INDIVISIBLE Lambertville NJ / New Hope PA

Category: Environment

  • ILNH FYI

    ILNH FYI

    Lambertville Candidates Corner ReplayOver 80 people attended the Indivisible Lambertville/New Hope Candidates’ Corner for Lambertville Town Council. The virtual event hosted all five candidates running for council during three 20-minute sessions. Candidates fielded a series of questions that had been submitted in advance by registered attendees.  Participation was limited to Lambertville residents who are on the ILNH email list. If you missed the event, see the replay on YouTube from the homepage of our website.  Stay tuned for more Candidates’ Corners in upcoming months. 

    The ILNH Environmental Action Group joined 128 other organizations in opposition of the Gibbstown Liquid Natural Gas (LNG) Terminal in a letter to the DRBC. You can view the letter here.

  • ILNH FYI

    ILNH FYI

    Environmental Art Show to Bring Attention to Climate Crisis

    Do you want to get inspired about the environment? Then check out Love Mother Earth 2020, an environmental art and performance show on Saturday Feb. 29 from 12 – 5 p.m. at Prallsville Mills in Stockton.

    A joint venture between Indivisible and the Sunrise chapters of Hunterdon and Lambertville, the show will feature local artists in any medium, poets and performers whose topics are based around the environment. The exhibit will include traditional visual arts such as drawings, paintings, and sculpture, as well as song, dance, poetry and spoken word.

    More than twenty artists have already committed to the show. More are encouraged to participate. The deadline to submit an application to participate is Feb. 15.

    Volunteers are needed for set up on Friday, Feb. 28, parking during the event, and clean up on Sunday, March 1. If you are available and able to help, please sign up here:  https://docs.google.com/document/d/1iNYeW6A45S1A8xmWWTrKjceYMA40Q_p0zYOUccKnM08/edit

    Sunrise Movement is a youth organization to end the climate crisis and advocate for the Green New Deal. The Hunterdon and Lambertville chapters, called hubs, are part of an international organization.

    More information about the exhibit:

    The exhibit is free and open to the public. For more information and to sign up to attend, click here:  https://www.eventbrite.com/e/love-mother-earth-2020-tickets-91449025497

    If you are interested in participating as an artist or performer, please apply here: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSepAIBmmcpQa-xTzLidW5Hk6EtKiAb386e5s4ekXCOgOE7lHA/viewform 

    Environmental or youth organizations are invited to have a table at this event.  Please apply here: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSc5kuZGOxfWyVyIR-ZtmlFRxQelizJHl1p298mPzZD1vE0HLw/viewform

    Did You See This? New York Times Covers Change the Conversation Bucks!

    Several of ILNH’s leadership team were captured and quoted in a recent NYTimes article that covered Change the Conversation Together and a recently held training and canvassing in Bucks County. In To Sway Swing Voters, Try Empathy, by Michael Massing, Cindi Sternfeld is quoted, Susan Shapiro and Elycia Lerman are in the photos. The piece has already heightened interest and attracted more people who want to join the cause. How about you? 

    Meet ILNH’s new co-Treasurer John Woods

    I started hanging around Indivisible LNH about a year and a half ago. I’m a 73 year old retired gay guy who worked in Human Services for many years. After the 2016 election results and what began to emerge, I became really worried about what was happening in our country. Our values as a democracy were under attack by super wealthy white guys who seemed to only care about money and power, no matter what. So I attended a couple of ILNH Community Meetings, got hooked up with a canvassing team before the 2018 elections, canvassed in Hunterdon and Bucks counties. I got involved early with Change the Conversation, a really unique way of connecting with potential voters. I got on the ILNH Slack site and began to be part of planning and feedback around various issues. 

    My experience with ILNH to date has been fantastic. I’ve been part of many kinds of organizations over my lifetime and I have never seen one with such constant, organic-like, communications that are so effective at accomplishing many objectives. I asked if there were other things I could do. The next day I was asked to help as an organization treasurer. Admittedly, I’m a bit overwhelmed at learning the specifics of the job, but feel great to be helping in an important way. Whether you are a joiner, a hermit, an angry citizen, shy, not a people person or whatever. . .there is an important place for you here, where you can make a difference in getting our democracy and values back. 

  • Climate Strike: What’s Next?

    Contributed by Amara Willey.

    “If the people lead, the leaders will follow” was given new energy as the season tried to turn from summer to autumn in September. Coinciding with United Nations Week and preceding the U.N. Climate Summit, Swedish student and environmental activist Greta Thunberg spoke at the U.N., inspiring global protests of more than 4 million people.

    Climate Strike, the third of its kind this year, was a series of global protests and strikes demanding that action be taken to address climate change during the week of Sept. 20-27. The demands of this ongoing movement include a Green New Deal, respect for indigenous land, environmental justice, protection of biodiversity, and sustainable agriculture.

    Montreal saw one of the biggest crowds for the action, gathering an estimated 315,000. To put that in perspective, the September 2014 People’s Climate March in New York attracted 310,000.

    Among the demands by Climate Strike Canada – the network overseeing the various activist and student groups organizing the marches – is a call to reject all new fossil fuel extraction or transportation projects, and to eliminate fossil fuel subsidies. That sentiment was echoed in the much smaller DC marches during U.N. Week.

    Climate protests were also reported in Finland, India, South Korea, Spain, and New Zealand. Tens of thousands of protesters also rallied in Rome, Italy, holding up signs with slogans such as “change the system, not the climate.”

    Students have been walking out of classrooms on Fridays all year to protest that not enough is being done to address climate change issues. Many grassroots organizations are working together on this issue. The adult coalition members are: 350.org, Alliance for Climate Education (ACE), Center for Biological Diversity, The Center for Popular Democracy, Climate Hawks Vote, GreenFaith, Greenpeace, Hip Hop Caucus, Interfaith Power & Light, Labor Network for Sustainability, League of Conservation Voters (LCV), March On, Mothers Out Front, Move On, National Wildlife Federation, NextGen America, Natural Resource Defense Council (NRDC), Our Children’s Trust, Oxfam, SEIU, & Sierra Club.

    Continued pressure is planned for the two weeks following Oct. 7 by Extinction Rebellion in 60 cities worldwide. In New York City, the 5-day Rebel Fest is set for Washington Square Park Oct. 7-11. Throughout the week, non-violent disruptive actions are planned in various locations in the city. At 9:30 a.m. on Monday Oct. 7, people will gather at Battery Park to partake in an Ecological Funeral Procession and the announcement of Declaration Rebellion. Rebel Fest officially begins later that day at 2:00 p.m. in Washington Square Park, with activities including teach-ins, workshops, art making, meditation, yoga, live music, talks and nonviolent direct action training.  For information and the week’s schedule, go here: https://bit.ly/2m85lu9

    What you can do:

    1. Sign the Climate Strike Pledge at www.strikedc.org and/or donate to them.
    2. Go to https://globalclimatestrike.net/next/ and sign petitions for
    3. A fossil free FaceBook
    4. Stopping oil exploitation in Virunga Park, DRC (The Congo)
    5. Put pressure on New Zealand’s rugby team to dump AIG’s sponsorship
    6. Join a local campaign for the We Are Unstoppable movement: www.350.org
    7. Join Extinction Rebellion’s plans for a two-week action starting Oct. 7. Local actions will take place in Washington Square Park in New York City from Oct. 7-11 under the name Rebel Fest. Go here for more information: https://rebellion.earth/international-rebellion/.
    8. Plant a tree. Go here for more information: https://www.plant-for-the-planet.org/en/home
    9. Sing for the climate: https://singfortheclimate.com/. Organize an action locally by emailing: info@singfortheclimate.com.

    Sources:

    www.strikedc.org

    https://www.climatestrike.net/

    https://strikewithus.org/

    https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-49856860

    https://news.yahoo.com/thousands-people-plan-protest-friday-103009717.html;_ylt=AwrJ61hZv49dIngAUSNXNyoA;_ylu=X3oDMTEycWg2ZWI3BGNvbG8DYmYxBHBvcwMzBHZ0aWQDQjg3MDFfMQRzZWMDc2M-

  • I Am an Indigenous Woman; We Are All Someone’s Prayer for Change

    The following speech was given by Niya Maniez-Wassegiig, a South Hunterdon High School senior, at the recent Climate Strike held in Lambertville. We offer this with gratitude to both our next-generation of leaders and all Indigenous people as protectors of the earth. 

    Aaniin, Hello,

    I would like to thank everyone who came to the climate strike today. I am Niya Maniez-Wassegiig and I am a tribal member of Wikwemikong First Nation in Canada. I am a senior in high school and a resident of Lambertville. I am an Anishinaabekwe, or indigenous woman, I am a social activist and an artist. 

    Climate change affects indigenous people and marginalized communities disproportionately. Indigenous people are only 5% of the world’s population, and yet, our communities are at the forefront of protecting the earth, advocating against fossil fuels, and recognizing water as sacred. We “protect nearly 80% of biodiversity” according to the U.N. But protecting the earth, our mother, is not the responsibility of native people. It is everyone’s responsibility. 

    Some indigenous communities are deeply connected to the earth and rely directly on and contribute positively to particular ecosystems which are threatened by climate change. Not only is indigenous land often forcibly taken and used for fossil fuels and other natural resources, but the land to which indigenous peoples have been forcibly relocated is often the least fertile and the least livable. 

    The climate crisis exacerbates this problem because most indigenous communities do not have the resources or flexibility to respond. There are so many reservations that do not even have clean drinking water. According to the Southern University Law Center’s 2019 study, nearly 50% of tribal homes lack clean water, or even access to water, in the U.S. Meanwhile, the natural resources which are available on the land are funneled away for use by non-indigenous people. At the same time, fossil fuel companies seek out these areas to take advantage of because these big businesses know that no one will care or call media attention to what is happening to marginalized communities. 

    But my people are rising up, we are making change. When people hear the word “pipeline” they often think back to the the Dakota Access Pipeline and Standing Rock. Standing Rock began when a youth group set up a small prayer camp on their reservation. You may have also heard news of the conflict on Mauna Kea, where indigenous people are blocking roads to protect the sacred mountain. 

    These examples have gained a lot of news coverage, but these are not the only examples of indigenous communities rising up to protect sacred earth from big businesses. Oil and natural gas companies continue to undermine these underprivileged communities, aiming to make money instead of aiming to avoid a climate crisis. In order to solve this crisis, it is important to remember that equity is key. 

    Our own community here in Lambertville has been confronted with similar issues regarding a pipeline. It has been a long road that has worried many members of our community. Here in Lambertville, we are lucky to have wealth on our side, along with many educated people that are embedded in our systems of government and business that are helping to put a stop to an unneeded and unwanted pipeline. Imagine all the communities within North America that do not have the same resources as our community. In those communities, the pipeline would already be in the ground. 

    It scares me when I see that so few people are concerned about the climate crisis. People older than me frequently have little to no concern, because it is not them who will have to live in this world after it has become uninhabitable. So then why is it that people my age and younger also do not care? It is because they see no reason to try, they believe in climate change and what will happen, but we have become so numb to it that it no longer seems to matter.  

    We can allow this possible future to lull us into depression or complacency, or we can choose to allow this crisis to fuel our progress to problem solve creatively and in collaboration with each other. It is important for us to be together here, on the streets, but what is more important is for us to take action when we leave. Let this gathering be a catalyst for us to make change now. When we leave this strike today, what we will organize to do in our community to make change?

    Oren Lyons, Chief of the Onondaga Nation, writes: “We are looking ahead, as is one of the first mandates given us as chiefs, to make sure and to make every decision that we make relate to the welfare and well-being of the seventh generation to come. … What about the seventh generation? Where are you taking them? What will they have?”

    In closing, I would like to share with you the words of Autumn Peltier, a young woman from the Wikwemikong reservation. At just the age of fourteen, Autumn was recently named chief water commissioner for Anishinabek Nation. This is what she has to say: 

    “You are someone’s seventh generation, you are the change, you are someone’s hope, you are someone’s prayer for change.” 

    Migwetch, thank you. 

    Sources: 

    https://www.un.org/development/desa/indigenouspeoples/climate-change.html

    https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/31/magazine/the-youth-group-that-launched-a-movement-at-standing-rock.html

    https://racism.org/articles/basic-needs/207-food-and-water/3070-the-reservation-water-crisis

  • ILNH FYI – Updates and Upcoming

    ILNH FYI – Updates and Upcoming

    Ready to get busy? Check out our Action Group Activities and Opportunities to Get Involved!

    Environmental Action Team Update – Lambertville is a hub of environmental action fueled by volunteers and we are only getting started! Indivisible LNH members and community allies have fought climate change this year with tenacity and innovation. Below is only a snapshot of the incredible work folks like YOU have been up to!

    PennEast – ILNH worked alongside incredible Stop PennEast allies like Lambertville CAP, Hunterdon and Mercer CAPS, HALT, Delaware Riverkeeper Network, Rethink Energy and Sierra Club NJ to support homeowners, urge legislators to act and demand permit denials from the NJDEP and DRBC. The NJ AG’s office won an important case in this fight, which will prohibit PennEast from taking state owned preserved lands along the route. The project is stalled, but we must remain diligent in advocating for NJDEP and DRBC to DENY all PennEast permits before them.

    Greening the Pipeline is an initiative and creative approach to fighting PennEast started by Lambertville resident Michael Heffler. Aggregation is a program available to towns to buy electricity. What the Greening the Pipeline program is proposing, is rather than just lower the cost, they change the mix of electricity to lower the natural gas used and increase the percentage of renewables. This hits PennEast in the wallet. Towns along the proposed pipeline route that have passed the ordinance to join the program are Frenchtown, Delaware Township, Kingwood and Lambertville. Pennington, Stockton and Alexandria are in the process of passage and discussions have started with Hopewell and West Amwell. This program will save all of us money, shrink our carbon footprint with no cost and no risk. Thank your town council for joining the energy coop, saving all of us money and taking it from the companies investing in Penneast.

    The Lambertville Environmental Commission in partnership with volunteers throughout the City launched the Ditching Disposables Initiative. The DD Initiative seeks to empower businesses and residents to minimize their consumption of single use plastics and transition to more sustainable alternatives. One of the kickoff events was the T-Shirts to Totes event, where residents turned unused t-shirts into reusable bags that will be donated to the local food pantries. The success of this event was due largely in part to the incredible dedication of Cindy Sternfeld and her team of ILNH volunteers who rocked it at the sewing machine! Ditching Disposables has continued to roll out with programs like the Sustainable Business Forum and Green Innovator Award! To learn more follow Lambertville Environmental Commission on Facebook.

    On Oct 1 the ILNH Environment Team was joined by Student Climate Strike Organizer Patrick Artur and Eric Benson from Clean Water Action NJ. Patrick shared what inspired him to organize the Climate Strike and how students can inform future Environment Team actions. Eric Benson from Clean Water Action shared about the top issues facing NJ today and what we can do to address them!

    Call to Action!
    Urge NJDEP and DRBC to Deny All Permits to the PennEast Pipeline
    Sign petition to the NJDEP https://www.greenactions.org/stop-penneast?sc=hlt&fbclid=IwAR2SlWQMpEGr9jPNtQg8EGX3BMoQE-3T-iK6PN6FPYc23xo6KYv_k955HF8
    Sign petition to the DRBC
    https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfZvhXXAppbzQKrZ_5s6lnIdHdUiyIg0hO0_2SN5FsV-8qUZQ/viewform

    Civil Rights Action Group is Active as Heck! – check out the upcoming events. Contact Shara Durkee for more information, locations and to RSVP.

    • Book Club Meeting – Wednesday, October 9 at 6:30 pm in Lambertville – Subject is Solitary by Albert Woodfox, who served more than four decades in solitary confinement – 23 hours a day in a 6-foot by 9-foot cell – for a crime he didn’t commit. Even if you don’t have time to finish or haven’t even started the book, please join us for a lively discussion!
    • Volunteer at Books Through Bars in Philadelphia – Saturday, October 19, 11 am – 2 pm
    • Civil Rights monthly meeting – Monday, October 21 at 6:30 pm in Lambertville.
    • Presentation and Discussion with Elaine Buck and Beverly Mills, authors of If These Stones Could Talk: African American Presence in the Hopewell Valley – Saturday, October 26, 3-5 pm – Methodist Church, 108 N. Union, Lambertville – A decade ago, Beverly Mills and Elaine Buck began formal collaboration into researching the lives of their African American ancestors, most of whom were likely to have been brought up the Delaware River as slaves to–what is now the Hopewell Valley region in Central New Jersey. Active community members, Mills and Buck both serve on the board of the Stoutsburg Cemetery Association, a burial ground for African American residents and veterans in the region.
    • Tour of Eastern State Penitentiary in Philadelphia – Saturday, November 9, 11 am – This one hour tour highlights Eastern State’s fascinating 142-year history, revolutionary architecture, notorious inmates and world-wide influence. The tour will also focus on criminal justice. For the group tour, prices are $11/adults, $10/seniors, $8/students ages 7-12.
    • Workshop “Dismantling the Racism Machine: Myths, Taught to White People that Perpetuate White Supremacy – Wednesday, November 20, 6:30-8:30 pm, Lambertville Public Library – With Karen Gaffney, author of Dismantling the Racism Machine: A Manual and Toolbox.

    Join ILNH Leadership Team! We have roles to fill and need your help. We need to flesh out our GOTV team now, including an overall lead, NJ and PA specific leads, and those who want to focus their energies on righting the ship by educating and encouraging voters through November 3, 2020.
    We’re also looking for someone to head the Swag team, including identifying merchandise to sell, caring for and maintaining inventory and adding to the ILNH finances by successfully SELLING the stock at meetings and other appropriate locations and events.
    In addition, a Fundraising co-lead will join Diane Abatemarco to help plan activities and other mechanisms through which we can support the financial health of ILNH.

    Write for Us! The ILNH Take A Stand Newsletter needs writers. Part of the ILNH mission is educating our community and one of the ways we do so is through this newsletter. Contribute a single piece to express your passion and/or knowledge, or be a regular staffer who keeps their finger on the pulse of the incredible amount of news and subjects that help us be informed citizens – the choice is yours. Contact Deb Kline via email or Slack.