Calendar

Jul
20
Sun
PESC Meeting @ Yellow House next to UUCP
Jul 20 @ 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm
Aug
17
Sun
PESC Meeting @ Yellow House next to UUCP
Aug 17 @ 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm

— snacks provided — at the Yellow House (414 E. 2nd St. Moscow).

Agenda will include detailed plans for the March for Survival Sunday Sept 21: we have permission to use the Chipman Trail! This march is in solidarity with the 350.org huge climate demonstration in NYC. Also planning for the UI PalousaFest Table on August 23rd, Gasland II at Kenworthy September 15. Please send additional agenda items to me.

(Please note the change in the date for March for Survival. We previously had planned for the day before, but this conflicted with a WSU football game.)

Sep
16
Tue
Film, “Gasland II” @ Kenworthy Performing Arts Center
Sep 16 @ 2:00 am – 3:30 am

Gasland II - movie poster

The award winning documentary Gasland Part II will have its Moscow area premier at the Kenworthy on Monday, September 15, at 7pm. This sequel to Gasland released in 2009 continues to explore the controversial method of extracting natural gas and oil known as “fracking,” one of the most divisive environmental issues facing our nation today. Gasland Part 2 argues how and why fracked wells leak contaminated water and air and contributing to climate change. Audience members are invited to stay after the showing for a thought- provoking discussion. This event is sponsored by the Palouse Environmental Sustainability Coalition with a generous donation from the Batina family.

Sep
21
Sun
PESC Meeting CANCELLED @ Yellow House next to UUCP
Sep 21 @ 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Normally we would meet on this day but we will be busy with the “March for Survival” event instead. We will meet again next month on the third Sunday at noon as usual.

“March for Survival” Event @ Time/Place TBA
Sep 21 @ 9:00 pm – Sep 22 @ 1:00 am

You are invited to the ‘March for Survival’ Sept. 21 at 2 pm in Pullman, followed by a Celebration at 6 pm in Moscow. We will walk from Pullman to Moscow on the Chipman trail in solidarity with the ‘People’s Climate March’, the biggest demonstration in the history of the climate change movement on the same day in NY City. Our March and Celebration are peaceful events of healing, hope, and inspiration for all. We will promote climate change awareness and support those suffering from the environmental consequences of Canada’s tar sands oil extraction, especially First Nations Peoples.

 

Our March begins at 2 pm at the head of the Chipman Trail (Quality Inn parking lot) with a Native American blessing by Roger Vielle. We will walk the length of the Chipman Trail to its endpoint across from the Palouse Mall (8 miles), with an option to exit at the halfway point. You are invited to bring signs expressing your concerns about climate change. Bring water bottles, snacks, and outdoor clothing suitable for an 8-mile walk (hot sunny weather is forecast).

 

Our Celebration begins at 6 pm in Friendship Square in Moscow, with a potluck, Native American drummers, local environmental speakers, and opportunities to connect with like-minded community members and groups.

 

Carpools will meet at 1 pm at the southeast corner of the Palouse Mall parking lot which is across the lot from Winco – (intersection of Pullman Rd & Farm Rd), across the road from the end of the Chipman trail. This will enable residents to return to Pullman or to go to Friendship Square after the March.

 

Organized by the Palouse Environmental Sustainability Coalition. For more information contact Lori Batina skydancer8@gmail.com, Pat Fuerst epfuerst@frontier.com, 509-339-5213, or our Facebook page “Palouse March for Survival”.

Oct
14
Tue
Film, “The Lost Fish” (Indigenous Peoples Day) @ WSU - Cleveland Hall Room 30W
Oct 14 @ 12:30 am – 2:30 am

In celebration of Indigenous Peoples Day (Monday, October 13), the Washington State University (WSU) Clearinghouse on Native Teaching and Learning will feature the film The Lost Fish, jointly produced by the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission and Freshwaters Illustrated and selected for the EcoFilm Festival.  Also honoring the memory of the late Elmer Crow of the Nez Perce Tribe, the movie explores the importance of the lamprey eel to the Plateau tribes and tribal actions to ensure that these ancient fish return to their native rivers and streams throughout the Columbia River Basin.  Share an evening celebrating the contemporary lives of Indigenous people from our region, through this film shown on Monday, October 13, from 5:30 to 7:30 pm in WSU’s Cleveland Hall Room 30W.  Please call 509-335-3478 with questions.

Oct
19
Sun
PESC Meeting @ Yellow House next to UUCP
Oct 19 @ 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm
Nov
16
Sun
PESC Meeting @ Yellow House next to UUCP
Nov 16 @ 8:00 pm – 9:00 pm
Dec
21
Sun
PESC Meeting @ Yellow House next to UUCP
Dec 21 @ 8:00 pm – 9:00 pm
Jan
18
Sun
PESC Meeting @ Yellow House next to UUCP
Jan 18 @ 12:00 pm – 1:15 pm

— a light lunch will be provided – thanks to Pat & Dan R

(we meet 3rd Sunday every month – next meeting is February 15)

 

Agenda to include:

We have two special guests this Sunday. The PESC meeting, about one hour, will be followed by Climate Forum meeting about 1 or 1:15 pm. We will discuss joining with the Coop for several environmental films at the Kenworthy.  Please send additional agenda items to me.

 

Brett Haverstick, Friends of Clearwater, will review a joint event in March regarding Snake River dam breaching and port dredging. We also plan to collaborate on Chris Caudill’s Salmon Restoration and the effect of the dams later in the year.

 

Tim Hatten, entomologist, will review the effect of neonicotinoid pesticides on our bee population, a major concern not only for farmers but for all gardeners in the Palouse. How to restrict their use locally. How we can encourage Monarchs with native northwest milkweed.

Climate Forum Meeting @ Yellow House next to UUCP
Jan 18 @ 1:15 pm – 2:15 pm

April 24-26, 2015 PESC Climate Forum with Maria Talero

Looking for people to help with fundraising, outreach, organizing, and/or publicity.

 

Tentative Schedule for April 24–26

  • Friday night in the 1912 Center Great Room: Plenary multi-media presentation with audience participation.
  • Saturday (Great Room 8:30–4pm)(Fiske and Art Rooms 1–4pm)
  • Morning workshop: Climate Courage Skills and Strategies: How Ordinary Citizens, Students, and Families Can Face the Climate Crisis Together, Instead of Alone.
  • Afternoon workshops: “Introduction to climate change activism on the Palouse” and “break-out groups and tabling”.
  • Concurrently in Afternoon: Fostering a Courageous Climate Change Ministry (private workshop for faith leaders).
  • Saturday Night Dance, Potluck, Film (UUCP Basement)

 

Names for this event are still tentative: “Palouse Climate Courage Kickoff” or “A Climate Change Plan for a Resilient Palouse.”

 

Maria L. Talero, Ph.D.

Maria Talero will be the leader for most of this weekend event. Maria Talero is a Denver-based community climate change educator and former philosophy professor who is developing an innovative approach to climate change communication, organizing and activism. Her research-based methodology draws on a paradigm called “embodied cognition” to identify the stages of transformation (for both individuals and communities) that lead to courageous and powerful climate change activism. She is a hands-on, mindful and passionate presenter and facilitator with 15 years of experience as an educator, and she currently organizes a monthly community group in Denver, Colorado called the Climate Courage Resilience Circle. She offers leadership trainings and workshops to non-profits, schools and communities of faith in Colorado. She is Adjunct Assistant Professor at the University of Colorado Denver. She is a 2014 NAAEE Community Climate Change Fellow as well as a board member and team leader with 350 Colorado and 350 Denver.

 

YouTube videos of Maria: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=On8pZi4KuxY,https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y-zPh1pwZGA, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PM9xTfv089k.

Jan
20
Tue
Future of Geothermal Energy @ 1912 Center
Jan 20 @ 7:30 pm – 9:00 pm

Can geothermal energy aid in mitigating climate change?  University of Idaho PhD candidate Cary Lindsey will give a talk on the “Future of Geothermal Energy” Tuesday, January 20, in the 1912 Center Fiske Room at 7:30 p.m.  She will discuss her research from Yellowstone Park and other “hot spots” as well as local geothermal projects. This presentation is sponsored by PESC and the UUCP Environmental Task Force. For further information, contact Pat Rathmann.

Jan
31
Sat
“Protecting the Environment” Nimiipuu Tribal Environmental Summit @ Washington State University, College of Education Bldg, Cleveland Hall
Jan 31 @ 8:30 am – 4:30 pm

Crystal Layman, First Nations from Alberta, will speak about tar sands; other topics include Wolves, and Grizzly Bear Recovery. Contact/Like us on Facebook “Nimiipuu Protecting the Environment”.  Thanks and happy new year to all!!! Food and beverage for all. Saturday, January 31,  2015 from 8:30 to 4:30 pm at Washington State University, College of Education Bldg, Cleveland Hall. PESC is a co-sponsor.

Feb
15
Sun
PESC Meeting @ Yellow House next to UUCP
Feb 15 @ 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm

The Palouse Environmental Sustainability Coalition general meeting and committee meeting, for our special event “Building a Resilient Palouse in the Age of Climate Change: A Forum for Thoughtful and Courageous Action”, are this Sunday, 2/15. The general meeting is at 12pm noon at the UUCP Yellow House, and the committee meeting, which anyone is welcome to join, will follow at 1:30pm.

Feb
26
Thu
Geothermal Energy Talk @ University of Idaho, Jansen Engineering Bldg., Room 104
Feb 26 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm

Can geothermal energy aid in mitigating climate change? University of Idaho PhD student Cary Lindsey will give a talk on the “Geothermal Energy: An overview of this renewable energy resource and its place in Idaho’s energy future ” on Thursday, Feb 26, in the UI Jansen Engineering Room 104 at 7:00pm. She will give an overview of geothermal energy including her research from Yellowstone Park and other “hot spots” and discuss geothermal energy opportunities in Idaho. This presentation is sponsored by the UUCP Environmental Task Force and the Palouse Environmental Sustainability Coalition. The public is invited.