September 2022 Newsletter
Nora Lehmann Nora Lehmann

September 2022 Newsletter

We have just passed the autumnal equinox, the turning point in our journey around the sun where the day and night are briefly equal in length. As our planet keeps spinning and our nights here in the northern hemisphere lengthen, we’ve been thinking about other kinds of turning points.

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World Car-Free Day!
Nora Lehmann Nora Lehmann

World Car-Free Day!

September 22nd, 2022 is World Car-Free Day! Join us in taking the pledge to bike, walk, roll, or take public transit to get to your everyday destinations.

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Electrify Benson Tech
Noelle Studer Noelle Studer

Electrify Benson Tech

Your voice is needed: Let the Board of Education know that modernizing Portland’s premier polytechnic high school should include all-electric technology, consistent with the Climate Crisis Response Policy adopted earlier this year.

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Resources from Oregon CUB on Gas Stoves and Indoor Air Quality
Nora Lehmann Nora Lehmann

Resources from Oregon CUB on Gas Stoves and Indoor Air Quality

We are happy to be able to share this recent article by Amelia Lamb from the Oregon Citizen Utilities Board’s blog. It is a thorough look at the health risks of gas stoves with respect to the air quality inside our homes, and includes ways to mitigate them through proper ventilation, or remove them altogether, by replacing a gas range with an induction model. Thanks to Amelia and CUB for creating this informative resource and allowing us to share it with our community.

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August 2022 Newsletter
Nora Lehmann Nora Lehmann

August 2022 Newsletter

After more than three decades of failure by the federal government to take action on climate change, the Inflation Reduction Act was passed by the House yesterday. There is broad agreement that the measure will result in critical emissions reductions; and also, that they are not sufficient to put the United States on a path to doing its part to avoid catastrophic climate change. It also shells out reprehensible gifts to fossil fuel corporations that will harm all of us, but vulnerable communities the most. While this bill is a big step forward and we are grateful for it, it won’t put Families for Climate out of work yet (sadly!). There are still thousands of miles of bike infrastructure to build, gas appliances to swap out, new behaviors to model for our kids, and plenty of room to grow climate justice for all.

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Contact your Senators about Build Back Better!
Nora Lehmann Nora Lehmann

Contact your Senators about Build Back Better!

If you are worried sick over the ongoing gutting of the climate provisions (among many others) in the Build Back Better bill in Washington DC, thanks largely to Senator Joe Manchin, you are not alone.

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October Events & Actions
Noelle Studer Noelle Studer

October Events & Actions

From Oregon’s first official Indigenous Peoples Day to Beavers, Plants, and Public Comment, there are so many ways to learn & make a difference this month.

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September: Help DEQ Protect our Climate
Nora Lehmann Nora Lehmann

September: Help DEQ Protect our Climate

Currently, the DEQ is creating a new program called the “Climate Protection Program” that will enable Oregon to regulate greenhouse gas emissions. The bad news is that the program, as currently designed, will not actually do its job. Join a state-wide public input effort to help DEQ strengthen this program so Oregon can reach its decarbonization goals! Read more

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August News you can Use
Noelle Studer Noelle Studer

August News you can Use

This is the month that the City of Portland will decide the future of the Zenith Oil-by-Rail Terminal, and we need everyone to share how you feel.

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Oregon is burning.
Noelle Studer Noelle Studer

Oregon is burning.

Oregon is on fire. Here are some things you can do this month to make a difference.

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Dispatch from a Heat Wave
Noelle Studer Noelle Studer

Dispatch from a Heat Wave

Dear America,

You probably heard about that 116 degree all-time temperature record we recently set for the Pacific Northwest. Well, this is not the kind of exceptionalism celebrated by the famous “Keep Portland Weird” bumper sticker. This dramatic example of “weather weirding” is a frightening glimpse of our climate-changed future, in which this summer will be one of the coolest ones of the rest of our lives, and these extreme weather events get ever more extreme.

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