Green Business Strategies
Lecture Series
June 1, 8, and 15
Community Services Bldg
150 N Third
This Burbank Green Alliance series is designed for ALL businesses seeking economic and environmental sustainability. Learn to design and apply a green business plan, as well as, save resources and money !
June 1st: 3-5pm
Greening Your Restaurant/Food Service Business
Speaker: Leslie VanKeuren Campbell, LEED GA
Founder and Zero Waste/Sustainability Consultant, Sustain LA
June 8th: 6:30-9pm
Energy and Water Savings for Businesses
Speaker: Natalie Freidberg, Sustainable Building Advisor
and Certified Green Building Professional
June 15th: 6:30-9pm
Sustainable Business Strategies
Speaker: Brad Cracchiola, Senior Sustainability Engineer
BMW Group Designworks USA
Must Register for each course separately @ or 818.238.5198
$10 Residents
$15 Non-Residents
FREE Chamber Members
Tuesday, May 31, 2011
Thursday, May 26, 2011
Green Day Planner: June 2011
Burbank Library Green Pages
June 2011 Calendar
Calendar of Green Events in Burbank and Greater LA. Check out State and National events on the Green Day Planner.
Burbank
Jun 1: Greening Your Restaurant – Burbank Green Alliance @ 3pm
Jun 7: Urban Water Management Plan – Public Meeting @ 6pm
Jun 8: Energy & Water Savings – Burbank Green Alliance @ 6:30pm
Jun 15: Sustainable Business Strategies – Burbank Green Alliance @ 6:30pm
Jun 20: Sustainable Task Force @ 4:30pm
Los Angeles – Southern California
Jun 4: TreePeople’s Green City Fair – Beverly Hills @ 10am
Jun 5: Green Jobs Fair – LA State Park @ 1pm
Jun 11: Green Long Beach @ 10am
Jun 15+: West Coast Energy Congress – Long Beach
Jun 23: Valley Green Building Educ Conf/Expo – CSUN
California
Jun 4+: Eco-Urban Festival - SF
Jun 7+: Sustainable Brands 2011 – Monterey
United States
Jun 12+: American Water Works Conf - DC
June 2011 Calendar
Calendar of Green Events in Burbank and Greater LA. Check out State and National events on the Green Day Planner.
Burbank
Jun 1: Greening Your Restaurant – Burbank Green Alliance @ 3pm
Jun 7: Urban Water Management Plan – Public Meeting @ 6pm
Jun 8: Energy & Water Savings – Burbank Green Alliance @ 6:30pm
Jun 15: Sustainable Business Strategies – Burbank Green Alliance @ 6:30pm
Jun 20: Sustainable Task Force @ 4:30pm
Los Angeles – Southern California
Jun 4: TreePeople’s Green City Fair – Beverly Hills @ 10am
Jun 5: Green Jobs Fair – LA State Park @ 1pm
Jun 11: Green Long Beach @ 10am
Jun 15+: West Coast Energy Congress – Long Beach
Jun 23: Valley Green Building Educ Conf/Expo – CSUN
California
Jun 4+: Eco-Urban Festival - SF
Jun 7+: Sustainable Brands 2011 – Monterey
United States
Jun 12+: American Water Works Conf - DC
Friday, May 20, 2011
Recycling
8 Things You Didn’t Know You Could Recycle
Care2.com: 5.19.11
posted by Mel, selected from Divine Caroline via EcoSalon
1. Wine Corks
Send them to Yemm & Hart Green Materials started an experimental wine cork-recycling program that processes the old bottle stoppers into environmentally friendly cork floor and wall tiles.
2. Books, DVDs, and CDs
Swaptree.com is a cool Web site that allows you to essentially keep a constantly fresh, rotating selection of reading material, movies, and music for zero dollars.
3. Shoes
Nike is happy to take your rubber-soled shoes—no matter who made them—and recycle them into new athletic surfaces like basketball courts and running tracks. Find your nearest dropoff location at the Nike Reuse-A-Shoe website.
4. Foam Packing Peanuts
EPS recyclers. Polystyrene packing peanuts and molded foam cushioning can either be dropped off at a local location if you have one or sent in the mail.
5. Carpet
Check out the map at CarpetRecovery—you could be able to give that shaggy rug new life as composite lumber, roofing shingles, railroad ties, or automotive parts.
6. Holiday Lights
Send them off to HolidayLEDs to be recycled and you’ll get more than just do-gooder satisfaction. They’ll gift you with a 15-percent-off coupon for anything on their site, so you can get the twinkly LED lights of your dreams.
7. Bras
Bosom Buddy Recycling will take your old bras and give them to deserving women around the country including women’s shelters, transitional housing, and breast cancer-survivor support groups.
8. Prescription Medication
L A County Sheriff's Dept. Drug Drop Off Program
Our water has a drug problem, and as a result, we’re all taking in way more medication than we bargained for. Drinking water in many major metropolitan areas is contaminated with all kinds of pharmaceuticals—from antibiotics to antidepressants—and it’s not just the result of them passing through our bodies. Instead of flushing your prescription meds down the toilet, donate drugs that are still usable. Not every state has a recycling/redistribution program or allows patients to donate directly.
Care2.com: 5.19.11
posted by Mel, selected from Divine Caroline via EcoSalon
1. Wine Corks
Send them to Yemm & Hart Green Materials started an experimental wine cork-recycling program that processes the old bottle stoppers into environmentally friendly cork floor and wall tiles.
2. Books, DVDs, and CDs
Swaptree.com is a cool Web site that allows you to essentially keep a constantly fresh, rotating selection of reading material, movies, and music for zero dollars.
3. Shoes
Nike is happy to take your rubber-soled shoes—no matter who made them—and recycle them into new athletic surfaces like basketball courts and running tracks. Find your nearest dropoff location at the Nike Reuse-A-Shoe website.
4. Foam Packing Peanuts
EPS recyclers. Polystyrene packing peanuts and molded foam cushioning can either be dropped off at a local location if you have one or sent in the mail.
5. Carpet
Check out the map at CarpetRecovery—you could be able to give that shaggy rug new life as composite lumber, roofing shingles, railroad ties, or automotive parts.
6. Holiday Lights
Send them off to HolidayLEDs to be recycled and you’ll get more than just do-gooder satisfaction. They’ll gift you with a 15-percent-off coupon for anything on their site, so you can get the twinkly LED lights of your dreams.
7. Bras
Bosom Buddy Recycling will take your old bras and give them to deserving women around the country including women’s shelters, transitional housing, and breast cancer-survivor support groups.
8. Prescription Medication
L A County Sheriff's Dept. Drug Drop Off Program
Our water has a drug problem, and as a result, we’re all taking in way more medication than we bargained for. Drinking water in many major metropolitan areas is contaminated with all kinds of pharmaceuticals—from antibiotics to antidepressants—and it’s not just the result of them passing through our bodies. Instead of flushing your prescription meds down the toilet, donate drugs that are still usable. Not every state has a recycling/redistribution program or allows patients to donate directly.
Wednesday, May 11, 2011
Book Watch: Burbank Library
New Green Books @ Burbank Public Library
Aerotropolis: the way we'll live next
John D Kasarda – Farrar, 2011
Eye-opening look at the new phenomenon called the aerotropolis gives us a glimpse of the way we will live in the near future and the way we will do business too.read
307.0112 KASAR
Earth, the operators' manual
Richard B. Alley – WW Norton - 2011
Explores the history of energy use by humans over the centuries, gives a doubt-destroying proof that already-high levels of carbon dioxide are causing damaging global warming, and surveys the alternative energy options that are available to exploit right now.
333.79 ALLEY
Mindfully green: a personal and spiritual guide to whole earth thinking
Stephanie Kaza – Shambhala, 2008
In three parts, she guides readers through the principles of Buddhism as they apply to taking responsible action toward the earth: reducing harm, understanding suffering, seeing the big picture, letting go of desire and being in the moment.
333.72 KAZA
Plastiki: across the Pacific on plastic-an adventure to save our oceans
David de Rothschild – Chronicle, 2011
Explorer, global green leader, and eco-TV host David de Rothschild recounts the extraordinary journey of the Plastiki, an innovative and mostly untested sixty-foot catamaran that floats on 12,500 reclaimed plastic bottles.
910.9164 ROTHS
Girls gone green
Lynn Hirshfield – Participant Media, 2010
Filled with stories from real girls who made a difference, plus lots of celebrity green girls who are doing their part to help out, Girls Gone Greengives girls everywhere the inspiration to do something to help their world.
333.72 HIRSH
Wednesday, May 4, 2011
SB 2X: 33% Renewable Energy Portfolio Standard
What Stands in the Way of California's 33 Percent Renewables Goal?
Renewable Energy World: 4.13.11 by Lindsay Morris
On April 12, California Governor Jerry Brown signed Senate Bill 2X into law, requiring that 33 percent of the state’s electric generation come from renewable sources by 2020.
Under S.B. 2X, all load-serving entities must meet a 20 percent renewables target by Dec. 31, 2013, a 25 percent target by the end of 2016, and achieve the 33 percent criterion by the end of 2020.
S.B. 2X applies to all electricity retailers in the state – investor-owned utilities, municipal utilities and independent sellers. The current 20 percent renewable energy requirement applies only to investor-owned utilities and independent power producers.
One municipal utility, the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, has already reached the 2013 goal of generating 20 percent of its power from renewables. Smaller municipal utilities like Glendale, Anaheim, Pasadena and Burbank, are behind at this stage in terms of how much renewable power they have in their portfolios, said Dario Frommer, partner at Mayer Brown law firm.
Most investor-owned utilities in California are hovering just under 20 percent renewables now. While it may seem that investor-owned utilities are close to meeting the 2013 goal, many of these projects are in litigation over siting issues and may not be completed in time to meet the 2013 target, Frommer said.
“It’s incumbent on the political leaders to address the siting issues that are creating problems for financing,” Frommer said. “Those issues are an impediment to realizing the 33 percent goal.”
Since it was passed during a special legislative session, S.B. 2X is not expected to take effect until early July. READ MORE !
Renewable Energy World: 4.13.11 by Lindsay Morris
On April 12, California Governor Jerry Brown signed Senate Bill 2X into law, requiring that 33 percent of the state’s electric generation come from renewable sources by 2020.
Under S.B. 2X, all load-serving entities must meet a 20 percent renewables target by Dec. 31, 2013, a 25 percent target by the end of 2016, and achieve the 33 percent criterion by the end of 2020.
S.B. 2X applies to all electricity retailers in the state – investor-owned utilities, municipal utilities and independent sellers. The current 20 percent renewable energy requirement applies only to investor-owned utilities and independent power producers.
One municipal utility, the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, has already reached the 2013 goal of generating 20 percent of its power from renewables. Smaller municipal utilities like Glendale, Anaheim, Pasadena and Burbank, are behind at this stage in terms of how much renewable power they have in their portfolios, said Dario Frommer, partner at Mayer Brown law firm.
Most investor-owned utilities in California are hovering just under 20 percent renewables now. While it may seem that investor-owned utilities are close to meeting the 2013 goal, many of these projects are in litigation over siting issues and may not be completed in time to meet the 2013 target, Frommer said.
“It’s incumbent on the political leaders to address the siting issues that are creating problems for financing,” Frommer said. “Those issues are an impediment to realizing the 33 percent goal.”
6 6 6 6 6 6 6
Since it was passed during a special legislative session, S.B. 2X is not expected to take effect until early July. READ MORE !
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