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Eric/GRRN, Congratulations on the new hire and board additions. Speaking personally, I look forward to the opportunity to work with and support GRRN's work for years to come. Sincerely, Timothy J.W. Logan Lead Organizer, NYC Zero Waste Campaign -----Original Message----- From: Eric Lombardi [mailto:eric@no.address] Sent: Friday, August 26, 2005 5:07 PM To: greenyes@no.address Subject: [greenyes] GRRN is on the move toward Zero Waste Communities GRRN Takes Zero Waste in a New Direction for the Coming Decade. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - It?s one thing to talk about Zero Waste, it?s another thing to do it. In communities across the country?from Palo Alto to New York?zero waste policies are being deliberated and adopted by local governments. In addition, campaigns for increased recycling, producer responsibility, anti-incinerator struggles, and environmental justice are numerous, but frequently they are without connection to a larger vision and movement. In order for these small campaigns and disparate struggles to take hold in a deeper way and to spread to other parts of the country, residents, activist and governments need to develop a clearer message, use a common language, and have a deeper understanding of the components of a Zero Waste Community. Therefore GRRN is launching a whole new approach for Zero Waste in the coming decade; GRRN?s Zero Waste Communities Program will train and support emerging leaders and practitioners by providing the skills, technical knowledge, examples, and assistance they need to move beyond recycling and begin implementing zero waste programs and practices in their communities. In Spring of 2006 GRRN will invite community activists addressing environmental health and justice in local communities, as well as government staff who have access and influence with policy makers, to participate in a one-year training program to move beyond recycling and implement Zero Waste on a community level. GRRN will recruit participants from both larger cities and small communities throughout the U.S. in order to ?seed? the zero waste idea and ?mainstream? it. Zero Waste is a big vision- one that can only be realized if the number of people working on it grows from the tens to the hundreds and then the thousands. Exciting new changes at GRRN include: * Eric Lombardi, Executive Director of Eco-Cycle in Boulder, Colorado is the new GRRN President; * Linda Christopher is the new Executive Director of GRRN, which is based in Oakland, California. And new additions to the Board include: * Monica Wilson, the U.S. Organizer for GAIA, the Global Alternatives to Incinerators Alliance * Carly Weir, Executive Director, Summit Recycling Project in Frisco, Colorado; * Martin Bourque, Executive Director, Ecology Center in Berkeley, California; ________________________________________________________________ Sent via the WebMail system at ecocycle.org __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com |
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