Monday, April 14, 2008

Project Memo

April 15, 2008
JRNL 80-B
Mo Krochmal
Green Levittown: Project Memo
By Amanda Brody (amandaeva27@gmail.com)

When I first started doing research for this project, I began to think more about doing an environmental story about going green. Green has been everywhere, in supermarkets, clothing stores and some furniture stores too. It seemed as if everywhere I turned there was something new about green. So why not take it to the local level? I had read about Levittown becoming the Nation’s first green suburb but I didn’t know too much about it until I began my research and I found out a lot of people I knew who are from Long Island, didn’t even know about Green Levittown.

So what I wanted to do a story on was, what Green Levittown was about, but when I started doing interviews and I realized that green affects the economy just like everything else. Most of the green initiatives ask people to spend money they don’t have so the plans are not as effective as one may think at this time.

After having my research done, it came to interviewing time. Luckily, I didn’t really have that much trouble reaching my contacts, although there were a few people I wanted to talk to that never got back to me. The one thing about interviewing people that I learned is that their busy and so are you and it’s hard to find a time that fits into everyone’s schedule. Some re-scheduling had to be done but by Tuesday, April 7, 2008 all my interviews were complete.

Then came the hardest and most time-consuming part of the project: putting it all together. It took quite a while for me to figure out which bytes I wanted to use and cutting them down to two minutes was quite another challenge. I did my stand ups in the beginning before I actually got any of the interviews and looking back on it, I think they would have worked better if they had been done afterwards.

Transcribing the videos was a very tedious mission but it had to be done. It actually helped me figure out what clips to use for the main video and the quotes to write my story.

I also decided to do two photo essays to correspond with the Green Levittown story. The first was taken at Alure Home Improvements, where they have a green kitchen on display. In the captions I included what everything was made of and put a link to the photo slide show in the additional links part of the project. I also did another one on recycling; more so as a visual piece other than anything else.

I also decided to create a website for the project on synthasite to better organize all my materials and also provide a nice, clean presentation for the future.

I put a lot of work and effort into this project and am very happy with the results, even though it took over my life for two weeks. I am actually very excited to have something like this in my portfolio because it really shows the convergence of journalism and how I can actually be a converged journalist; doing video, photography, a website and of course the written article.

Green Levittown

Green Levittown

AMANDA: (0:00:00) County executive Tom Suozzi, wants Levittown to become the nation’s first green suburb, setting an example as it once did during post-war America for housing. Businesses in the area are offering discounts on energy star appliances as well as other goods. For some it may be just as simple as changing a light bulb.

ADRIENNE: (0:17:19) Green Levittown is an innovative program that brings together businesses, government, the public and also environmental groups. And our role right now is to do the community outreach and the community education.

HUBIE: (0:31:05) We are able to go in and show people how their home is performing from an energy stand point. We do various tests to come to specific numbers such as air loss and how good the insulation is in the house.

DENNIS: (0:44:18) Bio-fuel is a renewable source using agricultural resources. It decreases the omissions that are released into the environment and you don’t need to change your existing equipment to use it.

GARY: (0:56:08) The least expensive of the initiatives is to replace light bulbs

HUBIE: (1:05:29) All of these items do save money in the long run, they start saving money from the day it is done.

AMANDA: (1:08:17) But how do residents feel about going green?

GARY: (1:11:15) It’s difficult at this point now to ask people to dig into their pockets and spend $500, $2,000.

TOM: (1:21:17) I keep getting offers on a new oil burner that’s much more efficient and more green so to speak and I can’t afford to do it right now.

ADRIENNE: (1:21:19) What we are finding is that the economy is a hindrance for people to lay out money, but with the same token now with oil up way over $100 a barrel and home energy bills really skyrocketing. It really forces people to have to think about well I have to save money.

DENNIS: (1:46:26) Is it going to get larger? I really do believe so; I wouldn’t be surprised if you see a green Long Island come up in the near future.

AMANDA: (1:53:26) Outside of Tri-County flea market in Levittown, this is Amanda Brody reporting for Nassau News.

Gary Hudes, Councilman

Gary Hudes: Councilman

AMANDA: (0:00:00) Councilman, tell me how you feel about the green initiatives by Tom Suozzi as a resident and as a political leader in the community?

GARY: (0:11:04) Well, the green initiative in general is a great idea. The fact is that our future depends upon us becoming more eco-friendly more green. The county’s effort is certainly applauded. I don’t know how much success is being met at this point because it’s a tough time to do it. Right now people are not…people don’t have a lot of extra money to spend. And the initiatives right now as part of the green Levittown require, a great deal of it requires an input of money. Whether you are going to work on making your home more efficient, it requires money and the initiative to do that would cost a fair amount of money. And with the economy as it is softening a bit, it has become a little bit tough for people. And so it’s difficult at this point now to ask people to dig into their pockets and to spend $500, $2000 to insulate their homes and to make their homes more air tight or go out and buy more energy efficient appliances. The least expensive of the initiatives to replace light bulbs is one that actually interesting because I did it many years ago in my home and I went to the compact florescent bulbs. There is no downside to it except the fact that some of them just take a little longer to warm up. It’s not a bad price to pay to have it wait a few minutes for the lights to become brighter to a) save money and b) to make for a better environment.

GARY: (2:11:01) The Town of Hempstead’s been doing green initiatives for a long time now, with my partner Kate Murray, as town supervisor. As a matter of fact jus today I was sitting at a traffic light in Hempstead and I was looking at town hall and if you look on the south side of town hall you will see photocells covering the entire top of the building. Kate’s office and her conference room are all powered by those solar panels that are there. The town has also invested in some hybrid garbage trucks; we have some electric vehicles now in parks. Levy park as a matter of fact, which was a landfill at one point and was closed. The state wanted the town to cap it, which would have cost us a lot of money and instead at that time through supervisor Richard Giordano we capped it and turned it into a nature preserve. And again if your talking about going green you go to the top of the level preserve which is located on Merrick road and the Meadowbrook parkway. Go up to the top, it’s a nice healthy walk and when you get up to the top you’ll find a wind vain up there and that is actually powering, the wind is powering the water distribution at the top where there’s a pond

GARY: (3:41:18) As a matter of fact as part of the town’s green Levittown, we’ve been going to the schools. This school (Northside School) actually is on the list to be done but just yesterday we were in Stokes school in Island Trees where we are doing a program on recycling in the schools. The great thing about it is that the kids now are getting into the whole green idea. The fact that the county started the green Levittown if it does nothing more than get people aware, of thinking about greening, thinking about saving energy, thinking about the future then it’s accomplished its’ goal in my opinion. I think that the fact that we’ve had more and more children in the schools over the last year asking about recycling, interested in recycling and they’re not getting paid to do it. They’re taking it upon themselves to say you know what I want to do my part I want to do what I can, it’s my future. And you know I’m 52 years old, I don’t have the same future they have. And when we were kids there was no such thing as recycling and now it’s important, it was important then, only we didn’t know it. Now it’s certainly very very important so anything that helps is a great idea.

AMANDA: (5:10:11) Besides putting in the compact fluorescents have you done anything for your home?

GARY: (5:14:21) Yes as a matter of fact, actually many years ago I had an energy audit done. And just about 3 weeks ago, I had an energy audit done of my house, they actually did a wind test of my house and it cost me over $2,000 to have my house insulated better, the wind resistance cut down in the house or I should say increased they actually sealed a lot of the input into my house. And they showed me on this machine that the air is not blowing in and out of my house as much as it was before. They have told me that I’m going to save x amount of dollars by next year. I guess next year I will see if what they did is actually saving me money or else I’ll actually be calling the company back to come visit me again. But that’s why I speak first hand when I say a lot of people at this point don’t have $2000 to spend on that. I had been planning this all along to do some additional insulation in my house, so I was prepared for it. The greening has taken some people by surprise that they weren’t prepared to spend the extra money. But yea I did it in my house; I’m a firm believer. I’m very big on recycling. My term in office, I’m in office almost 9 years, I’ve personally delivered probably about 7,000 recycling bins to people’s homes because I want people to be encouraged to recycle. Because it’s such a waste to see broken cans and bottles and plastic bottles on the side of the road when I know they can go back in and be recycled. And the paper that we’re doing in the schools and I think it’s every 10 foot stack of paper you save a tree and for every group of bottles or cans it will take a couple of hours but it will run a television. All these things are important and they help are future.

Dennis Traina, VP Tragar Oil

AMANDA: (0:00:00) Ok, can you tell me a little bit about the company?

DENNIS: (0:01:28) Sure. My name is Dennis Traina and I’m the Vice President of Tragar Oil. I’m the third generation. We’ve been here for fifty years in Wantagh. We got involved with the green Levittown project, they actually seeked us out because we are a green energy company. What I mean by that is, from the paper that we use inside the office, to the energy star boilers we install, to the solar panels to the soybean blended heating oil that we deliver, I sort of think we are pioneers in bringing green energy to Long Island.

AMANDA: (0:37:26) You said the company’s been in business for over fifty years, has it always been green?

DENNIS: (0:43:08) No. Actually it’s an interesting story. It came from my sister who’s out in San Francisco and she pretty much sparked the green revolution over in San Francisco. And said you really have to pay attention to this and I did. And it went with my lifestyle; I’ve always been sort of living a green lifestyle. So six years ago it was.

AMANDA: (1:06:20) So how many homes, have recently, since the green initiatives from Suozzi, have been using your products?

DENNIS: (1:15:12) The project began in November. Since November, we’re responsible for two major initiatives. One is to replace as much heating equipment as possible, with energy star, high efficiency equipment. And I will mention that by replacing a heating system, the homeowner increases their efficiency of their heating system by 30 %. The average home uses about 800 gallons so they save 200 gallons of oil a year, by replacing their equipment. 200 gallons at $4 a gallon which is the current going rate, they’re saving approximately $800 a year just by installing the equipment. $800 times maybe 6 years, it pays for it self. It’s one of the greatest returns on your investment that homeowners can do to make their home a more efficient home.

AMANDA: (2:14:00) Now how much does it cost upfront? Is it more expensive upfront than a regular heating system?

DENNIS: (2:19:03) No. A heating system has pretty much has always been about the same, about $4500. There’s aggressive financing with green Levittown, with the Bethpage Federal credit union, where over a 10 year fixed loan the homeowner will actually pay a monthly payment and at the end of the year will make more money in the savings of the heating system than it will cost them to pay for the loans.

AMANDA: (2: 45:21) Can you tell me more about the soybean oil that you’re using?

DENNIS: (2:49:07) Sure. We use what is called a B5 blend, which is 5% soybean oil and 95% heating oil. We’re starting off with B5, they do b10, b20. But at this point the infrastructure on Long Island is best suited for B5 blend and what excites me about it is it’s starting something small and eventually, I don’t know if soybean will be the ideal choices, but we’re setting up an infrastructure for an alternative fuel. The reason why I don’t know if soybeans will be, as you’re probably aware they are a controversial issue as far as people how people are changing crops and destroying farm lands to make fuel based products. Ideally, about 5 years from know what we’re going to hopefully be selling is an algae based fuel It’s much healthier for the environment and it doesn’t affect the food chain.

AMANDA: (3:47:10) What do you think as a long island resident what Levittown is doing? How do you feel about it? And do you think it will eventually spread to the rest of the island?

DENNIS: (3:55:12) First I’m very proud of the project as an idea of how exciting the project is, tomorrow I leave for DC to help represent green Levittown at the national climate change summit. It got the attention as being the first project to actually take municipal government and local sponsors, like an oil company like myself and really change the mindset of one community and this summit how they do this and replicate this across the nation. So is it going to get larger? I really do believe so. I wouldn’t be surprised if you see a green Long Island come up in the near future although there’s no budgeting for it yet.


DENNIS: (4:45:05) Bio-fuel is a renewable source using agricultural resources. It decreases the emissions that are released into the environment and it doesn’t cost anymore, you don’t need to change your existing equipment to use it. It also is a cleaner fuel meaning that when it runs through your heating system it actually cleans out the oil lines, cleans out the heating system so it requires less service, making the homeowner more satisfied.

AMANDA: (5:12:19) Do you have anything else you want to tell me about?

DENNIS: (5:17:16) So far the results since the project began in November, we’ve actually replaces 37 boilers which may not seem like a tremendous amount considering there are 17,000 homes. However, there’s only 5,100 who still have original equipment and their only 30 per cent done with the canvassing. The CCE is going door to door and there’s about a month delay between when we knock on that door and we actually speak to the homeowner and then the homeowner has to make a decision to change the equipment and then we actually have to do the installation. I can tell you that there are hundreds of leads we’re still working with. And we’ve done a nice number of conversions to bio heat where people have switched to Tragar oil, so I believe we are really making a difference in Levittown.

AMANDA: (6:05:01) Do you have a lot lined up for the future? Like you just said it takes a little while for it to turn around, for you to install it and everything? Do you have a lot of appointment in the next couple of months to do installments?

DENNIS: (6:20:21) Right now is a unique time for this project to be taking place. We’re obviously in an economic recession so to say. We’re asking people in green Levittown to put on new roofs, change their heating systems, go with solar panels, making large investments on their homes when their probably looking to save money on their tax returns rather than spend them. We have a lot of estimates out there and now it’s really a turn to see what people will choose. And if they were to evaluate the savings for making a green decision they will actually spend money today but save it tomorrow, which would really be the best decision they could make.

Hubie van Meurs, Contractor Alure

Alure Home Improvements: Hubie Van Muers

AMANDA: (0:00:00) Could you tell me what Alure’s role is in the Green Levittown initiative that Tom Suozzi invoked this year?

HUBIE: (0:07:18) Well, we are a home performance contractor so we are able to go in and show people how their home is performing from energy stand point. We do various tests to come to specific numbers such as air loss and how good the insulation is in the house. And then we can make proposals as to what can be changed to makes the house perform better, reduce its energy use which then in return will reduce the carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide that’s put into the atmosphere. So it’s healthier for the planet and it’s healthier for the inhabitant, we often make the houses more comfortable. But the key factor is that we can make the home more energy efficient.

AMANDA: (0:49:14) Now have you done any of these yet in Levittown, like made anything greener?

HUBIE: (0:54:22) Yes, we’ve actually done work on three homes so far in Levittown. We’re at the very early part of the process we’re expecting that there will be many more to follow. The Citizens Campaign for the Environment is doing the door knocking and the follow up calls, so there’s a lot in the pipeline where people have professed an interest and we have yet to get out to them and do the various testing we need to do.

AMANDA: (1:19:03) Now, when you were showing me that counter, can you just talk about the materials being used, recyclables and stuff to build new interiors, exteriors?

HUBIE: (1:29:10) Well on the interior we have this green kitchen display, there are cabinets that have finished on them with low VOC, VOC is volatile organic compounds so it doesn’t pollute from that stand point. There are countertops that are 100 per cent post consumer used materials. The counter top that I was showing you inside is 93 per cent crushed concrete and 7 per cent broken glass. Basically comes in many different colors but it’s 100 per cent recycled equipment. There’s also natural materials used in there, rather than different type of laminates the floor is a ceramic even after it’s useful period is done when it goes into a landfill it is not harmful in any way shape or form that products like linoleum or plastics may be.

AMANDA: (2:24:22) Why has Alure decided to participate in this?

HUBIE: (2:28:02) Well, the green Levittown initiative, we wanted to become partners in that because 1. We do have a very strong sense of community as a company; we give back in many different ways. And we recognize, senior management does and the owners that we contribute not as a company but as people to the harmful effects that our living does to the environment and we’re in a position to be able to try and reverse some of that. And the guys, who run this company, have their heads in the right place on these types of issues. Not only can we do some good for the environment, it can also be a profitable area as well.

AMANDA: (3:13:07) So how do you feel like this is going to affect the rest of Long Island? Do you think Levittown will set an example?

HUBIE: (3:22:07) Well yes I do believe it will set an example. There are actually already some, well let’s call them copycats, there is an organization that is working to do something similar for the town of Plainview. And there are other initiatives starting up around the island. We are working to stay involved in any and all of those that we can. But we do think it is something that is going to spread.

AMANDA: (3:46:17) How important do you feel these green initiatives are, just in general as a resident?

HUBIE: (3:53:15)Well I think it’s very important. We have been contributing to the demise of the environment here on long island and that’s something that’s a national issue. Whether you're not you believe in global warming, a good number people do, many scientists do believe that and if we don’t start paying attention and making some changes and not just talking about it but actually changing our behavior we run the risk of having a serious serious issue in the future. We’re still at a point where all scientists agree, we haven’t reached a tipping point but if we don’t change behavior, we may well get there.

AMANDA: (4:32:04) Now what are the costs of some of these greener materials? Are they more expensive?

HUBIE: (3:39:07) Nah, the materials themselves if you look at materials for a kitchen are right in that competitive range. It does not add to the cost significantly, minor if at all. All the measures or remediation action that we take in your home is going to have a payback period. Some of them will pay for themselves within a few years in energy savings other ones may take 10 or more years. The bottom line though is that all these measures that we take will save energy, it’ll reduce your cost to heat and cool your home and it will pay for itself over time. So the ultimate cost, there’s none, it’s a value there’s savings involved. The upfront cost of having the work done, can run anywhere from $1,000 to depending on the size of the house or the seriousness of the issues $5,000 or $6,000 or possibly more if your going to change out your heating system, etc.

AMANDA: (5:35:15) So basically what your saying is that it might cost more upfront but in the long run it will save you money?

HUBIE: (5:40:22) Absolutely.

AMANDA: (5:43:06) With the economy the way it is right now, would you recommend that for Long Islanders, it would be more efficient to upgrade their homes to greener energy and sealing them and stuff?

HUBIE: (5:54:24) You know it’s not just the sales me in me saying this, but in each and every case the answer is yes it does make sense to do it right a way. All these items do save money in the long run; they will start saving money from the day it is done. And that’s important .You can think of it this way some people don’t want to go and spend the $9 it may be to replace a single light bulb when you buy a compact florescent to replace an old incandescent bulb. But each day that you run that incandescent bulb you’re using four to five times more energy than you need to. So the sooner you can get just get past throwing that bulb out and putting that new compact fluorescent in the sooner you start saving money.

AMANDA: (6:36:00) Do you think there are any negative effects of going greener?

HUBIE: (6:40:18) Right now I don’t see any, of course there are some issues with one thing that I just spoke about, the compact fluorescent bulb actually has mercury it, so it can’t go into the regular landfill, it needs to be collected and disposed of properly after it’s useful life. But other than that, green is something that really is a win win win, it’s a win for the environment, it’s a win for us a contractors and it’s a win for the homeowner’s budget.

Transcript: Adrienne Esposito, CCE

AMANDA: (0:00:00) Now what is the citizens campaign doing for Green Levittown?

ADRIENNE: (0:04:07) We are very involved in Green Levittown. Green Levittown is an innovative program that brings together businesses, government, the public and also environmental groups. Our role right now is do the community outreach and the community education so that the community of Levittown understands what their options and opportunities are to implement energy efficiency programs so that they can save money and save the environment at the same time. So what CC is actually doing is we hired a number of staff people to go door to door in the Levittown community and give out information, talk to members the community at their home and help them to understand the options. In addition CCE is also then doing follow up phone calls to those homes who have said that they are interested in knowing more and want to participate in the Green Levittown program. So we are doing extensive community outreach overall.

AMANDA: (1:02:07) How successful has the community outreach been in Levittown?

ADRIENNE: (1:05:07) It’s been fairly successful. There are 17,000 homes in Levittown and we have probably knocked on about 10,000 doors so far. And we have about 3,000 people who’ve said they would absolutely like to participate and implement some type of energy efficiency program in their home to reduce their carbon dioxide output, to save money and to also really combat global warming.

AMANDA: (1:29:24) Have anyone you’ve spoken to or your volunteers have spoken to, said anything about the economy being how it is now that they are not interested?

ADRIENNE: (1:39:26) Yes. It’s actually a double -edged sword. What we‘re finding is that the economy is a hindrance for people to lay out money but by the same token now with oil up way over $100 per barrel and peoples home energy bills skyrocketing it really forces people to have to think about well I need to save money. And the best way that people can to save money by putting in new boilers, which are now 30% more efficient so when you use 30% less oil, you’re saving a lot of money. So there are programs designed for green Levittown that will help people save money right now as soon as they implement them and reduce their oil costs. That’s actually a pretty big deal for people. So on one hand the economy makes it harder but on the other hand the cost of energy is so high right now and so daunting for the average home owner that it is really an impatience for people to make some changes.

ADRIENNE: (2:39:19) Anything from insulating peoples attics, putting in new windows so that the energy from the home is not literally going out right the window. As I said earlier new boilers, even just changing the light bulbs from the old standard light bulb to the new compact fluorescent bulbs. This will save people, if they change over 5 light bulbs per home, it can save them up to $200 per year in energy costs. So there are real and meaningful things and changes that people can make, that can really will make a difference in their household budget and make a difference for the environment.

AMANDA: (3:17:00) Do you think that Levittown will eventually spark other communities on Long Island and in the nation to follow in their path?

ADRIENNE: (3:23:28) We’re really hoping that Green Levittown will be a pilot program for an expanded concept such as this. So we started with Green Levittown, we’re learning a lot as we’re doing it. There was a lot that we needed to adjust and to improve on the program. We’re hoping that it will be a prototype for many communities to come. Perhaps the next step is to expand to one Suffolk and then do green Long Island. This is something that can be replicated and is designed to be able to be replicated throughout communities across the country. All communities should be implementing energy efficiency because it really is the cheapest, the easiest, the most effective thing we can do immediately to reduce our energy consumption, reduce our energy bills and save the plant at the same time.

AMANDA: (4:14:07) Is there anything else you would like to add about the campaign or about green Levittown?

ADRIENNE: (4:17:26) Well the goal of green Levittown is to get 5,000 people to participate in some way in this program. And our hope is to reduce the carbon dioxide output by 10% in the Levittown community. We should know probably in a couple of months if we’ve attained that goal or not but we’re really finding that people need a couple of months also to think about and implement these kinds of changes. So whether they’re going to get new windows or insulation or whatever it is that this takes time. So this is a yearlong project, we’re in it for the long haul. It’s not going to be a quick easy fix to save the planet and to save money. But yet it’s very real and very doable. So we’re excited about it and we think it’s going to be a big success.

Transcript: Tom Butcher Levittown Resident

Tom: Levittown Resident

AMANDA: (0:00:00) What do you think about the green Levittown initiatives, as a resident?

TOM: (0:06:18) I think it’s good, it’s not that inconvenient either. There’s recycling every Thursday. And basically all you have to do is get your plastics, glasses and stuff like that out and tie up your papers and put them in paper bags. So it’s a good thing.

AMANDA: (0:21:16) What about some of the other programs they are offering, like special discounts on things?

TOM: (0:27:14) I think that’s a big key because I think they have to give people, some people the reason to recycle unfortunately because some people just need that little push to get them going. So if they find out you can get a discount if you switch to star dishwashers or something like that, then I think that’s a good thing.

AMANDA: (0:46:27) So how aware do you feel the community is about all these initiatives including the recycling stuff?

TOM: (0:54:11) It seems to be that they are doing a big push in the media. I’ve seen it in a couple of local papers; I’ve seen it on the news. I even had a company come to my door, going door to door letting people know about the program and giving them more information if they wanted. So I think they’re letting people know about it, which is good.

AMANDA: (1:12:01) If the plan included maybe like raising taxes, do you think it would be different?

TOM: (1:18:25) Yes that could be a problem. Especially Levittown, Nassau is one of the highest taxed counties in the country so that would not be a good thing. I think it should be the other way around where you get tax breaks the more you recycle.

AMANDA: (1:31:08) Now a lot these things you could buy, like the energy star appliances, or you know re-fixing your home so it’s more insulated and stuff. A lot of these things are more expensive upfront but people say they are worth it in the long wrong. Do you think that’s.. a lot of people might not pay for things upfront because of how the economy is now?

TOM: (1:51:03) I think that could be a problem right now. I’m definitely in that situation myself. I keep getting offers on a new oil burner that’s much more efficient and more green so to speak and I can’t afford to do it right now so that might be an issue right now.

AMANDA: (2:05:16) And about the recycling stuff, how important do you feel it is that everyone recycles?

TOM: (2:10:25) I think it’s important because it’s not a big deal. I’m not a you know a major god let’s save the environment person. To me I find it not a big deal to just put my stuff in the recycle box instead of the garbage can so it’s not a big deal to recycle and I think everyone should.

AMANDA: (2:26:20) How do you see Levittown in like ten years from now?

TOM: (2:33:26) Hopefully there will be some more changes in it. I think like I said right now we wont see much of a change because of money being so tight and especially with the amount of taxes everyone in Levittown has to pay. But when things get better I think you’ll see a lot more changes with the people and the houses will definitely be going more green.

AMANDA: (2:50:17) And do you think that this initiative that Levittown is doing will spark other initiative around Long Island as well as in the country?

TOM: (2:58:02) Yea I do. I think other towns are going to catch on the bandwagon of going green. And they want to say hey we want to get in on that too and look good. Especially when you got politicians involved they want to say hey let’s look good. So I think it’s going to spread.

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Links Explained

Hempstead's E-Cycling Program "Computes" To A Clean & Green Levittown ... & Planet!
February 27, 2008
Supervisor Kate Murray and Councilman Gary Hudes have partnered in Levittown to continue the greening of America's largest township with some of the nation's most environmentally sound initiatives, including the successful E-Cycling Program. E-Cycling collects and re-cycles old computers and electronic equipment. "As a government and as a community we accept the responsibility of preserving a safe and healthy planet for generations to come," stated Supervisor Kate Murray.
The Town of Hempstead's first E-Cycling Program for 2008 is set for Saturday, March 15 from 8 am to 2 pm (rain or shine) in the town parking field off Division Avenue in Levittown behind the Tri-County Flea Market. The program is open to town residents only. A second E-Cycling Program is scheduled for Sunday, October 5 in Baldwin Park.
The E-Cycling Program will allow residents to dispose of unwanted computers, televisions, DVD players and VCRs in an eco-friendly fashion that prevents health-threatening toxic material, such as lead, mercury and arsenic, from entering the waste stream. In addition to the environmental positives, the town's E-Cycle Program protects the security and sensitivity of computer data by grinding all machines.
"In the six E-Cycling Programs to date, over 4,000 residents have participated and more than 291 tons of electronic equipment have been collected," added Supervisor Murray. "Town residents have clearly embraced the benefits of e-cycling and other environmental initiatives with great enthusiasm."
"E-cyling is just one avenue along the journey to environmental safety," observed Councilman Hudes. The town has become a municipal leader in the development of ecological safeguards by formulating earth friendly programs that are cost 'e'-ffective and energy 'e'-fficient."
With solar powered offices, pristine nature preserves, kayak eco tours, hybrid vehicles, progressive recycling and e-cycling efforts, and a successful S.T.O.P. program that collects dangerous household chemicals and pollutants, the town has adopted a pro-active environmental agenda.
"Preserving a safe and healthy planet for generations to come is a responsibility entrusted to each of us," commented Supervisor Murray. "Government has the unique ability to allocate resources and mobilize manpower to orchestrate environmental programs of immense value and widespread participation."
Having achieved the acclaimed status as "America's Largest Township," we are proud to add the banner as "America's Greenest Township." With resolute determination and unbridled optimism, the "greening" of our township continues with innovative programs such as e-cycling."
The town's 2008 E-Cycling Program welcomes the support of KJOY 98.3 fm, Tele Techie and Lenovo.
Welcome to the Levittown Chamber of Commerce website. Known as the birthplace of suburbia, Levittown is a large community, established in 1947 and occupying 6.9 square miles in the Township of Hempstead in Nassau County, Long Island. More than 50,000 people reside in 17,500 homes. The history of the Levittown Chamber of Commerce dates back to 1959. Currently, there are 150 members in the Chamber representing small mom and pop stores, corporations, banking institutions, real estate, retail, wholesale and service businesses, organizations, public and specialized schools, and a variety of other businesses. New members are always welcomed.
The Levittown Chamber of Commerce is a member of the Nassau Council of Chambers of Commerce and the Levittown Community Council, Inc.
Nassau County Executive Tom Suozzi kicked off plans to dub Levittown America’s first "green suburb". Mr. Suozzi has reached out to the community and schools to explain his initiative to reduce Levittown’s carbon footprint by 10% in 2008, and by even more in the future. This public-private partnership has begun with a door-to-door campaign to inform homeowners of ideas to help cut energy bills. The goal of this initiative is to retrofit Levittown’s 17,000 homes with energy-saving equipment, devices and home improvements at a reduced cost and affordable financing rates.
Mr. Suozzi would like to work closely with the schools, faculty and students to make Levittown “a model to be replicated for the rest of America”. He has spoken to the students at each of our elementary schools. He was most impressed as the students dressed in green and answered his questions regarding global warming. Mr. Suozzi gave citations to the East Broadway students who participate in the recycling club and spoke to the students encouraging them to recycle, to create projects to promote awareness of global warming, and to come up with ways to help clean up the planet.
Our elementary schools are teaching the students about the harmful effects of pollution and green house gases on our planet. East Broadway recycles paper and water bottles. The children of the recycling group wear “Go Green” aprons and hats and collect materials from the offices and classrooms.
The technology class at Jonas E. Salk Middle School recently completed an energy audit of the school building. The students collected data throughout the day relating to energy consumption. Their research also included a tour of the boiler room and learning about the new furnace that was recently installed. Their findings not only led to the students placing first in the FIRST Lego contest, but to the creation of a school-based advisory committee on energy conservation.
Both Division Avenue and MacArthur High Schools recycle cell phones and printer cartridges. In addition, both schools offer electives in Environmental Science as well an AP Environmental Science course in which students study environmental changes and impacts.
The Levittown Public Schools are already quite green. Our multi-year budget process has allowed the district to budget for and implement numerous capital improvement projects that continue to make our schools more energy efficient, saving money on energy costs, and making them more environmentally friendly. Many of our buildings have recently installed new energy efficient duel fuel heating systems, insulated roofing materials, energy efficient windows, motion sensor light switches, energy efficient light fixtures, and water saving devices. Additionally, the schools do not use pesticides and use green cleaning products.
As America’s first suburb celebrates its 60th anniversary, local, state, and national attention will once again focus on Levittown as it makes history again by becoming the first “green” suburb. For more information check the www.greenlevittown.com web site.
Few communities in America are as easily recognizable by name as Levittown, New York. In addition to its distinction as the childhood home of world famous singer/songwriter, Billy Joel, (who was actually raised in a Levitt home in nearby Hicksville) Levittown is the model on which scores of post World War II suburban communities were based - a place that started out as an experiment in low-cost, mass-produced housing and became, perhaps, the most famous suburban development in the world.
Many volumes have been written which provide comprehensive histories of Levittown, including its "pre-history" as a center of early Long Island aviation and its prominence as the host of the 1908 through 1910 Vanderbilt Cup Races. Some of these are available at our Museum Shop or at various Long Island libraries. For those of you who are interested in a basic outline, the following "mini-history" is extracted from the Levittown Historical Society's History Of Levittown, New York, by Lynne Matarrese.
In The Beginning: Island Trees
The story of Levittown begins with the story of the Hempstead Plains, sixty thousand acres of flat, treeless grasslands that was once considered the largest prairie in the eastern United States. It was here, in 1644, that a group of English colonists established Hempstead, the first permanent settlement in what later became Nassau County. Subsequently, through various grants and land deals, Hempstead was divided into territories, one of which became known as Island Trees, likely because it contained a tall group of pine trees that, from a distance, resembled an island unto itself.
The few early residents of Island Trees were mainly farmers of English descent. When the Long Island Rail Road extended its tracks from Jamaica to Hicksville in 1836, the Island Trees farmers found themselves with a new, more convenient means of transporting their goods to market - and for receiving shipments of feed and fertilizer. This made the area surrounding Hicksville highly attractive to German land developers, who soon purchased large parcels of land in the railroad's vicinity, which included Island Trees. Over the next several decades, small villages of immigrants, most from Germany, sprouted up around the area.
Island Trees' main cash crops in the late 1800s were cabbage and cucumbers, until a severe blight hit the area in 1912 and farmers shifted their attention to potato farming. Island Trees soon became the center of potato farming in Nassau County. But then, in the mid 1930s, farmers in the area suddenly began to experience serious potato crop damage brought on by a dreaded critter called the Golden Nematode. It was at the onset of this crisis that Abraham Levitt and his sons, Alfred and William, purchased an abandoned potato field in Island Trees at a "greatly reduced price."
Levitt & Sons
Abraham Levitt was a real estate lawyer by trade, but also dabbled in real estate investment, purchasing land and selling it off to developers in the late 1920s. When the onset of the 1930's Great Depression caused the developer of a Rockville Centre property to default on his payments, the senior Levitt was forced to complete the development himself to protect his investment. Having no previous experience with construction, he called on his two sons, in college at the time, for help. Together, Levitt & Sons labored to learn everything there was to know about construction techniques, and together, they completed the project.
Strathmore, as the upscale Rockville Centre development was called, was such a success that Levitt and Sons continued to purchase land and build new homes throughout the Depression. And, with each new development, their construction methods became more and more efficient. When the U.S. entered WWII in 1941, Levitt and Sons won a Navy contract to build homes for shipyard workers in Norfolk, Virginia. Here, they developed and perfected the mass production techniques they later used in the construction of Levittown, New York. It may have also been this experience that inspired William, the older of the Levitt sons, to enlist in the Navy in 1943.
Meanwhile, back home in Island Trees, the golden nematode had gained a strong foothold and was wiping out a large part of the area's potato crop, on which many local farmers depended for survival. By 1945 and the end of World War II, Island Trees farmers began looking to sell off affected land as quickly as they could.
At the same time, 16 million GI's were returning from either Europe, the Pacific, or from military bases in the United States. Many were planning to get married and raise families. But these former soldiers were running into trouble in their search to find suitable shelter for their new families. The war had created a shortage of construction materials and the housing industry had fallen off rapidly. At the end of 1945, the US was in dire need of about five million houses, as ex-GIs and their families were living with their parents or in rented attics, basements, or unheated summer bungalows. Some even lived in barns, trolley cars, and tool sheds.
During his service in Hawaii, Lieutenant William Levitt realized that the urgent need for post-war housing and the availability of cheap farmland provided a golden opportunity for his family to capitalize on their Island Trees property. He proposed to his father and brother that Levitt & Sons divide the former potato field into small lots and build simple, inexpensive mass-produced homes for veterans and their families. These returning servicemen were entitled to low-interest, insured "GI Loans," which would make the new Levitt homes easily affordable and, therefore, highly attractive.
The blueprint for the postwar American way of life was written in the culs-de-sac of new developments like Levittown, N.Y., the Long Island community that calls itself the country's first suburb. Beginning in 1947, developer Bill Levitt's armies of builders churned out house after house, transforming a bare potato field into a centrally planned town that today is home to 53,000 people. Low-cost and low-interest loans enabled the working class to flee dense cities for the new suburbs, while cheap cars and cheaper gasoline supported their long commutes to urban workplaces. Three-bedroom houses, two cars in the driveway? The suburbs were about having more, and more became the American Dream.
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But that manifestation of the American Dream came at a cost: soaring energy use, which is higher per capita in the U.S. than in almost any other country. "What is causing global warming is the lifestyle of the American middle class," says Miami-based architect Andres Duany, a longtime proponent of sustainable design.
That makes what is happening in Levittown today so important. County officials, along with environmentalists and local businesses, recently launched the Green Levittown program, which aims to persuade residents to upgrade their homes, improving energy efficiency and cutting fuel bills. Volunteers signed up to canvass Levittown's 17,000 homes starting Jan. 15. Their mission is to introduce the program and offer to schedule an energy audit (approximately $300) that can identify cost-effective renovations. Those who choose to participate--replacing an inefficient hot-water boiler, adding solar thermal power--can finance the upgrades with reduced-interest loans offered by a local credit union. "For all the attention paid to global warming in the media or internationally, this will be something to show to actual people that they can make a difference in their own lives," says county executive Tom Suozzi.
Given that many houses date back to Levittown's creation more than 60 years ago, there is great potential for efficiency improvements, and an energy overhaul may not be a tough sell in the era of triple-digit oil. Suozzi hopes the program--which runs through Earth Day, April 15--will enlist about 5,000 households and shrink Levittown's carbon footprint 20%. But the real benefit may be even greater. "There is nothing more Middle America than Levittown," says Stan Bratskeir, a public relations executive who co-organized the program with Suozzi. "If we can demonstrate this here, we can do it anywhere."
Greening house by house is already catching on--the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) extended its Leadership in Energy and Design (LEED) rating system to residences to meet the interest in more environmentally friendly homes. But the next steps will be tougher. The sprawl of the suburbs has ensured that much of the energy we consume--and carbon we emit--comes from our dependence on cars. Until we change the layout of our neighborhoods--reversing the suburban ideal of semi-isolated homes--living green won't be easy. "Having a green neighborhood and a green home are two different things," says Michelle Moore, a vice president at USGBC.
As it happens, USGBC recently launched LEED-Neighborhood Development, a new rating system that evaluates how the layout of a development has an impact on the environment. Green features on individual homes will count, but so will designing a neighborhood dense enough to make walking to the office or store a simple task, not an epic journey. "The building is a piece," says Douglas Farr, a Chicago-based architect who helped design the rating system. But "it's part of a bigger system." Making the suburbs truly green will take a construction revolution every bit as sweeping as the one that created Levittown out of thin air six decades ago.
Widely regarded as the first mass-produced suburb and the archetype for postwar neighborhoods, Long Island's Levittown is again on the cutting edge of design and modern living. This week Nassau County Executive Thomas Suozzi jump-started the much-anticipated effort to remake the community as a pioneering Green Suburb, as Newsday reports.
Suozzi began the process of canvassing Levittown's 17,000 homes with the goal of getting residents to sign on to public/private partnerships based on saving energy and money. The heart of the program is that homeowners can receive special discounts on energy efficient items, such as $500 off and 10 free trees when purchasing a soy-based bioheat furnace from Tragar Oil. Residents get 20% of all Satco CFLs and gift cards back upon purchase of Energy Star appliances from P.C. Richard & Son.
Other program partners include the Citizens Campaign for the Environment, Alure Home Improvements and Bethpage Federal Credit Union.
Historic Levittown, which was built between 1947 and 1951 by the firm of Levitt & Sons, Inc., hopes this program will catch on nationwide. The initiative's website is Green Levittown.
Long Island's Alure Home Improvements is Going Green, and Holding Design &
Planning Show to Kick Off the Program
EAST MEADOW, N.Y., Jan. 15 /PRNewswire/ -- On November 14th, Nassau County
Executive Tom Suozzi announced plans to dub Levittown, America's first suburb,
the first "green" suburb and he announced a public-private partnership that
will take measures to reduce Levittown's carbon footprint by a fifth. From the
statement: The program aims to reduce Levittown's carbon footprint by 20%
next year by retrofitting Levittown's 17,000 homes with energy-saving
equipment, devices and home improvements at reduced cost an affordable
financing rates. Partners in the program include Alure Home Improvements,
Tragar Oil, LIPA, Keyspan, Bethpage Federal Credit Union, Satco products,
Intellidyne, Earthkind Energy, and Citizen's Campaign for the Environment.
Alure will be holding their own Design & Planning Show this weekend to
help educate the community on the Green Levittown program, as well as their
partnership with LIPA as a Home Performance Energy Contractor and will show
off their environmentally green kitchen display, one of many new displays in
their fully remodeled three-floor showroom.
The event is Saturday, January 19th thru Monday, January 21st, from 10am -
6pm each day. The show is open to the public and will include free educational
seminars, free food, raffles and prizes and special promotions for those
attending.
Alure continues to set the bar for remodeling companies with their
dedication to customer service and commitment to the community. In March of
2007, Alure President & CEO Sal Ferro led Alure through their sixth renovation
for ABC's Emmy winning show Extreme Makeover: Home Edition, building a
recreation center at Clearpool Education Center in Kent, NY, a 100-year-old
non-profit camp that caters to underprivileged children in the tri-state area.
Alure is the area's premier home remodeler, specializing in kitchens,
baths, finished basements, siding, windows, roofing, sunrooms, dormers and
extensions and is an authorized installer for the Owens Corning Basement
Finishing and SunSuite Sunroom Systems. In business since 1946, Alure prides
itself on friendly and knowledgeable salespeople, creative designers,
meticulous installers, and superior lifetime customer service. Alure was
recently recognized by Forbes Magazine and awarded a Forbes Business
Enterprise Award for exceptional customer service and commitment to community.
Alure's Long Island showroom is located at 1999 Hempstead Turnpike in East
Meadow, NY. For more information about Alure, call 877-44-ALURE or visit
www.alure.com
The blueprint for the postwar American way of life was written in the culs-de-sac of new developments like Levittown, N.Y., the Long Island community that calls itself the country's first suburb. Beginning in 1947, developer Bill Levitt's armies of builders churned out house after house, transforming a bare potato field into a centrally planned town that today is home to 53,000 people. Low-cost and low-interest loans enabled the working class to flee dense cities for the new suburbs, while cheap cars and cheaper gasoline supported their long commutes to urban workplaces. Three-bedroom houses, two cars in the driveway? The suburbs were about having more, and more became the American Dream.
But that manifestation of the American Dream came at a cost: soaring energy use, which is higher per capita in the U.S. than in almost any other country. "What is causing global warming is the lifestyle of the American middle class," says Miami-based architect Andres Duany, a
longtime proponent of sustainable design.
Use cast iron pans instead of nonstick. Read about Teflon health concerns.
2
To avoid chemicals leaching into food, go easy on processed, canned or fast foods and never microwave plastic. Read about Bisphenol A, a toxic food-can lining ingredient associated with birth defects.
3
Buy organic, or eat vegetables and fruit from the "Cleanest 12" list. Find out more about the "Dirty Dozen."
4
Use iodized salt to combat chemical interference from the thyroid. Read about rocket fuel's effect on the thyroid.
5
Seal outdoor wooden structures. Order a test kit to find out if your wooden deck, picnic table, or playset is leaching arsenic.
6
Leave your shoes at the door. This cuts down on dust-bound pollutants in the home.
7
Avoid perfume, cologne and products with added fragrance. Search for personal care products that are fragrance-free, or check the products you're already using.
8
Buy products with natural fibers, like cotton and wool, that are naturally fire resistant. Use our list of products and manufacturers to avoid the chemical flame retardant PBDE.
9
Eat low-mercury fish like tilapia & pollock, rather than high-mercury choices like tuna & swordfish. Check our Safe Fish List to see which fish to avoid and what's safe to eat.
10
Filter your water for drinking and cooking. How does your tap water stack up? Search our tap water database to see what you're drinking.
Half the cuts in greenhouse gas emissions needed to make the world safe can be achieved at a net profit to the global economy, a study has found. Investing about $170 billion a year worldwide into energy efficiency would yield a profit of about 17 percent, or $29 billion. The energy savings would be equivalent to 64 million barrels of oil a day, while the cost would amount to about 0.4 per cent of GDP. The study also found that the most inefficient sector in the world is heavy industry in China, with the second being residential housing in the US, where homes are large, poorly insulated and equipped with a range of appliances that are often themselves inefficient or poorly used, such as air-conditioning systems left on unnecessarily. Full Article
By Fiona Harvey © 2008 The Financial Times Ltd
US Energy Dept Sets New Power Transformer Efficiency Rules
October 12, 2007 - SmartMoney
New York -- Under a new rule, new electricity transformers will need to be 38% more efficient than current models. However, this measure still falls short of the standards requested by both utilities and environmentalists. Transformers only lose about 1%-2% of electricity through heat, but because there are millions of them in the United States tremendous amounts of energy could be saved through improved efficiency. The implementation of this requirement is expected to save 320 billion kilowatt hours of electricity over the next 29 years, according to the DOE. Full Article
By Matthew Dalton © 1995 - 2007 SmartMoney © 2007 Dow Jones Newswires
After Oil and Gas, Sahara Sunshine?
August 11, 2007 - The Boston Globe
Algiers, Algeria -- Work has begun on a 150 megawatt hybrid power plant that will use a combination of solar energy and natural gas. This is part of a larger plan to tap the vast amount of land in North Africa and the high amount of solar radiation that hits the area everyday. The potential for energy production is huge since the country receives enough sunshine to meet Western Europe's needs 60 times over. Full Article
By Aidan Lewis © 2007 The Associated Press © 2007 The New York Times Company
House Shifts $16 Billion Toward Renewable Energy
August 5, 2007 - Planet Ark
Washington -- The U.S. House of Representatives passed a Democratic rewrite of U.S. energy policy that strips $16 billion in tax incentives away from Big Oil and puts it toward renewable energy sources like wind and solar power. Included in the bill is an amendment that would require U.S. utilities to generate 15 percent of their electricity from renewable sources like wind and solar by 2020. Republicans criticize the lack of drilling incentives and “green pork.” The White House threatened to veto the bill on concerns that it could boost energy prices. Full Article
By Chris Baltimore © 2007 Reuters © 2007 Planet Ark
U of D Researcher Says Seeds from Salt-Tolerant Plant a Promising Source of Biodiesel
July 10, 2007 - ENN
Lewes, Del. -- The seashore mallow could be a source of biodiesel in the future. The oil composition is similar to that of soybeans and cottonseed, however annual plantings are not required and because the plant is salt-tolerant it can grow in areas where other crops cannot, so additional land does not need to be diverted away from other crops. The stems of the plant can be used for cellulosic ethanol, the roots can be used to make industrial gum, and the meal left over can be used for animal feed. Full Article
By Randall Chase © 2007 The Associated Press © 2007 ENN
Nearly Half of Electricity From Renewable Resources By 2030: Berlin
July 5, 2007 - Yahoo! News
Berlin -- Germany plans to generate 45 percent of it's electricity from renewable sources by 2030. The country has already surpassed it's previous goal of 12.5 percent by 2010. Full Article
New York Cares wants you -- on Saturday, April 12! That’s when we are mobilizing 5,500 volunteers to help give our city’s public spaces their annual spring-cleaning. Please join us for a day of good green fun as we revitalize local parks, gardens, playgrounds, community centers, homeless shelters, and schools. Here’s how you can help:
• Start a team and recruit a team of volunteers to join you. Online Team Registration for Hands On New York Day has now closed. To start a team, please call 212-228-5000.
Putting REAL Creamer in My Coffee
Remember last month when I was all jazzed up about trying to cut some High Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS) out of my diet? If you don't remember, don't feel too bad, I forgot too. That's me in a nutshell. All pissed off about something one day, distracted by a shiny object the next. You really have no idea how amazed I am that I still even write in this blog!
Seriously.
Well, I've got HFCS change #2 for you today. It is to replace my usual CoffeeMate Hazelnut Yum-O-Riffic Chemical Concoction with good, old fashioned cream and sugar. Not only does this entirely nix any morning HFCS, but it also means one less #2 plastic bottle per week. Instead I will be using cream purchased in a returnable glass bottle (same dairy that produces our regular milk). And the sugar? Comes in a big ol' paper sack.
I made the switch over two weeks ago and I must say, I don't miss the flavors. much. I thought that the calories in the cream would be a tad high, but because it is so.... well, "creamy", I find that I use much less of it than I thought I would.
Savings:
HFCS plus one plastic bottle each week. Two birds with one stone. Good stuff.
Difficulty Level: 1 out of 5
As long as the COFFEE part is still there, everything will be ok. Mess with the java though? Now that would be a recipe for disaster!
0 comments
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
#190 - IT BURNS! IT BURNS!
Using Hot Pasta Water to Kill Weeds
Imagine, if you will, a quiet suburban street. An eco-dork housewife is busily preparing a homecooked meal of spaghetti with red sauce. As she drains the pasta, she laments the fact that she is pouring perfectly good hot water down the sink.
In another dimension, in a house just like the first, another 'green' woman is wondering what sort of eco-friendly solution she could find that would eliminate those pesky driveway weeds that keep popping up between the cracks.
Coincidence? Perhaps. Or perhaps there's more to this story.
Perhaps both these ladies have access to a fifth dimension called - the interwebbies. Where they both discover that...
BOILING WATER KILLS WEEDS!
So when you see me out in my driveway pouring my dinner on dandelions, you'll know what I'm doing. Now if you wouldn't mind explaining it to the neighbors so they don't think they're in a bad episode of the Twilight Zone, I'd appreciate it.
Savings:
Give or take 1 gallon of hot water per week.
Difficulty Level: 3 out of 5
Most of my changes can't really be seen by others, so this does take me a little out of my comfort zone. But since they're going to be seeing me growing a veggie garden in the flower beds and herbs in the window boxes this summer, they might as well start getting used to my Serling-esque ways.
12 comments
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
#189 - Be A Trendsetter
Shut Off the Lights in Public Bathrooms
Picture this: You're at Starbucks. You've just purchased a non-fat, no whip Mocha Latte and a couple of, what appear to be, two week-old chocolate glazed donuts for the kiddos when the little one turns to you and says "I go boopey."
Great. Hands full of coffee and "fresh" food, protected only by a thin paper bag, you head for the germtopia that is the public bathroom. You open the door to the single-serve potty room and find the lights and fan have been left on, just waiting for the next person to "boopey". You do your thing, wash up and head back out.
But what happens when you open that door and the lights are off? Sure, you flick 'em on, but then you shut them back off when you leave, right? I know I do. It's the old "Leave it as you found it" mentality. Why does this happen? How the hell should I know? I'm not a psychiatrist. I just know it's true. We tend to do whatever the last guy did because, hey, he's done it so it must be right. Let's face it, we are a species of followers.
So from now on, I'm going to be the trendsetter who shuts the lights off. Hopefully, the next person after me will do the same and the lights will be left off in that bathroom for a least a couple more boopeys. Who knows.
I wouldn't recommend this in those multi-stall bathrooms though. That might piss someone off. Or result in someone being pissed on. Either way, it wouldn't be good.
Savings:
Incalculable. Unless I want to hang out in Starbucks all day watching people go in and out of the crapper. If I had more free time, maybe I would. They've got wi-fi you know.
Difficulty Level: 1 out of 5
So many of the changes I make are just about being more aware. More conscious of your actions. Living in 'The Now'. All that zen stuff. This is one of those changes.
8 comments
Monday, March 10, 2008
#188 - Dropping A Brick In The Toilet
Sounds Like A Euphemism For Taking A Crap
But it's not. It's actually a way of further reducing the amount of water you use every time you flush the toilet. Only, in my case, I didn't use a brick. I used three empty glass honey jars I had sitting around - one for each toilet tank in the house. I filled each one with two cups of water and placed it in the tank, away from all the moving flushy-type stuff.
Tada! Instant water savings every time I flush! Which is much less often than it used to be (yeah, have I mentioned that this is a slippery slope change? Once you get used to seeing pee in the toilets, you tend to stop flushing unless the toilet paper is actually coming up over the rim ;-).
Also, have I mentioned how much I am LOVING Technology-Free Day? The only downside is it doesn't leave me much time to work on my Monday post, so they end up being kind of short. Like this one.
Savings:
Two cups of water per flush and I'd say we're now averaging eight flushes per day. So 8 x 2 = 16 cups per day, or one gallon. In one week, that's seven gallons of water. In a year, 365 gallons saved! That shaves another percentage point off my riot numbers! Woo Hoo!
Difficulty Level: 1 out of 5
This literally could not be easier. Fill jars with water. Set jar in tank. Forget about it forever. The only caveat I'd give is to make sure the labels are off the jars. You don't want them to come off and float around in the tank -- they might interfere with the flushing mechanism.
12 comments
Sunday, March 9, 2008
Are You Sick Of Planned Obsolescence in Your Electronics?
Even more disgusted with the fact that you can't repair these crappy products, that you have to dispose of them and buy new? Well, you're not alone. Not by a long shot! And thanks to the efforts of the Electronics Takeback Coalition, you've got a chance to let your complaints be heard.
The Electronics TakeBack Coalition is a national coalition of non-profit organizations promoting responsible recycling and green design in the electronics industry. Beth Terry, the infamous Fake Plastic Fish blogger, contacted ETBC last week about issues she was having with her piece of crap HP Monitor that can't be repaired. Turns out, ETBC loved to hear her story and wants to hear from any of you who have similar Dead Gadget stories. Here's the email she received from Barbara Kyle of ETBC:
We have focused on the recycling end of the e-waste problem. But we want to do more on promoting reuse, and green design concepts that allow us to hang on to our electronic products longer, and to upgrade them to keep up with advances in technology. So far, the industry has focused on energy as the primary criteria for “green design.” While we don’t disagree that energy use by the product is important, the energy used to create new products is even more significant, and could be reduced if our products simply lasted longer.
We want dead gadget stories!
We would love to receive stories just like the one you documented on your blog, showing clearly how products simply can’t be fixed or upgraded, because of clear choices made by the product designers. Please send your stories to Stories@deadgadgets.com and include the following information:
• Make and model
• Year they bought it. Is it under warranty?
• Why it’s dead. (Doesn’t turn on, won’t reboot, can’t upgrade it to run certain software, etc)
• Steps taken to try to fix it, or cost to fix it. (Here’s where your story was incredibly compelling. You didn’t just say your monitor died – you found someone who tried to fix it, identified the part needed, made the call, and then was rebuffed. So asking your readers to fill in this part would be great. Making the call to get an estimate on what it would cost to fix it (vs replace it) is good. But actually getting the company to say they WON'T sell you a replacement part gets to the heart of the issue. So that’s an extra step, but if you could ask them to document this, it will help us tell this story. Feel free to include whom they spoke with at the companies, so there can be no question of misunderstanding.)
• Picture of the dead gadget. (Be sure we can see the manufacturer name or logo!) For our dead gadget gallery (soon to come). This request includes broken TELEVISIONS, not just computer-type devices.
According to Beth, Barbara also added that if there are any serious reuse and upgrade geeks out here, she'd love to talk to them in more detail about how they could do a more thorough “study” of this issue, trends they see with different companies, etc.
So if you've suffered similar frustrations, please take a minute to send your story to Stories@deadgadgets.com and help persuade companies to take responsibility for the products they release into the world.
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Saturday, March 8, 2008
Story Hour XVI
Story Hour is a collection of short, autobiographical stories written by my father about growing up on a farm in rural Upstate New York.
The School
SAGE DISTRICT NO. 6. The neat, white, one room school sat on the crest of the hill between Sawmill Road and Upton Road. In addition to the classroom there was a boy’s cloak room with a toilet and a girl’s cloak room and toilet.
There was no running water, but a washstand with a basin and a pail of water provided the means to wash your hands. The toilets were the conventional farm type except they had a cement pit for cleaning out the waste material instead of moving the building. The clean out job was hired out to a local farmer or student willing to earn a dollar or two.
Strategically located was a wood burning heater. If the teacher was female, arrangements were made during cold weather to have one of the older boys come to school a little early to start the fire and get the school warmed up. Some years we had a man for a teacher and he would perform this task. The well and pump were located by the front steps on a concrete pad. I had a rather traumatic experience with that concrete pad at a later date.
Off to one side of the yard was the recess area consisting of a swing set with four swings and a trapeze bar. The yard was large and maintained for the usual games of tag, foot races and other physical activities.
Multiple windows provided adequate light as there was no electricity and I don’t recall seeing any lamps there during the seven years I attended the school. I do not remember there ever being an evening social event.
The desks were neatly arranged in rows, with the black cast iron frames and seats secured to the floor with screws. The tops of the desks did not lift up but had a shelf beneath for storage of books and papers. The top surfaces were invariably ink-stained and marked up with more than a few initials carved into the wood.
The teacher’s desk was of modest size and was, of course the focus of all attention. There was also a work table for projects and a world globe on an iron stand for geography lessons. A rack of pull-down maps gave an enlarged view of various countries and continents.
The library consisted of a few well-worn primers, some classic chapter books, a large dictionary and various arithmetic books. Other books that were needed could be obtained from Sandy Creek central school by the teacher. Ball point pens did not exist so each desk was furnished with an ink well. We were considered modern so we didn’t use turkey quills, but steel nibs on the scratchy pens. Penmanship was very important and many hours were spent doing the “Palmer Method” practice. Somehow I fell through the cracks on that deal.
The official school day started with a “Good morning students,” from the teacher. The reply was a resounding,”Good morning Mr. or Mrs. Blank,” in unison.
“We will start as usual with the younger classes and their reading lessons.”
Each student would stand and read from the assigned pages or report on an event. Sometimes the teacher would ask for a definition of a word or a personal reaction to a bit of dialogue. The rest of the pupils were expected to behave in a much disciplined manner and concentrate on their own lessons.
Of course there were whispers and giggles as the enthusiasms of young people exceeded the rules. A sharp rap on the desk with a long wooden pointer and a stern look at the offender usually restored order allowing the classes to continue.
As the school day progressed, the teacher would, after the allocated time with an age group or class, move on up to the next higher grade. The lessons got a little more involved; arithmetic reared its ugly head and demanded recitation of multiplication tables.
Quite a bit of the learning process at that time was having a good memory. Practice and recitation was the best route to good grades. Having been exposed to the one room system and then going to a centralized system where you stayed with your own class and changed classrooms several times a day. I have ambivalent feelings as which system is best.
I have to confess I do not recall if we carried our lunch or went home to lunch. I suspect that when there was good sledding we went home and made sure not to overshoot the driveway or we would be late getting back. If we carried our lunch it would have been bread and jam.
At one time the U.S. Department of Agriculture instituted a “Hot Lunch Program.” Mr. Butterworth brought in a couple of sauce pans from his kitchen and us kids each brought in a spoon and a cup or mug. At lunch time the can opener was put into operation and three cans of red kidney beans (surplus foods) and a can of evaporated milk (also surplus) with an additional can of water were mixed together and heated on the stove. This then, was the government’s idea of what a hot lunch should consist of. Mom generously contributed a loaf of bread occasionally. For some reason the delivery of the food was rather sporadic for a while, then stopped completely.
By late afternoon the teaching day reached its pinnacle - seventh and eighth grade. That was as high as one could go. From this point on it was up and out to high school. Something mysterious called “Algebra” and another creature called “Geometry” entered the vocabulary.
My own children have seen many changes in teaching methods with the “New Math”, Number lines and a general deterioration of standards. Unfortunately, many of our students are emerging from school as functional illiterates. Many cannot figure out what their pay checks should be. Simple basic arithmetic is beyond their comprehension.
As I told all of my kids, "The most important thing you can learn is to read and understand what you are reading. If you can do this then you can LEARN ANYTHING.”
1 comments
Friday, March 7, 2008
#187 - Oh Say Can You See...
By The Dawnzerlee© Light?
Ok, there are several ways you can change your indoor lighting habits in order to save energy. The two you hear about most often are the suggestions to switch to CFLs or remember to turn out the lights when you leave the room. What very few folks talk about is not bothering to turn them on in the first place.
Spring is in the air here in America and the days are getting longer. So I'm trying to be more conscious about flickin' the lights on during the day. Do I need all three lights on in the living room? I mean, I'm only hanging laundry, how bright does it need to be? Do I need any lights on at all?
Generally speaking, when I walk into a room I turn on the lights without even thinking. It could be as bright as Doogie Howser and I still flip the switch. My personal favorite is when I catch myself turning on the lights in the kids' bath during the day. I certainly don't need that light on, since there is a huge skylight in there that floods the room with tons natural sunlight every day from 8 am - 5 pm.
So instead of automatically reaching for the "on" switch every time I enter a room, I'm going to first assess whether or not I actually need the lights on. Because sometimes, being really bright is really quite dim.
Savings:
Assuming each light I flick on is a CFL that runs at 18 watts, and assuming I'm avoiding a measly 5 hours of lighting per day, that equates to 2.8 kWh per month or 33.6 kWh per year. Not a ton, but if I convince just 10 of you to make this change and those ten each convince ten friends to do it and then those folks convince another ten, together we will save over 33,000 kWh each year and have the base for a very lucrative ponzi scheme.
Difficulty Level: 1 out of 5
This is yet another one of those wasteful habits that is so ingrained in our daily lives that it takes a bit of focus to change it. But, after concentrating on it for a couple of weeks, it will become second-nature and I will win the title of the "Dimmest Bright Idea".
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Nassau County Executive Tom Suozzi (D) has a challenge for Levittown, America's first suburb - go green.
"We want to make this the best example of a green suburb anywhere in the United States of America," he says.
Suozzi jump-started GreenLevittown this week, an initiative that plans to reduce the town's carbon footprint - or the amount of carbon dioxide produced - by 10 percent during 2008 through various energy-saving means. Representatives for the campaign will be going door-to-door to all 17,000+ homes in Levittown to urge citizens to lead a green lifestyle.
"Our job is to engage and energize the members of the public to participate in this meaningful program," says Adrienne Esposito, executive director of the Citizens Campaign for the Environment. "We are going to go these homes with a simple message: going green in your home will save you green in your wallet."
GreenLevittown has partners across LI offering deals. Residents will receive discounts on things like fluorescent light bulbs from Satco and Energy Star appliances from P.C. Richard & Son. There are also low-interest loans specifically for energy-saving appliances from Bethpage Federal Credit Union and Intellidyne, as well as state and federal tax incentives.
Ultimately, Suozzi said, he wants to get everyone in Levittown involved, and it won't take much to do that.
"Our goal is to have 100 percent participation in Levittown," he says. "Not everybody is going to put in a solar panel in, or change their boiler or change their windows, because those are big projects. But we want everybody to at least change a light bulb in their household."
Install dimmer switches where dimmed lighting makes sense, like the dining room and hallways. Any light bulb dimmed by 25 percent (including incandescents) will use roughly 20 percent less energy. Dimming one 75 watt incandescent by 25 percent for only 4 hours a day will save you 30 pounds of carbon over the course of the year. Start dimming around the house and watch the savings add up!
Save even more money with a dimmable CFLs, which last up to 10 times longer and use 75 percent less energy than incandescent bulbs. For a list of brands and where to buy them, read Fresh Finds.
© The Green Guide, 2008
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Convert to Green Power
Filed under: Energy, renewable energy, Wind energy, Green Power
11:05 am - February 4, 2008
The next step I am going to take to reduce my CO2 footprint is to switch to green power. I live in New York City, and my utility is Con Edison. They have a program called Green Power for residents and business customers. By selecting Green Power, I can buy electricity generated from regional wind and low-impact hydropower sources.
Con Edison makes it incredibly easy for its customers to sign up online simply by entering one's service information. And although it costs a bit more, ConEd's Green Power costs only an additional one cent per kilowatt-hour (kWh) more than the utility's standard offer and Wind Power just 2.5 cents per kilowatt-hour (kWh) more, making it a very affordable way to make a difference. By switching to Green Power for the energy needs of my 2-bedroom apartment (which averages out to be about 925kWh/month) I'm reducing my CO2 emissions by about 795 pounds per month.
More than 50 percent of retail customers in the United States now have an option of purchasing a green power product directly from their electricity supplier. By doing so, you can support increased development of renewable energy sources, which can reduce the burning of fossil fuels, such as coal, oil and natural gas. Greater reliance on renewable sources also provides economic benefits and can improve our national energy security.
Even if your state is not implementing electricity market competition, you may still be able to purchase green power through your regulated utility. More than 600 regulated utilities spanning more than 30 states offer "green pricing" programs (see our map of green pricing programs). The term green pricing refers to an optional utility service that allows customers to support a greater level of utility investment in renewable energy by paying a premium on their electric bill to cover any above-market costs of acquiring renewable energy resources.
Finally, whether or not you have access to green power through your utility or a competitive electricity marketer, you can purchase renewable energy certificates (RECs). RECs (also known as green tags, green energy certificates, or tradable renewable certificates) represent the environmental attributes of power generated from renewable electric plants. A variety of organizations offer RECs separate from electricity service, that is, you need not switch from your current electricity supplier in order to purchase these certificates.
To find out what green power options are available in your state, visit the "Can I Buy Green Power in My State?" web page maintained by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory and the Department of Energy, where you can click on your state to view available green power products.
I was also curious to know whether the Green Power offered by Con Edison was certified. Indeed, it is, by a well-respected organization called Green-e, a voluntary certification and verification program for wholesale, retail, and commercial electricity products, tradable renewable certificates (TRCs) and utility green pricing programs in the U.S. Green-e certifies about 100 retail and wholesale green power marketers across the country. To be sure that your green power purchase will benefit the environment, check out Green Power Consumer Protection.
© The Green Guide, 2008
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Turn Down Your Thermostat
Filed under: Energy saving measures, Carbon reduction
4:55 pm - January 29, 2008
Before you leave for work these wintry mornings, make the thermostat your final stop. During cold months, lowering the thermostat 10 degrees when no one is home can save 326 pounds of CO2 over the course of the year, and can reduce heating costs by ten percent. Plus, you'll avoid the sensation of walking straight in from the cold to the sauna. Instead, your home will warm up gradually as you do.
If you have an afternoon free, go on a hunt for heat leaks around the home. Hold a lit beeswax candle next to windows, doors, ceiling fixtures and any other seams in your walls. If the flame flickers to the side or (worse yet) is blown out, you've got a leak. Caulking, sealing or weather-stripping gaps will boost your heat savings and will allow you to turn down the thermostat even more. Try Geocel's VOC-free Quick Shield sealant (www.geocelusa.com) or other low-VOC varieties.
Lastly, never turn the heat off completely (or below 55 degrees during freezing weather), or you'll likely come home to frozen pipes!

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

VIEW TAG CLOUD

Green Links

http://www.townofhempstead.org/
TOWN OF HEMPSTEAD
Levittown is located in the town of Hempstead, which lists the latest news and events going on in the town.

http://www.levittownchamber.com/
LEVITTOWN CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
The Levittown Chamber of Commerce tells you what’s going on in Levittown including new businesses, events and initiatives.

http://www.levittownschools.com/

LEVITTOWN PUBLIC SCHOOLS
Schools are what fuel a community, in Levittown the schools are involved with “going green” by doing recycling drives and educating children on the environment.

http://www.levittownhistoricalsociety.org/index2.htm

HISTORY OF LEVITTOWN
Levittown has a very historic past being the country’s first suburban community created after World War II.

http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1704669,00.html
ERASING THE CARBON FOOTPRINT
Levittown represents the American dream but with rising energy costs and a deteriorating environment, Levittown looks to change its “blueprint” by becoming the first green suburb.

http://www.thedailygreen.com/green-homes/eco-friendly/levittown-going-green-46012308
SUOZZI'S GREEN SUBURB
Nassau County Executive, Tom Suozzi announces that Levittown will be the first green suburb.

http://www.reuters.com/article/pressRelease/idUS150140+15-Jan-2008+PRN20080115
ENERGY STAR HOMES
Allure Home Improvements of East Meadow will help Levittown contract new homes that fit into their going green initiative, with energy-saving appliances.

http://livemodern.com/greenblogs/3157324a97e380cee7d83076a3222e96
GREEN SUBURB
Levittown makes efforts to convert first suburb into the nation’s first green community.

http://www.ewg.org/solutions?gclid=CK-7iM6RhZICFQK-xgodSBS3-Q
HOW TO MAKE YOUR LIFE MORE GREEN
Ten solutions that will help ordinary people to go green in their home and in their community.

http://www.ourearth.org/
TIPS, BLOGS, NEWS
Our Earth. Org is a directory website for everything green, from the latest news, tips and blogs.

http://www.handsonnewyorkday.org/faf/home/default.asp?ievent=259230
NEW YORK CITY IS GREEN TOO
Long Island isn’t the only place going green. This year Hands On New York Day will be going green. The project is seeking volunteers to clean up New York City on April 12.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LVfXq7nt0kA
VIDEO LEVITTOWN
This video uses archive footage from Levittown’s past and new footage of what it looks like now synchronized to a song about Levittown.

http://blip.tv/file/716581/
REDUCE YOUR FUEL COSTS
Going Green with Eco-Systems US shows people how to reduce the amount of fuel in their lives and new tools that can help the environment.

http://burbanmom.blogspot.com/
GREEN SUBURBIA
This blog gives suburbanites tips on going green and the latest news on how to help the environment.

http://www.longislandpress.com/main.asp?Search=1&ArticleID=14833&SectionID=1&SubSectionID=1&S=1
LEVITTOWN'S GREEN MAKEOVER
Tom Suozzi announces his going green initiative for Levittown. They will be going door to door to over 17,000 homes in Levittown hoping to influence all to begin living green lifestyles.

http://www.thegreenguide.com/blog/lighten-up
ENERGY SAVING LIGHT BULBS
This guide tells you how to go green by saving electricity and using energy saving light bulbs. Even though the cost may be higher, in the long run it saves you money and saves the environment.

http://www.time.com/time/goinggreen
SAVE THE ENVIRONMENT
Each week time magazine does a column on saving the environment, the effects of global warming and how to go green.

http://www.benefitsofgoinggreen.com/pages/Going-Green-in-Levittown,-NY
LIVING GREEN
This website not only tells you how to go about living green but why it is so beneficial. It also provides you with links to other websites concerning green issues.

http://images.google.com/images?um=1&hl=en&client=firefox-a&rls=org.mozilla%3Aen-US%3Aofficial&hs=1PP&q=going+green+&btnG=Search+Images
GREEN IMAGES

These images, derived from a search on google are all about the environment. They can be helpful in getting points across.

http://earth911.org/
ENVIRONMENTALLY FRIENDLY
This website shows people how to take care of products they already own and how they can dispose of them in an environmentally friendly way.