#46: More about clothes drying

More about clothes drying, including Johanna and Sue talking about Coachlight Condominiums’ ban; Joyce on using the NHA clothesline at Cahill Apts, Tammi talking about drying in India with irons and monkeys; and unrelated, my sister Juji talking about the Heathcote community in Maryland where she lives.

#62: March to Stop the Pipeline

 

On March 17-20, 2016, I joined several hundred people marching along the proposed Kinder-Morgan/NED pipeline route. It was about 50 miles, from Windsor, MA, to Northfield, MA, both towns where compressor stations are proposed. The walk was stunningly organized by Sugar Shack Alliance (http://www.sugarshackalliance.org).

People along the way joined and fed and housed the walk, and organized special events. In this show, you’ll hear Will Elwell talking about a cabin he built in the middle of the proposed pipeline route; Josh Fox talking about his latest film, loving the things climate can’t change; Rep Steve Kulik sharing Kinder-Morgan stories as he has witnessed in the legislature; Dragonfly, one of the members of the “Rev Billy and the Church of Stop Shopping Choir” making up songs as we walk; Lisa McLaughlin talking about Native American sacred sites along the proposed route; Leigh Youngblood of Mt Grace Land Trust reading a list of Article 97 protected conservation lands that the pipeline would go through from Pittsfield to Dracut; Carolyn Shores Ness of the Deerfield selectboard explaining how Deerfield has been able to defend their town from a proposed compressor station; Moonlight Davis of Irving singing a pipeline original…and other voices.

#61: Frances Crowe – transit, Gov’s office; Pipelines; Simple; BLM

 

A couple of months before her 97th birthday, with walking places becoming more difficult, Frances Crowe sold her car. She tells us about one day navigating transportation options around Northampton. Then she talks about her birthday visit yesterday to Gov Baker’s office to tell him to stop the pipeline and raise the solar net metering cap.

I have some anecdotes about the Unist’ot’en pipeline resistance in western Canada, about biking through fracked territory in PA, “natural gas” vs my natural gas, and a song “Wake up and Smell the Gas” by Mark Kelso.

Angie from Simple Diaper and Linen (http://simple.coop) talks briefly about the cloth and compostable diaper business.

In the last 15 minutes there is a clip from a Black Lives Matter forum in February, actually organized by WHMP, where 4 local Black panelists talk about their experience in Northampton.

#60: International Women’s Day: Stop the Pipeline

 

In honor of International Women’s Day, March 8th, Western Mass Code Pink organized an event to honor women working to stop pipelines, mainly the proposed Kinder-Morgan/NED pipeline. Nearly 20 women speak, representing a dozen organizations across Western Mass (North). Music is by the Raging Grannies, Molly Scott, and Sarah Pirtle. The show is full of announcements and action items, so keep your pen and paper handy.

#59: Coal, Cardboard, and Compost

Take a bike ride with me through coal country of Eastern KY, and hear the mountains being trucked away. To where? Mountains of landfills full of consumer goods in Western Mass? And then there’s cardboard, mountains of Amazon boxes. What does online shopping mean for trash haulers? And then there’s compost. Susan Waite, Northampton recycling coordinator, talks briefly about the negative effects of putting organics in the trash. And then there are a couple of interviews from a composting conference I went to in FL in January: Brenda Sanders talks about incinerators and community gardens in Baltimore, Debbie Ullman shares her New York comPost box project, and Michael Robinson talks about collecting compost by bike in Cleveland, OH.

#58: Alex’s talk about community

 

This week’s episode features Alex Jarrett talking about sharing, busyness and creating non-traditional family.   More information at www.sharett.org/?p=146.

These pictures are referenced in the talk:

yard

Wood gathered from the neighborhood:

woodpile

Our bike trailer to travel to Antarctica:

trailer

Pedal People moving job:

ppmoving

Pedal People, Fall 2015:

pp2015

Free air by the bike path:

freeair

2006 – The original bench we built:

bench2006

2007 – The cob bench by the bike path

bench2007

2013 – After refinishing

bench2013

2015 – Latest refinishing:

bench2015

2006 – Busting up asphalt for future gardens:

beforeasphaltremoval

2012 – Gardens, rainbarrels, solar dehydrator:

aftergardens

#55: Ezra Parzybok – medical marijuana

 

Medical marijuana was legalized in Massachusetts in 2013.  But it has taken almost 3 years for the first dispensary to open in Western Mass.  Meet Ezra Parzybok of Florence,  a medical marijuana consultant and outspoken advocate for medical marijuana.  Ezra was also running a dispensary out of his home – until it was raided last fall.  Ezra talks about his personal story, and about ways cannabis can ease people’s pain, including a story about how one of his clients found healing from lung cancer by smoking marijuana.  Ezra also talks about issues with the law, and how the laws and stereotypes around marijuana are applied differently depending on race and class

And at the beginning of the show, Luna Puchalsky has a 5-min segment of street interviews she did, asking people about the biggest problem this country faces in the upcoming year.

#54: Opioid addiction – Holyoke Health Center

 

How does opioid addiction and recovery work?

This seemed like a timely topic, given the recent spike in heroin overdoses in MA.  My housemate Tammi Kozuch works at the Holyoke Health Center, so I talked with her and two co-workers, Gene DiVincenzo and Liz O’Dair, about their work in the suboxone program there.

#53: Deciding what to buy; Refugee resettlement

 

Whether it’s food, clothing, or lottery tickets, how do we decide what to buy?  Or what we want?  I asked about 20 random people around town their thoughts on this.  It sounds like we’re generally pretty impulsive – and the advertising industry gambles $180 billion a year to shape our wants.

My good friend and housemate Alex Jarrett talks in depth about some of his consumer decisions.  Other featured voices include Nao, Stan-the-Fixit Man, and Joanna V.  For me, I try to answer two questions before buying anything:  Where did it come from ?  and Where will it go?

The last quarter of the show is highlights from a presentation about refugee resettlement by Deirdre Griffin, New American Program Director at Jewish Family Services in Springfield.  The presentation was at the Friends Meeting House in Northampton last Saturday.  The event was prompted by the current Syrian refugee crisis.  For more info, or for ways to volunteer, go to  http://www.jfswm.org/healing-world/refugee-services

 

 

 

#52: Climate Action Rally, Bike ride through N’ton

 

This week the international climate talks are being held in Paris.  Here in Northampton, around 250 enthusiastic climate change fighters marched and rallied the evening of Sunday, November 29th.  The first half hour of the show is from this march and rally.  Probably about 20 different people from the community speak about their passions, to the eager cheering of an engaged (and chilly) crowd.

 

The latter part of the show is me narrating as I bike from downtown to the new Northampton Community Rowing docks on the Connecticut River  north of Damon Rd.  I attempt a spontaneous visit to the Coca-Cola plant,  and take a ride down the memory of Lane Construction.

Tune in every Friday from 4 to 5 pm on Valley Free Radio, 103.3 FM in Northampton, MA USA or streaming online at valleyfreeradio.org