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Activate NEC: Community Action Group

Caroline Gri th, EcoNews Journalist

With so many issues to get involved in and so many ways to a ect policy it can be hard to know where to start. Activism can take many forms, all of which are important contributions to the overall environmental movement. Whether you are a seasoned activist or just starting to dip your toes into environmental justice work, the NEC wants to help you deepen your understanding and think more strategically.

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Our new community action group, Activate NEC, is a bi-weekly exploration of local environmental issues and the various ways that we, as individuals and in groups, can a ect policy change. Each session will look at di erent environmental issues a ecting our bioregion and discuss the strategies and tactics that can be used to bring about desired changes. Since nothing happens in a vacuum, these sessions also focus on the intersections between environmental and social issues.

Facilitated by EcoNews Journalist and longtime activist Caroline Gri th, these are participatory discussions about strategy and the variety of tactics that can be used, from lobbying legislators to art to letter writing to civil disobedience and boycotts. One upcoming topic of discussion (inspired by this month’s letter to EcoNews by Marisa on page 6) will be water usage on cannabis farms.

Whether you are a research-minded, data-driven person who is concerned about this issue, a policy wonk who regularly attends Planning Commission meetings, or an aspiring activist who is worried about the drought and looking to see where you t into this movement, Activate NEC can help you gure out how to plug in. Join us the 2nd and 4th Wednesday of each month at 6pm.

Visit yournec.org/activate for more details and zoom link.

EcoNews Community Creations - Solar & Wind Powered Dryer -

Carol

In 1938 the rst clothes dryer was introduced in the United States. is new invention quickly caught on and now more than 90% of Americans and 80% of Canadians use them exclusively. While almost half of Germans and Brits use electricity to dry clothing, fewer than a fth of the French, a tenth of the Japanese, and a tiny fraction of anybody else in the world uses anything other than a combination of wind and solar power to dry clothes.

Photo Caption: The most energy efficient clothes dryer on the market, the clothesline! This stateof-the-art technology requires no electricity.

YOURNEC.ORG /BUTT-IN

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