8.08.2008
From the wetlands to the cauliflower fields...summer in Madison, Wisconsin
Hallo Alles ~
...which means "hello everyone" in german. Because I have my computer settings on german I get to navigate google Blogs and check my email in the german language.. it's loads of fun, trust me ;)
I am so excited to finally write on our blog. I guess it all started with the theme "Green Jobs" so I thought I would start by explaining the title of my post (or "titel" as my german Blog setting states).
I have recently moved to Madison, Wisconsin from upstate (Adirondacks) New York. Why move from such beautiful mountains and wilderness to a city in the flat midwest you might ask? Well, I will try my best to answer.
First off, I was getting a little lonely...yes, even though I was enjoying my love affair with the woods, streams, and dare I say wild animals (not literally of course) I was getting an itch for city life. At least of the small-ish kind of city. I yearned for bike lanes, walks to the coffee shop where anti-Iraq war meetings were going on, eccentric people walking down the sidewalk, late night live music at a cafe, and all hopefully in an environmentally conscious place nontheless - Madison came into view.
Second, I am interested in University of Wisconsin, Madison. Mostly for it's conservation biology and landscape/community ecology programs. I am considering applying to grad school for next fall. I had a job for the summer monitoring the nesting behaviors of swamp sparrows in wetlands just north of Madison. Three times a week I would travel in a NRCS (National Resources Conservation Service) vehicle with a few other research assistants to monitor the birds in 6 different natural and restored wetlands.
Third, I wanted to live in a small city AND work on an organic farm for a season. Madison was the best of both worlds due to its high density of organic farms with CSA members (some of which are only a 20 min drive from downtown) and an abundance of farmers markets all throughout the area. Thus, the second part of my post's title has to do with the fields (and hoophouses) that I have been pouring my heart and sweat into since June. The fruits of our labor have been many though and I have been able to freeze, can, and enjoy SO much fresh food - veggies, fruit, and pasture-fed chickens and turkeys.
So...in response to the title of our blog I would say that a "green job" means many things to me. First and foremost it means "feeling green" - feeling good about your everyday interactions with your surroundings (the people you meet, the animals you protect, the water you drink, the type of transportation you use, etc. - the list goes on and on) But, by living in a place where you can come as close as possible to "feeling green" well then you're probably going to be able to find yourself in a "green job" situation. I like jobs that connect me to the earth more fully (or at least to some sector of the earth that I enjoy helping or learning more about). I love being around children - I hope to be teaching again this fall. I love studying plants and animals in their natural habitat. I love growing, harvesting, and storing my own food. I hope that I can continue to have jobs that keep me "feeling green" throughout my entire life. Wow...I think I wrote too much, but that's what happens when I wait to long to make a post. Ha!
Take care everyone...until next time.
~Nadia
7.26.2008
"When I hear that whistle blowing, I hang my head and cry..."
After recently reading the book Newjack, by ethnographic journalist Ted Conover, my lingering interest in the US Prison System was brought to my moral/mental foreground. After being denied entry into some of the nation's top maximum security prisons, Conover decided to be hired, undercover, as a Corrections Officer at Sing-Sing prison (located just 5 hours Southeast of Rochester, in the Hudson River Valley). The one-year account of his experiences "walking the [prisoner] block" is extremely engaging and well written. His observation of racial discrimination, distorted punishment, and generally inhumane experience (on the part of both prisoners and guards) is astounding. I highly recommend this read to anyone seeking to learn more about the U.S. prison system. For now, I offer a few key facts and figures I have come across in my cursory internet research of the US Prison System:
General Statistics
(Click on image above for better image definition.)
The
Class and Race
Many of us have heard of the extreme discrepancies in race and income when comparing the incarcerated population to the general population... Some quick facts:
One in nine black men ages 20 to 34 is incarcerated. That figure is 1 in 100 for black women between the ages of 35 and 39, compared with one in 355 for white women in the same age group.
For more figures on incarceration by race, check out this Interactive Map of the US:
Who goes to prison for drug offenses?
Women in Prison
From 1977 to 2003,
As the Women's Prison Association reports: "Women in the criminal justice system are largely non-violent and not a risk to public safety. Typically, they are poor women of color who were arrested for drug-related crimes. Most have substance abuse histories, and are survivors of family violence and sexual abuse as well. Over three quarters are mothers and more than half have minor children at home."
Bringing it Home
Recently, I decided to meet with the Director of a local prisoner advocacy group, The Judicial Process Commission (JPC), to see how I might begin to do something, on both a personal and public level, about what is happening in our prison system. I now hope to attend their September training session in order to be a mentor for a woman in a local jail/prison. There is also talk, in the younger Rochester activist community, of hosting a prisoner correspondence program, while more pointedly advocating for prison reform and eventual abolition of the prison system as it exists today. Some friends and I will be meeting in a couple weeks to make plans for the coming year.Finally, some of you might recognize the title of this blog post as a stolen lyric from Johnny Cash's "Folsom Prison Blues". Cash's lyrics seemed an apt way to introduce a discussion of our prison systems, as he sings from the point of view of the imprisoned person. That is, the statistics I have listed are really only a summary of millions of personal stories of suffering and injustice.
7.20.2008
An Attempt to Grow Food
This spring, right before moving into together, my dedicated companion Jesse and I committed to an experiment we would attempt in solidarity: we would grow as much of our own food as possible- (limitations being space to grow, time, and energy!) Though we shared a plot in a community garden last season, this summer would be more serious: we expanded our growing space to include a back deck, sections of a communal backyard, and an additional plot in the garden.
7.16.2008
When Jobs Go Green - The Inaugural Post!
Friends, I hope you will jump in to discuss "Green Jobs" - the topic of our blog's first substantial post! I think it's one we can all relate to in some way, so chime in with your experiences, questions, insider knowledge or just general comments.

The burgeoning "Green Jobs" movement in the US promises no less than to "build an inclusive economy strong enough to lift people out of poverty." That is the slogan of Green for All - an Oakland-based not for profit spearheaded by rising eco-celebrity Van Jones.
Although the concept is still somewhat amorphous, the momentum behind it is strong.
At the national level, Congress passed a Green Jobs Act as part of the 2007 Energy Bill. The Act essentially commits the Federal Government to funding worker training programs to meet the growing labor demand in the green and clean energy sectors.
The Act is unique in that it specifically calls for "green" skills training for some of the most economically marginalized Amerricans - ex-offenders, welfare recipients, inner-city youth, veterans, etc. After receiving $22.5M from the House in 2008, it now awaits Senate approval.
At the local level, Mayors and County Execs are being called upon to sign a "Green Jobs Pledge." This is the level where citizens, business-men, politicians and activists are all jumping in to create local Green Jobs initiatives and do the on-the-ground leg-work.

In Durham, NC, the Grassroots Energy Alliance (GEA) leads the charge with their "Black Brown Green Alliance." I've attended several GEA meetings. I have to admit - it feels really amorphous and inchoate right now. Their plan is to host a conference in September with Majora Carter as keynote speaker; that's when the "next steps" will be developed.
While GEA is building a coalition, others are simply starting projects. For example, the Asheville Youth Climate Corp is a fledgling initiative that will train teenagers for "green collar jobs." The Resourceful Communities Program where I intern has made grants for other similar projects in NC.
I generally like the Green Jobs concept, because it offers an inspiring vision, and takes a refreshing, proactive approach to the traditionally reactive environmental justice movement.
But I'm not totally convinced.
My main criticism of these Green Jobs initiatives parallels the basic criticism behind any workforce development program: there's no guarantee that the trainees will move into well-paid work in the private sector. Further, I don't think there is enough clarity on what differentiates a "green" job from a non-green job. The Apollo Alliance and other groups try to define green as specific sectors such as transit, construction, solar installation - but this seems a bit limiting and prescriptive to me. Plus, even in those sectors, not all jobs will be "green" - like a truck driver carting solar panels.
Anyway, I would love to hear all your takes.
I know there's stuff going on in Chicago (GreenCorp) and NYC (Majora Carter with Sustainable South Bronx). How about Madison? And any rumblings in Rochester?
What do you all think about this concept and how does it relate to work you do?
Blog on, friends!
besos, Audrey
7.12.2008
TBE - The big experiment OR Test blog extremo
To reach our dream of having a social-justice, community blog where we can share good things we come across and gripe about the unbearable, here is a test site where we can mess around with formats, multi-person contributors and whatever other blogging foibles might trip us up.
Jess - I think since you and me seem to be the motivated bloggers, shall we take the initiative in messing around with this multi-blogger blog and working out the basic kinks? I was thinking we can start a completely new blog (uh, with a REAL name) before actually "going live". (Read: save your best posting material for that later date!)
OK, mess around with it! Off we go!
UPDATE - July 17: Turns out you can change the name, the template, even the web address, after a blog has already been started. So this is not only a "test" blog - it is THE blog!
