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Announcement: Ann Breen-Greco Recieves "Woman with Vision" Award from the Women's Bar Association of Illinois We are pleased to announce that our dear friend and neighbor, Ann Breen-Greco is a recipient of a Womens Bar Association of Illinois (WBAI) 2006 Women With Vision Award. The Women with Vision Awards were first presented in 1997 by the WBAI to honor and recognize women who have demonstrated visionary approaches in their professional endeavors and who have made a contribution to the well-being and empowerment of women. These awards will be presented during the WBAIs 65th Annual Joint Professional Dinner on Thursday, November 16, 2006 at the Westin Chicago River North Hotel in downtown Chicago. The event will start with a reception at 5:30 p.m., and dinner will begin at 6:30 p.m. Individual tickets for the Joint Professional Dinner and the Women With Vision award presentation are available for $85. Sponsor tickets are available for $100; Patron tickets are available for $125 and Benefactor tickets are available for $150. Law students may attend for a reduced ticket price of $75. Please let us know if you can be part of a table for Ann. If you are unable to attend but would like to send greetings to Ann please do so at annrun@sbcglobal.net. Thank you. Nov 13, 2006 1. Invitation to attend short meeting Sunday Nov 12 to plan additional West Nile and pesticide research. All are welcome. No experience necessary. We will need help to do a really great job bringing the best information to the city for the West Nile Summit. Email julie@beyondtoday if you'll like to join us or would like to otherwise help. 2. Invitation to the first Alternative Energy Committee meeting. 3 Report back from the Native Seed Workshop Thank you
Rinda, good turnout: Christianne, Jerry J. and Michael S of Pensacola,
Kevin A., David S., and Laura P. of Cullom, Jill H., Jo K., Julie P. Several
people requested we do another soon, so we will. Who will organize it?
Volunteers? 4.Request for help with the creation of a Green Gift Guide. Send your suggestions to beyondtoday@beyondToday.com with the subject line "gift guide" so it doesn't get lost. Let us know if you are interested in this project. It could be a very small or large project depending on who volunteers. (we already have recycled bike trailers for sale-exciting!) 5. Please check the calendar for more interesting events.
3. West Nile/Anvil Spray Working Group Invitation We are currently preparing for the West Nile Summit which will be held this winter. We need to do more research and produce a report which clearly explains the issue. You don't have to be a scientist to be able to look up the studies and help us look at the West Nile no-spray Management Plans of other cities. If you are willing to help look up studies, discuss strategy, or format our report, please email Julie. We will be meeting soon. 5. Update on Green Neighborhood projects Gardening: Native Gardening, Organic Gardening, Community Gardens, and Composting
River and Rain Committee Rainbarrels, Raingardens, Greenroofs, and Permeable Pavestones
Communications Committee Website, Newsletters, Community Blogs, and other communications.
Alternative Energy Committee Global Warming, Solar, Wind, Geothermal, Car use reduction, Bicycling, Efficiency, and Public Transportation
Resource Conservation Committee Food Issues, Green Consumerism, Reuse, Reduction of Use, and Recycling
Fundraising Committee Grant writing, Donations, Fundraising
Oct 31 Edition:
1. Environmental Neighborhood updates and Sign-up form 2. The Cullom/Western Crime and Neighborhood response covered in the Reader 3 West Nile/Anvil Spray Update 4. Machine guns on great lakes- Hearing Wed Nov. 1. Please sign the Petition 5. Tax savings through green home improvements. 6. New Organic store- let us know what you think. 7. Information from Chicago Fair Trade 9. Andersonville may put reins on retail chains- 10 Sandhill Crane report back with video
An Update from Julie Peterson Oct. 31, 2006 This Fall, we launched our Environmental Neighborhood Project with a series of dinner conversations to create a 3 year plan to become the most environmental neighborhood possible. We called them "Green Dinners" Over 70 people have attended these dinners including Alderman Schulter and many more wonderful residents and community leaders of many different stripes. We gathered all of your ideas and have grouped them to form working committees to bring your ideas to a reality. Click on any of the committee links to see what they're working on. Now is the very beginning and the momentum is high. It's a great time to get involved. You don't have to be an expert or even commit to a certain level of involvement, just helping us to keep the momentum going by contributing to decentralizing and spreading out the labor and leadership into these new working groups will really help us to be successful as we move into November. We're hoping to have all the committees meeting every other week and then coming together for a monthly hootenanny to share their information with the group. Remember, nothing will happen unless we do it! And let's have fun doing it too! Getting involved: If anyone is wondering what is going on,
the answer is "lots!" Many of you are already in motion. Rinda
West is hosting a workshop and green dinner. Nancy Benjamin is organizing
an organic gardening workshop and the gardening committee first meeting.
April is coordinating the nonprofit application papers. Martha is organizing
a solar panel workshop. Amongst those interested in solar panels are Alison
and Greg, Patrick and Lisa, Lori and John (who will also host a dinner),
Julie and Bobby, and Missy Kunze. Many of you are looking for ways to
work this environmental neighborhood project into your schedule without
going into overload. : ) Many of you are signed up for committees, many
of you have sent information to communicate to the group. I'm working
on the newsletter. In essence, if anyone is waiting to get involved, no
need to wait. Email if you need something to be scheduled in a way that
works for you. We aim to please! Give me a ring or email to coordinate with others.. I'm
here to help you find out who else is working on your issue, put you in
touch with resources and opportunities, and to help enable your efforts
and projects. The website and emails are here to help the community to
communicate amongst members as we figure out how it's possible to be a
wonderful Chicago community living in harmony with the rate of resource
renewal in nature. http://www.chicagoreader.com/features/stories/hottype/061027/
Marty Perez The Wrong Style for the Substance?
October 27, 2006 AT A TABLOID newspaper, vivid writing rules. Stefano Esposito's knack for it landed the Sun-Times in hot water recently, but editor in chief Michael Cooke stands by his criminal courts reporter. "He has his own wonderful style of writing the most obvious court cases," says Cooke, "and putting some energy and life and drama -- in the best sense -- into the reporting of those cases." Esposito wouldn't talk to me about the recent troubles, but as a onetime Sun-Times reporter myself, I sympathize with him. As they say, he was doing his job. On October 3 the Tribune offered a prosaic account of a ghastly crime story. The headline announced, "Handyman charged in kidnapping and assault," and the story began this way: "A Chicago handyman was ordered held on $325,000 bail Monday as Cook County prosecutors detailed how he repeatedly sexually assaulted a woman whom he bound to a specially designed bed and soundproof closet." In the Sun-Times, under the headline "'Cute Blonde. Runs in Park at 7:30': Artist allegedly holds woman hostage in chamber, rapes her, while keeping notes on others," Esposito's story began: "The middle-aged woman is blindfolded and handcuffed. "Her kidnapper has already raped her, choked her and threatened to kill her if she struggles. "Then Alan Donald Wyman removes the steel cables he's used to pin her to his bed. He leads the woman, who still cannot see, along a narrow hallway to a wooden trap door at the base of a specially built closet, Cook County prosecutors say. . . . He opens the trap door and forces the woman to crawl into a tiny, soundless black chamber. The woman loses all sense of time. And then the 53-year-old Wyman rapes her again, prosecutors say. "Wyman's occasional acts of mercy: spoonfuls of brown sugar and glasses of water." Esposito concluded: "Wyman drinks at June's bar across from his apartment, neighbors said. He collects books. He is the handyman in his apartment building. He writes poems. . . . Last Friday, while the victim was allegedly trapped in his apartment, Wyman went down to water his lawn, pick up litter and then stop off at June's for a double shot of Jameson, no ice." Esposito, helped considerably by the street reporting of his colleague Annie Sweeney, wrote such an upsetting story that a delegation of furious readers showed up at the Sun-Times offices to protest. For a technical critique of Esposito's effort, I offer the comments of a Reader colleague who once lived near Wyman's apartment, which was on the 4300 block of North Western. "The lead sets up the piece like it's going to be from the victim's point of view," Tori Marlan observed. "And it's not from her point of view. It's not even a feature, where point of view is important. It's just a news story. I think that narrative technique is being abused here. I'm not sure what the point of it was. Did the writers want their readers to identify with the victim? Experience the kidnapping and rape vicariously? Feel sympathy for her? No need to punch it up -- the details are startling enough on their own." And here's a more visceral response from the neighborhood. "When I showed the article to my neighbors they were floored -- this man had been in their homes as a handyman," Julie Peterson told me. She said somebody else had invited him over to help put Wyman's art up for sale on eBay. "Everybody knew who he was." Peterson believes the story began going wrong with its headline. "They called him an 'artist.' 'Alleged rapist' is the correct term. Many people felt the Sun-Times was giving him some kind of mystique, as some dark James Bond. He was a sick, sick person who kidnapped and tortured a person. It's so important not to give him this Silence of the Lambs treatment as if he was some kind of intellectual. Let's focus on the crime. I can't imagine him being more thrilled with the article the way it was written. He came off as the coolest rapist -- if there can be such a thing. It was really nauseating." Peterson maintains the Web site of the community organization Beyond Today. She posted the article on the site and provided a link that would allow visitors to e-mail letters of protest simultaneously to the Sun-Times, Alderman Eugene Schulter, and Beyond Today. "This article shows absolutely no concern for the victim, and reports facts as if they were clues in a trash novella," wrote Lori Erickson-Cueva of Lincoln Square. "Four years ago, here in Chicago, the daughter of a friend of mine was kidnapped, held for months in a basement, tortured, raped repeatedly, and pumped so full of cocaine she is now a vegetable in an institution. My friend is now raising the toddler, now 8 years old, that her daughter left behind. This hits close to home." Melissa McNeal of Uptown wrote, "I cannot imagine that the intent of the writers was to celebrate such a heinous act, but that is honestly how it felt reading it: a hands-rubbing-together sense of gaping with mouth wide open. It felt awful." On October 11 Esposito wrote a second story, this one straightforward. Wyman had been charged with a second, earlier, sexual assault, the repeated rape of a woman he'd held in his apartment for three days in August, and he was now being held without bond. By coincidence, October 11 was the day Peterson visited the Sun-Times and met with Cooke. She was joined by Ann Breen-Greco, an administrative law judge from the neighborhood, and representatives of Chicago NOW and the Chicago Foundation for Women. With Cooke were managing editor Don Hayner and reporter Sweeney. Esposito wasn't available. Breen-Greco tells me Sweeney listened "very intently." She says Sweeney explained that the two reporters had met "with a number of women who have been survivors and feel very much in tune with them and aware of what a traumatic experience this is, and the story was meant to highlight their terror." That might have been the intent, says Breen-Greco, but the result was simple "sensationalism." She goes on, "The big problem is that the Sun-Times wants very much to distinguish itself from the Chicago Tribune." When she and Peterson remarked that the Tribune had written a different kind of story, Cooke replied that the Sun-Times wasn't the Tribune. Later he told me, "The Tribune didn't cover it this way -- so what?" Esposito's story, he said, "was an attempt -- somewhat successful -- to portray the crime realistically and help readers understand the absolute horror of what allegedly had taken place. We're not the Congressional Record." At Cooke's invitation, Peterson and Breen-Greco submitted a statement criticizing the Sun-Times story. It ran on October 20 as a letter to the editor, and it wasn't even the lead letter. Peterson had hoped for more. She showed me an op-ed column on recycling the Sun-Times published on October 7 that had nothing in particular to do with Chicago and had been written by an economics professor in Virginia. "I sort of question why they thought that was more important than our letter," Peterson said. Sweeney told me the meeting at the Sun-Times was a good one. "We
needed to listen," she said. "I'm glad that it didn't get confrontational
and mean." Cooke added, "They pleaded their case with some eloquence
and passion." Was he persuaded? "Not entirely. But there were
some things to take away, for sure. It's hard to talk to people whose
friends and sisters have been raped. You don't have the moral high ground
there." -------------------- A quick update on the West Nile Virus/Anvil Spray issue. For more background, read here. We are currently preparing for the West Nile Summit which will be held this winter. Our hope is that the convening of experts will lead to Chicago adopting the same successful no-spray methods of mosquito reduction that are used in other cities. ----------- 4. Machine guns on great lakes- Hearing Wed Nov. 1 (forwarded by Sarah Simmons. Please forgive the formatting issues) Please sign the Petition ********For
Immediate Release******** Media Advisory for
Contact: Marcia Bernsten
847.912.0739 Wednesday, November 1, 2006
marcia@CitizensforLakeSafety.org
or
Lee Goodman 847.559.9525 Illinois residents to testify against
Coast Guard Plans
for Great Lakes Shooting Range
Coast Guard Hearing
in Waukegan to serve as forum
for growing environmental concerns.
The United States Coast Guard has announced plans to
turn the Great Lakes, the world's largest body of fresh water, into
the world's largest freshwater shooting range. Since 1817, a treaty
between the U.S. and Canada prohibited this kind of activity on the Great
Lakes.
The Coast Guard has installed machine guns, capable
of firing 600 rounds per minute, on its Great Lakes vessels and has begun
target practice on the lakes. Now the Coast Guard wants to designate 34
areas in the lakes as permanent target ranges for practice with live ammunition.
The areas they have mapped out come within five miles of the shore and
can be seen with the naked eye from the water's edge. They are strung
around the perimeter of all five Great Lakes (Lake Michigan, Lake Superior,
Lake Ontario, Lake Erie, and Lake Huron). In keeping with the Bush administration's
practice of giving misleading names to its initiatives, the Coast Guard
is calling the target ranges “safety zones.'
The so called "safety zones" cut through areas routinely
used by commercial and recreational fishing vessels, power boats, sailboats,
kayaks and other marine craft throughout the Great Lakes.
Environmentalists dispute of the Coast Guard's claims that
dumping an estimated 430,000 lead bullets into the lakes each year will
have no adverse environmental impact on fish, birds, mammals, plants,
or humans. Consistent with the military's view that they should be exempt
from environmental regulations, the Coast Guard has not prepared a complete
environmental impact statement.
What: Chicago/Milwaukee
Hearing on Coast Guard Plan to do live-fire machine gun target
practice on Great Lakes using ordnance containing
lead and other toxic substances.
Who: Citizens
of Illinois and Wisconsin, environmental groups, groups opposed to militarization
of the lakes, local government representatives. When: Wednesday,
November 1, 2006
4pm, Open House
5:30pm,
Testimony by residents, officials, etc. Where: Waukegan, Illinois:
Genessee Theater, 203 North Genessee St.
Please proceed to **more information from Mercia B.: Im sending this note out a little early because there is an event coming up on November 1st that Id love you all to support. - For full information go to http://citizensforlakesafety.org
--------------------------------------- Tax savings through green home improvements. - Jill Hutchins NOW IS A GOOD TIME. Uncle Sam will help pay for certified storm doors installed this year and next. U.S. consumers are eligible for a one-time tax credit of up to $500 for installing qualifying storm doors and other energy-efficiency home improvements on their primary home. The tax credit will pay for 10 percent of the storm-door cost, but not installation. You will need to keep a receipt and file the appropriate tax form to receive the credit. Granted, the credit is likely to be worth only $10 to $30, but it's worth filing a form.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/business/yourmoney/chi-0610290427oct29,1,7606806.story Treasury and IRS Provide Guidance for energy Credits for Homeowners http://www.irs.gov/newsroom/article/0,,id=154657,00.html -------------------- 6. New Organic store- let us know what you think. Raquel, one of our student intern lets us know about
a "new store call Sunflower Market. Everything sold there is organic,
homegrown, 100% ingredients in their food and juices. If you want you
can sign up for a newsletter (www.sunflowermarket.com) " 1910 North Clybourn Ave (North of North Ave) Email us and let us know what you think. Good? Who owns this place? Do they have local produce?
-------------------- 7. Information from Chicago Fair Trade Thanks for being part of the Chicago Fair Trades network, growing the fair trade movement! Weve just come off a great week of Black Gold Screening and Events with Tadesse Meskela. Now on to the work of building fair trade in Chicago!
Join the Trademark Campaign to help Ethiopian Farmers: With as many as 15 million Ethiopians dependent on coffee, Ethiopia has decided to get its farmers more of what they deserve. The country's government has asked Starbucks to sign a licensing agreement that will allow Ethiopia to get legal ownership of the names of its coffees, Sidamo, Yirgacheffe and Harar . That way, Ethiopia can help determine an export price that makes sure farmers see a larger share of the profits enabling them to feed their children, send them to school and get them better healthcare. Oxfam and a coalition of allies are asking Starbucks to sign this agreement and so far they have refused. Go to www.oxfamamerica.org/starbucks to support this effort.
Come to: Critical Issues in the Fair Trade Movement: Monday November 13th 7- 8:30pm Hot House, 31 E. Balbo Ave. Our quarterly information meeting will take up some of the questions within the fair trade movement: Is certification enough? Does certification create a too great a hurdle for cooperatives to clear? What role can consumers play in improving the fair trade movement?
Howl for Justice for Blue Diamond Workers Chicago Jobs With Justice asks for Support for Workers at Blue Diamond Almonds Tell Hershey's to ask their suppliers about workers' rights. Monday, Oct. 30th, 5:30pm Hershey's Chicago Office, 822 N. Michigan Ave.
Jobs With Justice, a member organization of Chicago Fair Trade, is supporting the workers at Blue Diamond Growers with an informational leaflet-ting. The Blue Diamond workers have been organizing for the past two years to join the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU). They have faced anti-union tactics in what a company spokesperson called an aggressive union avoidance campaign. The company has been found guilty of more than 20 violations of labor law, including the firing of union supporters.
Blue Diamond runs the world's largest almond process plant. Hersheys is one of Blue Diamonds biggest industrial customers, using the companys almonds in its Hersheys Kisses, Hersheys Almond Bars, and other products. Hershey's consumers can ask the candy maker to look into how workers are treated at its supplier, Blue Diamond.
Join the informational leaflet-ting of Hershey's Chicago office and let customers know about the labor dispute at Blue Diamond. JWJ is not calling for a boycott of Blue Diamonds products, Hershey's products, or other products that use Blue Diamond almonds. They are asking that Blue Diamond workers have the chance to decide for themselves if they want union representation at the plant without facing harassment, intimidation and firings.
Shop Fair Trade for the Holidays: An opportunity to give twice! Use the Chicago Fair Trade website to find the calendar of local holiday shopping events in the metro area as well as many website shopping opportunities that offer producers and artisans a chance for a better life. www.chicagofairtrade.org
NOTE NEW CONTACT INFORMATION FOR CHICAGO FAIR TRADE: As CFT moves from
a project of Oxfam America November 1st, please use a new email to contact
Nancy Jones, office staff: njones@chicagofairtrade.org
8. Composting in California(with worms!) submitted by Jill Hutchins According to a recent article from the Associated Press, California is encouraging public and private-sector employees to bring worms to work (set up vermicomposting bins) so that the worms can chew up apple cores, sandwich scraps and other lunch leftovers and produce compost. Employees are then invited to take the compost home and use the all-natural fertilizer in their gardens and on their houseplants. For example, at the California EPA complex in Sacramento, hundreds of thousands of worms process some five tons of food scraps per year. Over 60 bins are in offices, halls, even the daycare center. In fact, there is a waiting list for bins among employees, and some have been known to compete over whose office has the more productive worms.
9. Andersonville may put reins on retail chains- idea: wouldn't we also like an ordinance like this? your thoughts? submitted by Jill Hutchins Some local business leaders and politicians are considering locking in the neighborhood's charm-defined by quirky, hip, one-of-a-kind shops and eateries-and introducing the city's first ban on chain retailers. The ordinance has not yet been introduced, but if it were to make its way through the City Council successfully, qualifying neighborhoods could decide whether to opt in to the ban. The proposal's backers point to a 2004 study that found that for every $100 spent at an Andersonville business, $68 remains in Chicago, compared with $43 at a chain store. But building owners faced with rising real estate taxes are opposed to the proposal, because they wouldn't be able to rent to chain-store merchants, who often can pay more. They argue that the best defense against chain stores is to create an environment for independent retailers to thrive. What both sides agree to is this: Andersonville has a "sense of place" worth preserving. The full story was published October 10, 2006 in the Chicago Tribune.
www.chicagotribune.com 10. Sandhill Crane report back with video It was chilly and windy, but we had a very nice trip to see the Sandhill Cranes. Here's a video link. with photos! We'll have more video available on our website soon. It's a big file. Next time we'll work on that.
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