Thursday, March 26, 2009

Advocacy Project: My political leaders

This is the link to my hometown's (Brooklyn Park, MN) webpage. It will list the political leaders of the city. The mayor of Brooklyn Park, MN is Steve Lampi.

Steve Lampi
1209 88th Ave. N.

Brooklyn Park, MN 55424

Phone: 763-971-2947
Voicemail: 763-493-8010

Term expires: 12-31-10

Steve.Lampi@brooklynpark.org

City of Brooklyn Park's homepage. http://www.brooklynpark.org/sitepages/pid954.php


The President of the United States is Democratic leader Barrack Obama. He is the leader of the executive branch of the United States government.

The govenor of Minnesota is Tim Pawlenty, Republican
Contact Information: 130 State Capitol75 Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.St. Paul, MN 55155Phone: (651) 296-3391

State Rep., Mike Nelson- DFL
569 State Office Building100 Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.
Saint Paul, Minnesota 55155
Phone: 651-296-3751



State Senator, Linda Scheid- DFL
75 Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.Capitol Building, Room G-9
St. Paul, MN 55155-1606
Phone: 651.296.8869

US Representative, Erik Paulson- Republican
Washington, DC Office
Erik Paulsen 126 Cannon HOB Washington, D.C. 20515
Phone: (202) 225-2871
Fax: (202) 225-6351

District Office
250 Prairie Center Drive, Suite 230 Eden Prairie, MN 55344
Phone: (952) 405-8510
Fax: (952) 405-8514



Us Senator, Amy Klobuchar- Democrate
Contact Information: 302 Hart Senate Office Building
Washington, DC 20510
Phone: (202) 224-3244


Friday, March 13, 2009

Reflection: Weeks 7 and 8

Weeks 7 and 8

For Week 7
If we were to live by a big chemical plant that dumped all the harmful wast into our local water supply, would you feel comfertable with this? Harmful chemicals and waste is the theme of the week. The story of Becky Bradway and how she lived near a toxic chemical plant (Borden Chemical and Plastics Inc.) in Buffalo, Illinois is where we got the information of such tragic living conditions for some Americans have to deal with. The article in our textbook is "Reading 16 III Winds: The Chemical Plant Next Door". The discussion in class was about how the reading left a big gap as to what the conclusion of the story is. We interpreted it as an open-ended question that we talked about in class, and how these plastics we use everyday are killing people in some parts of America. We never think twice about where the plastic comes from or how its made.

The other part of the week was to watch the video "Green" in class. It was done by a graduate student. In the film they mention that 25% of the Nation's plastics are made along this relativly short stretch of the Lousiana part of the Mississippi River. What happens to the towns near these chemical plants is that every part of the wind, earth, and water is allegedly poisoned with carcinogenic substances. The people that live on this poisonous land are not able to move as their homes will not sell due to the poor living conditions, with these poverty stricken communities. Environmental Racisim is the focus of why this is happening. The government is turning a blind eye to the issue of health concerns for these people that live near the chemical plants, to benifit out of the plants and the money they can make. The companies are regulating themselves, which is a red flag. If there is no thrid party to observe a company to make sure they are being appropriate and safe, than we are putting a lot of risk into this decison to allow this to go on.

The Eye Opener we did this week is Environmental Working Group. This assignment is about finding how harmful our cosmetic products we use are to yourself and the environment. What I search about was the product Bert Bee's All-Natural Milk and Honey Lotion. It was able to score a 4 out of 10 for harmfulness. This I thought was very high at first, but then after some review it is a relativly low score, as very many lotions and especially hair spray/gels scored bad at an 7, 8, 9, or 10 . This activity lets you see if the product tests on animals, and also if they are apart of an agreement to Compact as Safe .


Week 8

We had a reading to do for the week. The reading is chapter 31 Privatizing Water. The story is about how water is being owned by private buisnessess, and sold by the ounce like gasoline is sold at the pump. If this happens we can be paying three times the amount for water we are paying now. In the chapter 31 example, the citizens of Cochabamba, Bolivia. The water was given a U.S. company "Bechtel", of which rose the price of water by 3 times the previous rate.

Along with that reading we watched a movie "Thirst" that is about Privatizing Water in Stockton, California. The mayor of Stockon in the movie is trying to change the public water to a private owned water company that will pay out more to the government as they charge the citizens for the water at a higher premium. To stop this change there was a grass roots effort established by local citiziens of Stockton to show the mayor the voters do not want this change. Their slogan was "Let us vote".

These two weeks have been very informative. It has showed me that grass roots campaigns can make a difference. If you believe in something you can work on getting it to come true.



Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Share and Voice: Spring Break in Colorado 2007

What I liked about this trip was the fact that Loveland Ski Resort doesn't groom their snow very much, if at all. What grooming the snow means is when a machine similar to a snowplow goes up the mountain and levels off all the snow so it is more evened out. I hate this because then you don't get to glide along fresh snow that may be 12 inches think. You really have to fight through the snow to move from side to side. It is the most wonderful feeling I have ever experienced. The snow on the first day was fresh (12inches). The air was as smooth to my lungs as you could imagine. And it was bright and fresh outside without any disgusting overcast of smog.



Because of this ski trip I really want to keep the natural world as clean as possible. It makes me mad to think that we always try and groom nature to look better, when in reality if we leave it alone it can be just as flourshing as beautiful.








My favorite picture from the entire trip, it was taken at about 12,000 feet of elevation by yours truly.















This is the view from the top of Loveland Ski Resort in Colorado, USA.

It feels as if it is untouched land that I am the first to explore. I know it is a tourist resort, but the way they leave it so untouched and open exilerates me. Makes me really appriciate how vast and big our world is.

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Eye Opener: Environmental Working Group




In my search for the cosmetic product to review I wanted to see what the lotion I use everyday would contribute to my health. I use Bert Bee's Milk and Honey Lotion. It claims on the bottle to be "All-natural". So, I would assume that I would have a very low rating.


What the Search Concluded
According to the Environmental Working Group's Skin Deep Cosmetic Safety Database, this lotion scored an overall 4 out of 10, making it a "moderate hazard". The results told me that the ingredients have been linked to: Cancer, developmental/reproductive toxicity, violations, restrictions & warnings, allergies/immunotoxicity, and other concerns for ingredients used in this product: Neurotoxicity, Endocrine disruption, Organ system toxicity (non-reproductive), Miscellaneous, Multiple, additive exposure sources, Irritation (skin, eyes, or lungs), Contamination concerns


The product does not test on animals, which is great news. Also, Bert Bee's is a Compact For Safer Cosmetics signer. This means they are motivated to provide safer products for the public to use.


What I have Learned

Overall, I am happy to see that the "All-natural" product I use is living up to its name and providing a safe product. I will continue to use this product. It is linked to cancer, which is a scary thought. But, seeing how nearly every lotion is linked to cancer I am not too worried. There have been no significant research findings to pursuade me to not to use the lotion.