Showing posts with label conservation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label conservation. Show all posts

Thursday, June 12, 2014

Fracking Film "GasLand II" - Free Screening Friday at CFPA


  Don't get scared on Friday the 13th -
 get educated!

  Gasland Part II Screening 
  & Fracking Discussion

  Friday, June 13 from 6:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m.
  CFPA Headquarters, Rockfall (Middlefield)


Join CFPA volunteers Scott Gray and Sonya Wulff as they host a screening of Gasland Part II and a discussion regarding fracking.

In the follow-up to his Oscar-nominated film Gasland, filmmaker Josh Fox uses his trademark dark humor to take a deeper, broader look at hydraulic fracturing, 
or fracking, the controversial method of extracting natural gas and oil, now occurring 
on a global level. 

Don't think fracking is a CT issue? A representative from Food & Water Watch 
will lead a discussion on how fracking impacts you, and the ways you can become 
more involved. 

Don't miss this fun and invigorating evening. All are welcome, and your questions are encouraged.

Space is limited, pre-registration is greatly appreciated. 
Click here to registerOr call us at 860-346-2372.

Connecticut Forest & Park AssociationCFPA on Facebook
16 Meriden Road
Rockfall, Connecticut 06481
(860) 346-TREE



Are you a CFPA member? Please join to support CFPA 
at www.ctwoodlands.org/join-us.

Thursday, January 16, 2014

CFPA hosts "Science Sunday" series at HQ on Route 66

Science Sunday Series: A Hidden World - Part 2 - Magnificent and Mysterious Ants

Where: 
CFPA Headquarters (16 Meriden Road, Rockfall, CT)
When: 
Sunday, January 19, 2014 - 2:00pm - 4:00pm
Who: 
Adults
Event Info: 
Join us for this exciting Science Sunday Series: A Hidden World! Each month we'll meet on the 3rd Sunday to learn about the secret world of insects found in Connecticut forests and parks. Be a lifelong learner with us as ecologist and Wesleyan University PhD student, Rob Clark, leads an indoor presentation followed by an outdoor scientific exploration in Highlawn Forest. This series is free and open to the public. Participants are welcome to attend all or individual classes.

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Invitation: Katchen Coley Mountain Laurel Preserve to be Dedicated July11th at 7pm



The City Council appropriated funding earlier in July to buy a beautiful, 50-acre parcel in Maromas to be preserved as open space. The City Council will meet in Special Session tomorrow, Thursday July 11, at 7 p.m, to formally dedicate that parcel of land to honor Katchen Coley who has worked tirelessly for decades on environmental causes here in Middletown and around Connecticut. One of Katchen's passions was saving Maromas, having recognized the value of the beautiful natural landscape in that part of town. The land will be named the Katchen Coley Mountain Laurel Preserve. 

The public is encouraged to come and celebrate this special occasion. The Council agenda does allow for people to speak on that agenda, so there will be an  opportunity to say a few words if you'd like to.

This property is surrounded by and enjoys easements over CL&P land and State of Connecticut land. It is the second highest point in Maromas at 648 feet above sea level. It is the 3rd highest point in Middletown. There is an abundance of Mountain Laurel and it is truly a unique parcel of land. It also contains part of the New England national scenic trail.

NOTE- the LOCATION of the meeting is the Council Chamber in City Hall



Here is a video clip of Katchen's reply to a question about how she became involved with the Middletown Conservation Commission:




Friday, December 11, 2009

Dreaming of a Green Christmas


Thanks to the hard work of Kate Miller of the Conservation Commission, Middletown has a wonderful Green Buying Guide that is packed with great ideas for the holidays. An excerpt is below, and the full guide is available at this link:

http://www.middletownplanning.com/documents/GreenBuyingGuide.pdf


GIVING WITHOUT GLUTTONY:


* Give necessities. Buy your family the new Energy Star dryer you've needed; give organic or locally grown food, or energy saving compact florescent light bulbs.
* Give your time. A card with a promise to help clean the basement or babysit the kids could be someone's favorite gift.
* Give services. A gift certificate for a massage, an afternoon of a cleaning service, a garden planted by a landscaper.
* Give gifts that keep on giving. Donate in the person.s name to a non-profit like a local environmental group, Hospice or social justice organization.
* Give homemade. Kids underestimate the appreciation of a homemade gift. Many are easy to make: a laminated bookmark with photographs, candles, cookies, decorated notecards.
* Give your skill. Good photographer? Give a family photo shoot. Organizer? Offer to help with a cluttered study or bedroom. Cook? Your favorite recipes.
* Give them skills. Buy art or drawing classes, music lessons, obedience training (for the dog.).
* Give an experience. Take the kids wall climbing or bowling, treat a friend to lunch, watch the kids so your spouse can have the afternoon alone.
* Give an heirloom. Emphasize the importance of family connections by giving a favorite piece of jewelry, a knick-knack or furniture.
* Give used. A treasure from an antique shop, a refinished piece of thrift shop furniture, a rare find from a used book store.
* Give back. Kids may better appreciate what they have, if they understand that so many people have less. Donate to toy drives, send money to a disaster relief organization, bring food to the soup kitchen, have them sort through their things and give excess to a thrift store, engage them in community service.
* Give a little at a time. Kids are often overwhelmed by the gift pile. Try giving one for the each of the twelve days of Christmas, open some on Christmas Eve, or go on the aspirin schedule - 1 every four hours.
* Give thanks! Creating moments to appreciate your good fortune and reflect on your values can be a welcome respite in this busy time.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Plan of Conservation and Development Input Session 2

Until mid-June, the Middletown Planning & Zoning Commission is hosting a series of public forums to share ideas about Middletown’s future land use and conservation, all at Russell Library.

The SECOND of 4 public input sessions will be held this Thursday:

April 16, 6:30-8 pm
in the Hubbard Room of the Russell Library.











The special focus of the April 16 session will be on land conservation (open space) and local farming. After a brief presentation of the draft plan for conservation and a sampling of ways land can be conserved, the floor will open up to the public for comments.

Discussion will take place about:

What do we want to protect in Middletown?
What role can land conservation play in the city’s economic development?
Do we want to increase local agriculture? How can we support this?

Following this discussion, there will be an “Open Mike” Session for any comments about any other aspects relating to the Plan of Conservation & Development.

ALL ARE WELCOME!

The next two Public Input Sessions will be held May 21, June 17, 2009 at 6:30 to 8 pm also at the Russell Library.

Notes from each session will be posted electronically at the following:
Middletownplanning.com and also on the Middletown Eye


Interested residents or questions? Contact P&Z Comm’r Catherine Johnson 343-1611.

Monday, April 6, 2009

Statewide Conservation Conference A Success


On Saturday April 4th, the Connecticut Land Conservation Conference was held in Middletown, drawing hundreds of Connecticut Conservation and Land Trust volunteers and members from around the state. The conference was a wonderful opportunity for conservationists to connect and meet peers from around the state as well as to see and hear about the great work that is being done around the state for conservation. Not to mention, it was a huge showoff of Middletown and our convenient central location, University resources and generally enjoyable destination town. I heard from many attendees how enthused they were to be travelling to Middletown for this event.

The Conference featured twenty-five workshops on a a range of topics directly affecting citizens and environments across Connecticut, as well as keynote speaker and an introduction to the Connecticut Land Conservation Council (CLCC), featuring enhanced member services and grants. Of course there were also many displays including brochures on organic land care and organic farming just to name a couple.

Especially poignant was the well-represented work of The Bridgeport Land Trust. The BLT had wonderful presenters on Community Gardens (Bridgeport has dozens!) and the Ash Creek Sand Spit Sanctuary preservation. Christine Cook and her colleagues from Bridgeport had an excellent presentation with amazing photos of wildlife, flora and fauna all found right in Bridgeport, and tales of engaging neighborhood kids in some good old-fashioned digging in the dirt.

The Keynote Presentation was delivered with skill and humor by Russ Brenneman, who participated in the formation of the first land trusts in CT, drafted the CT conservation easement law, and served as president of the CT Forest and Park Association. He has been a Trustee of The Nature Conservancy and was a founding member of the Great Meadows Land Trust. He currently teaches environmental law and policy at Trinity College and is of counsel to the law firm of Murtha Cullina LLP.

Representatives from Land Trusts in the towns of Southbury, Branford, and Canton had nice presentations on how they have engaged the community about the preserved land in their towns. Their work has spanned countless events which all looked like a load of fun while connecting people with the land and the towns.
The Middletown Conservation Commission is hard at work on many such events as well. More information is always available at http://www.middletownplanning.com/ . Click on "Conservation" at left to go to the Conservation Commission's page.

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Letterboxing - Save the Date!








Letterboxing - Save the Date!
April 25, 2009

The Middletown Conservation Commission is happy to announce our first Letterbox on City Conservation Land! A spring Letterboxing launch will be held on April 25, 2009 at 1pm in the afternoon at the Daniels-Schwarzkopf Conservation Area. This area, located off of Millbrook Road on on Old Johnson Lane, has a tightly packed network of relatively flat, easy trails. The Commission has been very busy with land preservation efforts, and is excited to encourage use of the City's conservation areas by the community through activities like letterboxing. This will be a fun event for the entire family, and anyone who likes the woods and nature and wants to learn more about Middletown's trails and open spaces.

Letterboxing is a fun way to enjoy our parks and natural areas. Letterboxes, small weatherproof containers with a logbook, rubber stamp and stamp pad, are hidden in remote or scenic places. The planter of the letterbox leaves clues about its location by word of mouth, on websites or via other means. Clues range from easy to difficult, and finding a letterbox may require a combination of skills such as map reading, orienteering, and puzzle-solving. Letterboxers carry their own logbook and personal stamp when hunting for hidden boxes. When they find a letterbox, they stamp their own logbook using the stamp inside, and leave their own stamp or mark in the letterbox's logbook. Some artistic letterboxers carve and even design their own stamps and logbooks. Letterboxes are hidden in various locations throughout the world.

Letterboxing information courtesy of Mark and Sue Pepe.

Middletown's Conservation Commission is an all volunteer land use commission with an emphasis on environmental quality and natural resource protection, which acts in an advisory capacity to the Planning and Zoning Commission and the Inland Wetlands and Watercourses Agency. The Commission is responsible for indexing all open space areas and wetlands, monitoring their use and overseeing their development. The Commission facilitates the acquisition of open space property.

The Conservation Commission also maintains a Trail Guide for the City's open space areas, now available online: www.middletownplanning.com/documents/MdtnTrailGuide.pdf.

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Farm Bill discussion in Middletown

Originally posted on Haddam Green, by John Friedlander.


To the so-called “average” Connecticut citizen, it might have seemed incongruous that four out of five of our U.S. Congressional Representatives attended a Farm Forum at Wesleyan’s beautiful Beckham Hall Monday afternoon, July 7.

(Only the 4th District’s Chris Shays (R) was not present.)

This was the first time so many CT Reps had been in the same room in the home district to talk farm policy in anyone’s memory. But the capacity crowd, made up of about 200 farmers, their friends and agriculture advocates, was intent on the conversation.

Tilt: Reset: Huh?

For those of us who don’t track farm policy on a daily basis – which would be most of us – here are a few facts to consider.

• Connecticut is losing farmland faster than any other state in the nation.

• Connecticut imports more of its food supply than any other state.

• Connecticut moves almost all of its food supply into and around the state by truck, since we have virtually no meaningful freight rail capacity.

• Rising oil prices are forcing price hikes in all consumer categories and painful market adjustments in every sector of our economy.

• 3rd District Representative Rosa DeLauro (D) chairs the powerful House Agricultural Appropriations Subcommittee, which in May administered the bicameral veto-proof passage of the massive $307 billion Farm Bill (318 to 106 in the House, 81 to 15 in the Senate).

The first part of Monday’s Farm Forum was all about heaping praise on DeLauro, who was, as usual, affably all-business as she absorbed the praise for her efforts from John Larson (D 1st,in his fifth term), freshman Chris Murphy (D 5th), and freshman Joe Courtney (D 2nd). DeLauro also stated the reason for her motivation by quoting John Kennedy: “Farmers are the only businesspeople who have to buy everything at retail, sell everything at wholesale and pay the freight both ways.”

Act II was the de rigueur recitation of the various alphabet-soup programs enabled or expanded by the bill, performed by a stellar collection of USDA and other agency figures instrumental in helping area farmers take advantage of federal programs to keep their farms afloat in troubled times.

Read the Middletown Press article for more on this aspect of the event.

Act III proved to be the most interesting part of the event, as attendees gave their reps the home field perspective. While the Congressional team may have thought energy prices were the Big Issue, immigration topped the agenda for many in attendance.

Speaker after speaker raised the issue of immigration reform.

Bob Heffernan, Executive Director of the Connecticut Green Industries Council (a coalition of the Connecticut Florists Association, Connecticut Greenhouse Growers Association, Connecticut Nursery & Landscape Association): “The biggest single problem affecting us and all of agriculture, is the … broken immigration system, and the use of foreign workers at our farms. This is a number one priority for us. The green industry has about 48,000 workers across the state… . We had about 5,000 jobs go unfilled this year, even as tough as the economy was. Of these 48,000 workers, we think there could be as many as 7,000 undocumented or illegal workers. So if Social Security overnight sent letters to all those farms and said these people are illegal, you could see the huge effect on our business. Parents in CT don’t raise their kids to do farm work, it’s just not the way the state is, we’re mostly a urban, suburban, well educated high income state. We really need a fix that works for agriculture.”

East Canaan farmer Ben Freund: “We don’t have time to do conservation unless we get immigration reform. There will be no cows milked on [many] farms the day after they start enforcing immigration [laws]. It’s an issue that is much bigger than what we can describe to you. Our farms are dependent on immigrant labor. The ratios [Bob Heffernan] gave [of 7,000 immigrant workers out of 48,000 green industry workers] is very, very low in terms of the numbers of workers that are actually doing the work on our farms. I am getting sick and tired of working in an economy illegally. It has been years and years and years, and I implore you as Congress to straighten this out. It is sickening for me to write those paychecks and each one of them knowing that they could come back and now they’re not going to be chasing Mexicans down through the cornfields, they’re going to be chasing me and my brother down through the cornfields because that’s where the responsibility lies. So I implore you to straighten this issue out.” (Big applause.)

DeLauro was candid in explaining that there is understanding of the need for immigration reform, but no solution will be accomplished before the end of the Bush presidency.

Chris Murphy made the point that immigration and healthcare are issues that will be on the ballot in November, and that it’s important for farmers and the general public to speak on the topic in ways that raise the visibility of the nature of the problems and the need for solutions.

Joe Courtney drove home the point. “What’s driving this debate is the talk shows, the radio shows, the misinformation that exists surrounding the issue of immigration. Your description about it being a broken system is very obvious to people who rely on immigrant labor to get their goods to market. What’s needed is for people to participate in that discussion and that debate. Frankly I don’t think there’s a more credible voice in America than farmers, to talk about the fact that this country has to make a decision about whether or not it wants to have food on the table at an affordable price. My experience at town hall meetings and on radio shows is that people don’t have a clue about what a crisis this is for the agriculture sector in CT and across the country. If we did have a greater understanding, we’d be in a better position to move forward toward a smart, balanced, reasonable solution to this problem, rather than the shouting match that exists surrounding this issue.”

Another key issue was raised by Jennifer McTiernan-H., Executive Director of CitySeed, a New Haven-based not-for-profit which operates several farmers’ markets and advocates for fresh local food supplies in urban areas. “As more people buy and enjoy local food, and have Farmers’ Cow milk in their refrigerator we are building a very powerful base of advocates who can stand up and support the needs of farmers in CT and through the Farm Bill nationally. This is a moment that we have to grow the local food movement. As food safety becomes more of an issue and as energy prices rise, there are more and more reasons to for people to buy local food. In CT, we are actually getting to a point where farmers are being asked to supply things that they’re out of, where there is an initial feeling of limited supply.”

Though several other issues were raised relating to somewhat more technical aspects of the Farm Bill, this local reporter left the event with a short list of key thoughts:

• Pressures on Connecticut farmers are unprecedented. Rising fuel prices, taxes, costs of labor, fertilizer and the pressure of real estate development top the list.

• The lack of workable immigration law means a major portion of the labor supply (some say up to 50%) may become unavailable at any time due to unpredictable law enforcement, and that farmers may become liable for legal costs in some circumstances.

• Because we are losing farmland at a rapid pace, and importing most of the food we eat, Connecticut residents are extremely vulnerable to the side effects of an interruption in the supply of oil.

• The growing demand for locally-grown food is partly indicated by the number of towns working to set up their own farmers’ markets. But the dwindling number of remaining farmers are already stretched thin and cannot afford to attend every market.

The bottom line seems to be a near perfect storm of factors indicating the need for major change in our relationship to food and the food marketplace. There are many aspects of this issue that relate in unexpected ways, including immigration (farms depend on immigrant labor), health insurance (many farmers can’t afford health insurance), education (kids need to learn food comes from farms, not stores, and that farming is important work), land use (should we be building more big houses on former farms, or replanting that land with food?), open space acquisition (allowing land to remain undeveloped may help preserve greenways which help neighboring land be more fruitful) and many others.

The time to get involved is now, before the crisis is made worse by a more serious energy supply interruption, and people begin to go hungry at a greater rate.

No farms, no food

Food not grass

CitySeed

Farmland preservation in Connecticut