Green Tuesdays in the Village

greebGreen Tuesdays in the Village is an annual public lecture series on various environmental topics and issues specifically relevant to the Village of Oak Park. Started in 2006, this is the 8th annual event. This year’s theme, Green Days of Future Past, is a timeline account of community and household practices and activities in the Village of Oak Park from the past, present and beyond ... where have we been, where we are now, and where are we headed?

 

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Click to view/download Green Tuesdays PDF Schedule

Why Buy Fair Trade Coffee?

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Black Gold

Co-sponsored by Whole Foods, One Earth Film Festival is hosting a free pre-festival preview of three films focused on fair trade, coffee and waste.  Join us at Whole Foods - River Forest (7245 Lake St, River Forest, IL) on Thursday, February 21, 2013, at 7 p.m. to learn what fair trade is, why it's important and also to sample Whole Trade Guarantee coffee.  RSVP to the store at 708.366.1045. Join the Facebook event to receive updates.  Call 773-315-1109 for more information. During the prescreening event, we'll watch and discuss a clip from Black Gold (Marc Francis; Nick Francis/2006/78 min).  Multinational coffee companies now rule our shopping malls and supermarkets and dominate the industry worth over $80 billion, making coffee the most valuable trading commodity in the world after oil.  But while we continue to pay for our lattes and cappuccinos, the price paid to coffee farmers remains so low that many have been forced to abandon their coffee fields. Nowhere is this paradox more evident than in Ethiopia, the birthplace of coffee.

Black Gold follows the story of Tadesse Meskela, one man on a mission to save his 74,000 struggling coffee farmers from bankruptcy.  As his farmers strive to harvest some of the highest quality coffee beans on the international market, Tadesse travels the world in an attempt to find buyers willing to pay a fair price.  Against the backdrop of Tadesse’s journey to London and Seattle, the enormous power of the multinational players that dominate the world’s coffee trade becomes apparent.  New York commodity traders, the international coffee exchanges, and the double dealings of trade ministers at the World Trade Organisation reveal the many challenges Tadesse faces in his quest for a long term solution for his farmers.

AWARDS: Winner: Best Achievement in Production, British Independent Film Awards. Winner: Best Documentary, San Francisco Black Film Festival.  Nominee: Grand Jury Prize, Sundance Film Festival.

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We'll also view the 15 minute film, For the Price of a Cup of Coffee (Hypatia Angelique Porter/2007/15 min).  What is the cost of convenience?  For the Price of a Cup of Coffee is a short environmental documentary examining the life cycle of a paper cup and the repercussions of a society reliant on convenience.  Why are less than 1% of coffeeshop patrons bringing their own cup?  Why do we have so much garbage, and where does it go? What is the true cost of a disposable culture?  Shot throughout the San Francisco Bay Area, including interviews with local activists, environmental experts and coffeeshop owners. This film is full of information that all consumers should know about the products that we use everyday, and the steps we need to make towards a more sustainable world.

AWARDS:  Festival Favorite, Wild and Scenic Environmental Film Festival 2008. Best Documentary, Epidemic Student Film Festival 2007.

Finally, we'll explore Fairtrade Africa (Rob Holmes, Founder/Pres. GLP/2012/5 min).

Fairtrade Africa - Short Version from Green Living Project on Vimeo.

Produced by award-winning media company Green Planet Films.

We hope you will join us at Whole Foods - River Forest (7245 Lake St, River Forest, IL) on Thursday, February 21, 2013, at 7 p.m. for this very special One Earth Film Festival preview night!

Working Bikes

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Saturday, Mar 2, 3P/Greenline Wheels, Oak Park - Tickets;

Sunday, Mar 3, 3P/Brown Cow, Forest Park - Tickets

2012/5 min

Follows the Chicago organization by the same name that removes discarded bikes from the waste stream and then rehabs the bikes for donation.

Programming note:  will be screened with Contested Streets and Bikes Belong (Saturday).  Will also be shown with The Clean Bin Project (Sunday).

For the Price of a Cup of Coffee

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Thursday, Feb 21, 7P/Whole Foods Market, River Forest preview night- RSVP call 708.366.1045

Hypatia Angelique Porter/2007/15 min

What is the cost of convenience?  For the Price of a Cup of Coffee is a short environmental documentary examining the life cycle of a paper cup and the repercussions of a society reliant on convenience.  Why are less than 1% of coffeeshop patrons bringing their own cup?  Why do we have so much garbage, and where does it go? What is the true cost of a disposable culture?

Shot throughout the San Francisco Bay Area, including interviews with local activists, environmental experts and coffeeshop owners. This film is full of information that all consumers should know about the products that we use everyday, and the steps we need to make towards a more sustainable world.

AWARDS:  Festival Favorite, Wild and Scenic Environmental Film Festival 2008. Best Documentary, Epidemic Student Film Festival 2007.

Programming note:  will be screeened with Black Gold and Fair Trade Africa.

The Majestic Plastic Bag: A Mockumentary

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Saturday, Mar 2, 3P/River Forest Public Library - Tickets

4 min/

This mockumentary is narrated by Academy Award-winner Jeremy Irons and tracks the “migration” of a plastic bag from a grocery store parking lot to the “Great Pacific Garbage Patch” in the Pacific Ocean.

Programming note:  will be screened and discussed along with Bag It - is your life too plastic?
 

Bag It - is your life too plastic?

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Saturday, Mar 2, 3P/River Forest Public Library - Tickets

74  min/FAMILY

Bag It has been garnering awards at film festivals across the nation. What started as a documentary about plastic bags evolved into a wholesale investigation into plastics and their effect on our waterways, oceans, and even our bodies.  Join the Bag It movement and decide for yourself how plastic your life will be.

 

Program note:  Bag It will be screened and discussed along with The Majestic Plastic Bag: A Mockumentary.
Film program sponsored by Keep Oak Park Beautiful.

The Clean Bin Project

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Sunday, Mar 3, 3P/

The Brown Cow, Forest Park

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Tickets

76 Min/FAMILY

Is it possible to live completely waste free? In this multi-award winning, festival favourite, partners Jen and Grant go head to head in a competition to see who can swear off consumerism and produce the least garbage.  Their light-hearted competition is set against a darker examination of the problem waste.

 Even as Grant and Jen start to garner interest in their project, they struggle to find meaning in their minuscule influence on the large-scale environmental impacts of our “throw-away society”. Described as An Inconvenient Truth meets Super Size Me, The Clean Bin Project features laugh out loud moments, stop motion animations, and unforgettable imagery. Captivating interviews with renowned artist, Chris Jordan and TED Lecturer Captain Charles Moore, make this film a fun and inspiring call to individual action that speaks to crowds of all ages.

Oak Park Launches a Repair Café

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What do you do with a broken toaster? Or a lamp that no longer lights? Or with a sweater that has  holes? Throw it away? Certainly not! The Lifelong Learning Center and local volunteers are organizing the first Repair Café in Oak Park, IL starting in January, 2013.

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At the Repair Café, located in the Lifelong Learning Center at the Oak Park Arms, 414 S. Oak Park Avenue, everything centers on making repairs and sharing knowledge. Various volunteer experts will be available: electricians, seamstresses and general handy people to help make all possible repairs free of charge. Tools and materials will also be on hand. People visiting the Repair Café can bring along their broken items from home. Toasters, lamps, hair dryers, clothes, toys, crockery... anything that is broken is welcome. And can more than likely be repaired. The specialists in Repair Café almost always have the know-how.

By promoting repairs, the Lifelong Learning Center wants to help reduce mountains of waste. This is absolutely necessary, according to Nancy Bauer: "We throw away piles of stuff…even things which practically have nothing wrong with them, and which could easily be used again after a simple repair. Unfortunately, many people have forgotten that they can have things repaired. Or they don’t know how to make the fix themselves. The Repair Café wants to change all that."

The Repair Café is also meant to put neighbors in touch with each other in a new way, by showing that a lot of know-how and practical skills can be found close to home. Nancy Bauer: "If you repair a bike, a CD player or a pair of pants together with a previously unfamiliar neighbor, you look at that person in a different light the next time you run into them on the street. Jointly making repairs can lead to pleasant contacts in the neighborhood."

Nancy points out that repairs can save money and resources, and can help minimize CO2 emissions. “But above all, The Repair Café just wants to show how much fun repairing things can be, and how easy it often is.”

We can’t guarantee that you’ll walk out with a workable item, as we may not have the skills or necessary parts on hand.  But we’ll give it our best shot.  To increase the chances of successful repair, please call the Lifelong Learning Center at 708-848-5251 in advance, and leave a message letting us know what kind of item you might be bringing in to be fixed.  We have a group of volunteers ready to assist you, and knowing a bit more in advance about the repair projects means we stand a better chance of having materials and knowledge available to get the job done.  (If you have the item’s Owner’s Manual, please bring that, too).

Repair Café Foundation:  The Repair Café concept arose in Amsterdam, where the Repair Café Foundation (see www.repaircafe.nl) has regularly been organizing gatherings since 2010. Since January 2011, the foundation has provided support to local groups in the Netherlands wishing to start their own Repair Café. The foundation also supports the Repair Café in Oak Park, IL., USA.

Oak Park Brings Curbside Composting to Community

from garbage to garden With the goal of decreasing the amount of organic refuse sent to landfills, the Village of Oak Park launched its first ever food scrap curbside composting pilot program in 2012. The pilot program, which ran from April through November, was open to the 1,300 residences located south of the Eisenhower Expressway from Harlem Avenue to East Avenue.  A dramatic example of the potential of the program can be seen at one local elementary school,  Beye School, which began participating in the program this Fall.  Beye has reduced its lunchroom waste to just 3%, meaning it is operating a 97% waste-free lunchroom. And due to its overwhelming success, the Village has decided to expand the CompostABLE pilot program throughout the entire Oak Park community. The expanded pilot will be available to single-family residences, up to and including five-flat households using Village refuse and recycling services. Participants will receive a special mobile cart for organics that will hold the approximate equivalent of three bags/containers of yardwaste that is collected in the current program.

The program will be offered on a voluntary, subscription basis. The subscription cost will be $14 per month, which is about the cost of one yardwaste sticker per week. Subscribers who use the organics cart for their yardwaste and food scraps will not be required to purchase yardwaste stickers.  There are no restrictions on sharing a cart, so residents who maintain backyard compost piles or who mulch grass clippings may wish to investigate sharing organics carts and costs with neighbors.

The MOST IMPORTANT THING to know about this program is that it is not like your standard backyard composting. This program takes and composts: (soiled or clean) paper, (soiled or clean) paper napkins, (soiled or clean) pizza boxes (!!!), (soiled) cardboard. It takes ALL food waste even the darn leftovers that you can't put in the backyard compost pile. It is basically what Berkeley and San Francisco and many European cities have been doing for a long time.

Organics carts will be delivered during the last two weeks in March. Organics pick-ups will begin on your regular collection day starting April 1. Information on how to sign up for the CompostABLE program can be found here.  Make sure to review the document, and return the card located at the bottom  of the page to sign up. Please be sure to include your email address for monthly program updates and event information.

Residents who participate in the project will receive a 96-gallon cart for the weekly collection of organics, an under-sink collection bucket and a box of compostable bags for food scraps. Both yardwaste and food scraps may be placed in the organics cart. However, food scraps must be contained in a bag labeled compostable that meets ASTM 6400 standards.

Need more information on the Village CompostABLE program? Please contact the Village Public Works Department at Works at 708.358.5700 or email publicworks@oak-park.us.

 

 

 

 

Youth Films Demonstrate Commitment to Sustainability

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by Katie Morris The One Earth Film Festival 2013, organized by Green Community Connections, will sponsor the first ever Young Filmmakers Contest: One Earth…Our Earth.  This film contest is a way in which young people can showcase their abilities in making positive changes for their future.  It is an opportunity to engage our youth, and create excitement around how they can, and do, make a difference in our world and in our local community.

As part of the 2nd annual One Earth Film Festival, the Young Filmmakers Contest invites students in all eligible age categories (from third grade through college) to submit film entries that cover at least one of the following categories: water, waste, food, transportation, or energy.

With this contest, “we want to encourage youth to not just contemplate the issues surrounding sustainability, but to get them thinking about potential solutions,” said Sue Crothers, contest committee chair. “Youth involvement in the sustainability movement is the key to our future, and film is a powerful medium for them to express their concern and awareness. ”

The Rainforest Rescue Coalition (RRC), a Chicago based nonprofit organization, is currently working on a submission for the college-aged category of the contest.  Founded by four OPRF High School graduates among others, the mission of the RRC is to conserve and protect rainforest land around the world and to support sustainable relationships between humans and nature. RRC raises money for sustainability and conservation initiatives through direct action campaigns.  One of RRC’s goals is to help educate the public about conservation and environmental issues - including both the problems and solutions, . . . and what better way than through film?

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According to Adam Bauer-Goulden, RRC President, RRC is creating their film entry as a way to show that anything is possible, if you put forth the energy and try to make a difference.   Though the film is still in its production phase, Bauer-Goulden reports that RRC’s film will begin with a montage of the terrible environmental disasters taking place in the world today. It will move into the story of how RRC was formed and show footage from its first 350-mile fundraising ride. The audience will have the chance to learn how they can become involved with RRC and other conservation efforts.  The film will close with a final montage of the great and positive things that the environmental movement is accomplishing.

Bauer-Goulden says, “Our inspiration is trying to get as many people involved as possible in our movement. I really believe that energy is the most important thing that we have. I believe that our purpose in life is to use our energy for something inherently good and to make the world a better place…we really just want to show people that we are just normal kids and anybody and everybody has the power to make change in this world, no matter what your situation...Anything counts!”

The deadline to submit a film to the Young Filmmakers Contest is January 25, 2013 at 5 PM CST.  For more information on the contest, please check out our website and facebook page, or contact Sue Crothers, suebillgee@comcast.net or Katie Morris, Katie.a.morris@gmail.com.