges to do—declare a climate emergency,” in hopes that their statuses as institutions can help influence the climate change conversation to get some much-needed change happening. 

the climate strike not only brought newcomers to the movement, but it also inspired people already informed on the movement to stay involved and motivated. 

“after the climate strike i’m a lot more hopeful about the future of the world than i was before the climate strike,” herzfeld shared. “i feel like there’s a global revolution/renaissance that’s building and that people all over the world are feeling more connected by this global existential threat that connects us in a way that we’ve never had before. we’ve never had a crisis like this where everyone is to a degree complicit in it in some way. as a planet, we can’t really shift the blame because it’s kind of all of us…we’re all the enemy. but we’re also all able to be a part of the solution.” 

when she’s not organizing petitions and protests or studying in her interdisciplinary major of political science, sociology, and economics with a focus on network theory, herzfeld can be found watching films, painting, and attending metal shows around portland.

“it’s a good way to get the angry energy out — especially around climate change and politics” 

she’s excited to keep organizing however, and she’s excited with what the climate movement will lead to. 

“i think that the nature of this problem is going to lead to a really, really awesome global movement that we’ve never seen before,” herzfeld said.that’s what i hope. that’s what i believe. and that’s what i’m working towards so i’m really excited to see what happens.”

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humancar //www.getitdoneaz.com/story/humancar/ wed, 17 jul 2013 14:00:10 +0000 http://dpetrov.2create.studio/planet/wordpress/humancar/ as a power agnostic hybrid electric vehicle. street legal as a nev globally, part mobile power station part human-electric generator. also the highest output human electric generator in the world currently.
currently a global phenomenon with millions of followers.

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biodegradable alternatives to plastic mulch //www.getitdoneaz.com/story/biodegradable-alternatives-to-plastic-mulch/ mon, 16 apr 2012 08:52:34 +0000 http://dpetrov.2create.studio/planet/wordpress/biodegradable-alternatives-to-plastic-mulch/ the average person tends to know what plastic drip tape and soaker hoses are, but what is plastic mulch? in china alone, the equivalent area of south carolina is covered with this fossil fuel based plastic sheet mulch every year and then the plastic becomes waste forever (7 million hectares for field crops alone; kasirajan et al., 2012).

why do farmers all around the world use it more and more each year? can this petroleum product be recycled? this is the first documentary film to engage the subject of plastic mulch as a truly global, accelerating, and complex sociotechnical problem. the film provides footage from farms and farmers within china, the united states, and from around the world.

this simple plastic sheet technology conserves water while providing more quantity and types of food, yet disposing of single-use plastic mulch is a humongous problem both within the united states and globally. one telling aspect of the film is how the description of the plastic mulch waste problem provided by oregon farmers precisely describes the plastic waste problem filmed on chinese farms some 6,000 miles away. is the problem truly this universal? farmers need your support! we need options for tomorrow!

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portland mayor adams: cities learning from one another on climate //www.getitdoneaz.com/story/portland-mayor-adams-cities-learning-from-one-another-on-climate/ thu, 14 jul 2011 15:00:49 +0000 http://dpetrov.2create.studio/planet/wordpress/portland-mayor-adams-cities-learning-from-one-another-on-climate/ in this interview from the c40 cities mayor’s summit, portland, ore., mayor sam adams talks about the importance of cities sharing best practices for developing sustainable communities and mitigating the impacts of climate change. he calls the summit, held in sao paulo brazil in june, an “amazing opportunity to trade notes” from the front lines of working on climate change and energy efficiency issues in urban centers.

learn more about how portland is putting energy efficiency and other best practices into action right now, actions that mayor adams details in this aol energy op-ed.

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reversing decades of dumping in the oregon badlands //www.getitdoneaz.com/story/reversing-decades-of-dumping-in-the-oregon-badlands/ tue, 11 jan 2011 13:00:23 +0000 http://dpetrov.2create.studio/planet/wordpress/reversing-decades-of-dumping-in-the-oregon-badlands/ just a 15-minute drive from downtown bend in central oregon, the badlands offer a quiet getaway. the land is designated as “wilderness” by the federal government, while volcanic ash and eroded lava make up sandy natural trails. off-trail hikers can explore mazes recreated by lava ridges that once rose and then split down the middle as the lava cooled.

david eddleston leads a volunteer force called the friends of the oregon badlands or fobits. he said the fun name rhyming with hobits brings attention to the group’s mission to help restore this high desert jewel.
“that means reversing decades of dumping,” eddleston said. “we want to take out all this trash that we’ve got here and gradually restore it and heal it and bring it back to being a wilderness again.”

the fobits have more than a 130 volunteers who work closely with other nonprofits.
the u.s. bureau of land management says that it benefits from tens of thousands of dollars in volunteer labor. facing tight budgets and limited resources, land managers here are increasingly turning to volunteers to help protect these uniquely american assets.

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preserving the volcanic beauty of black butte, oregon //www.getitdoneaz.com/story/preserving-the-volcanic-beauty-of-black-butte-oregon/ wed, 22 sep 2010 16:55:11 +0000 http://dpetrov.2create.studio/planet/wordpress/preserving-the-volcanic-beauty-of-black-butte-oregon/ a southern idaho highway punches through what was molten lava just 10,000 years ago, a blink of an eye in geologic time.

“i’d seen it from the road. i’d seen the lava flow across the road and i read about it in the literature at the wilderness study areas,” said david freiberg of the u.s. bureau of land management. “but when i finally got the chance to come up here and visit i came up over the hill and i thought wow this is…i described it as ‘tolkienesque’ because it’s such an austere looking volcanic landscape.”

this shield volcano called black butte rises just 200 feet above its surroundings on the snake river plain making it barely visible from the highway.

“very few people actually visit this area and its one of the things that i’ve been working on here at the blm is to try to raise people’s knowledge and their understanding of the different natural resources we have.”

hiking through that hostile landscape offers a tour into the recent volcanic past. sheets of basaltic lava remain extremely well preserved. black butte is identical to the volcanoes still active in hawaii today. just 10,000 years ago a lava lake filled this crater complex.

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