Archive for August, 2012

THE NATION’S CAPITAL WELCOMES THE EIGHTH ANNUAL GREEN FESTIVAL SEPTEMBER 29 & 30

Social justice and environmental issues are key focus at the largest and longest running green consumer event with renowned authors, educators, and visionary leaders

The 8th Annual Washington DC Green Festival, Sept. 29-30 at the Washington Convention Center

Washington, D.C. (August 16, 2012) –  The eighth annual premier green living event, Green Festival, rolls into the nation’s capital September 29-30, 2012.  TheWalterE.WashingtonConvention Center will host eco-innovators, speakers, artists, community leaders and green businesses addressing environmental and social justice issues. It is the largest marketplace of conscious, fair-trade businesses and the place to get a head start on holiday shopping.

There are plenty of activities and workshops aimed at educating kids and families on making healthy lifestyle choices: highlights include a kids’ zone where youngsters can learn about easy and fun ways to be green, a Good Food Stage featuring delicious vegetarian cuisine, yoga classes and an organic beer and wine garden.

Keynote speakers include leading environmental, healthy lifestyle and social justice advocates: Congressman Dennis Kucinich and Elizabeth Kucinich, of the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine; political activist and author, Ralph Nader;  Dr. Benjamin Chavis, a noted civil rights leader;  Amy Goodman of Democracy NOW!; Laura Flanders of GRITtv; NAACP President Benjamin Todd Jealous; John Perkins; Greg Palast; and Medea Benjamin.

A joint venture between Green America and Global Exchange, Green Festival is a non-profit event that celebrates an 11 year milestone hosting over one million attendees in eight cities. Green Festival is the largest sustainability event and is the only event that screens exhibitors for their commitment to social justice and ecological balance using Green America’s Green Business Certification Standards.

FORD Motor and Green Festivals have partnered again to fund a $5,000 Community Green Grant at the Washington, DC Green Festival. Attendees can to vote for their favorite non-profit project at the FORD Community Green Grants Booth during show hours.

“We are excited to host the eighth annual Green Festival in the Nation’s Capital,” said Denise Hamler, Green Festival Director. “Green Festival is a celebration of what is working in our communities and about showing the healthy choices we can all make in our communities and in our lives that will make a difference – from the food we consume to the technology we use.”

At the center of Green Festival is the Green Marketplace, which features 300 green and socially responsible businesses/organizations, featuring the latest in sustainable products and services. Attendees will have the opportunity to browse everything from green, non-toxic home furnishings to eco-fashions, Fair Trade gifts, and children’s toys.

Attendees of all ages can learn at the hands-on DIY workshops and gain practical green tips to apply to everyday life. At the Green Business Pavilion attendees will experience what’s trending in green jobs and businesses.

Highlights include:

  • Ford Ride and Drive in all-electric and hybrid cars
  • Green Kids Zone
  • Eco-Fashion Showcase
  • Do-It-Yourself Workshops
  • Green Pet Stage and fashion show
  • Green Business Stage
  • Green Jobs and Careers
  • Green Investing
  • Renewable Energy
  • Beer and Wine Garden
  • Organic Local Food
  • Fair Trade Stage
  • Community Action Stage
  • Green Films
  • Live music
  • Bike Valet
  • Keynote speakers include: Congressman Dennis Kucinich and Elizabeth Kucinich,  Ralph Nader, Dr. Benjamin Chavis, Amy Goodman, John Perkins, Greg Palast, Laura Flanders, Benjamin Todd Jealous and Medea Benjamin

Key partners and sponsors include: Ford Motor Company, Ford Community Green Grants, Earth Balance, New York Times, O’Organics, MOM’s Organic Market, SustainU, NAACP, Clif Bar and Yelp DC.

The 2012 Green Festival will be held at the WalterE.WashingtonConvention Center, 801 Mount Vernon Place N.W.Hall B, Washington, DC, 20001. Doors open Saturday, September 29th 10 am – 7 pm and Sunday, September 30th 11 am-6 pm.

Tickets are $10 for a one day pass and $20 for a full weekend pass when purchased online at www.greenfestivals.org, or $15 and $25 at the door. (All tickets provide access to exhibit floor, all workshops/yoga classes, speakers and films.) Discounted admission at the door for seniors (over 65) and students with student ID. Free admission for anyone who rides a bike to the event and parks with the bike valet, youth under eighteen, union members, volunteers and Green America and Global Exchange members.

For more information, please visit www.GreenFestivals.org. To exhibit, please call: 828-333-9403 x 300.

For partnership information, visit www.greenfestivals.org/become-a-partner.

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About Green America

Green America is a national nonprofit organization founded in 1982, providing the economic strategies, organizing power and practicing tools for businesses and individuals to address today’s social and environmental problems. Its Green Business Network is the largest national network of businesses screened for their social and environmental responsibility.

About Global Exchange

Global Exchange is a membership-based international human rights organization dedicated to promoting social, economic and environmental justice around the world. Since its founding in 1988, Global Exchange has successfully increased public awareness of root causes of injustice while building international partnerships and mobilizing for change.

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LA County Home to US’s First Green Certification for Arts Orgs

LOS ANGELES – August 2, 2012 When Joel Shapiro and Justin Yoffe oversaw the installation of solar panels on the roof of the Electric Lodge in Venice, California, in 2001, they may not have realized they’d also made the first step in what would become a countywide movement to make the arts into green businesses.

“I asked myself, ‘What is the purpose of a cultural organization in a community?’” Yoffe recalls. “I wanted to be part of setting the example.”

Their initial review of LEED certification led them to an eighty-page document of regulations whose upgrades and changes would cost tens of thousands of dollars —worthwhile investments that they are, unfortunately, out of reach for many nonprofit businesses.

Yoffe said the movement started off very small and grassroots. A voluntary coalition of galleries, theatres, and dance studios
came on board with an agreement to make small, incremental changes—adding recycle bins to their lobbies, changing some
light bulbs for example.

“What we realized is that by adapting these green practices, more people wanted to be at the Electric Lodge. Suddenly, we
had more demand for rentals, a larger audience, and people were more excited about what we were doing. And then our
donor base started to expand.”

From this modest beginning, the Arts:Earth Partnership grew. Yoffe and Shapiro connected with regional leaders, including
LA Stage Alliance, the City of Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs, and the City of Santa Monica to learn more about
how to establish a special certification for arts businesses—cultural facilities, theaters, museums, dance studios, art galleries,
performing arts companies, and individual artists—throughout the region. Each city has its own standards for the
certification, which makes Los Angeles County—with its 88 unique municipalities—challenging, but not impossible.

While Arts:Earth Partnership is a great step forward for Los Angeles County, it is also the very first recognized green business
association for the arts in the United States. For arts organizations, the certification often carries with it savings in energy,
water and waste expenses and access to rebates, and benefits that carry real impact on their ability to provide access to art,
performances, and education for members of their community.

AEP’s first big effort came from the City of Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs, who tasked them with evaluating the
city-owned cultural facilities to determine how green their operations were. None of them could be immediately certified,
Yoffe recalls, partly because the pre-approved products managers could buy for their facilites were not green. However,
when the Department of Sanitation heard from AEP about how to make the small changes to extend access to greener
materials, the department came online to support AEP’s efforts. Because of this work, Yoffe stresses, all seven hundred cityowned facilities now have access to the same green products.

Now AEP provides, with support from Los Angeles’s Department of Cultural Affairs, an inexpensive pathway to cultural
organizations striving to become more green. As part of the consultation, which costs approximately $300 over two years,
AEP provides a list of upgrades necessary to achieve their green certification along with the costs and an implementation
plan based on the organization’s capacity. AEP can also provide a cost payback analysis to help the cultural organization
understand the long term impact of its changes.

Adam Meltzer came on board in May 2011 as the programs director for A:EP to help oversee this work. “When we green a
theater or a museum/gallery, you not only see a difference when you walk into the space, but you can quantify that difference
into making the world a better place,” Meltzer says. “Fewer toxins in the air, more recycled products, less waste, and reduced
CO2 emissions released into the environment due to reduced energy use.”

Seventeen businesses in Los Angeles County have received A:EP’s green certification: Art-In-The-Park, Barnsdall Junior  Arts Center, Canoga Park Youth Arts Center, Craft & Folk Art Museum, Eagle Rock Community Cultural Center, Lankershim Arts Center, Madrid Theater, McGroarty Arts Center, Nate Holden Performing Arts Center, rediscover Center, Ruskin Group Theatre Co., Santa Monica Museum of Art, the Electric Lodge, the G2 Gallery, the Miles Memorial Playhouse, and William Reagh/LA Photo Center. These are only the beginning, though, as A:EP continues to consult with more and more creative businesses to help them achieve the certification. “The more people we have on board, the more powerful the message is,” Meltzer says.

Yoffe believes this green movement is a way to establish the arts sector as truly innovative outside our own silo. “There’s a
meme in this country that states the arts are a dependent sector, a parasitic sector, that funding for the arts is objectionable.
But we are the visionaries. We’re the way out of contemporary problems.” Meltzer agrees. “We had to find a way to get
organizations to say yes to environmental sustainability instead of no, so we simplified the process of certification. Making it
simple and cost effective is the way to do that.” Arts:Earth Partnership’s work, they believe, will help ensure the arts have a
seat at the table when communities talk about sustainability.

“People have committed to changing their organizations into places they can create art in a non-toxic environment and feel
good about working in partnership with the planet instead of taking a short term outlook,” Meltzer says. “That’s what keeps
me going.” After ten years of work, A:EP can now point to quanifiable results—not only for the organizations they serve, but
for all the residents of Los Angeles County.

For more information on Arts:Earth Partnership, visit their website at http://www.artsearthpartnership.org

 

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