Information bringing people together...
Maren's list of environmental, cultural, and
social justice events in and around Pittsburgh.
MarensList is Experiencing Technical Difficulties
Due to a change in how this platform works, it has become very difficult to make new postings for future events. I hope to find a solution soon, but in the meantime my apologies for a rather thin slate of events! I do consolidate a wide variety of events in each Sustainability Salon listing, so look there for "Other Items of Interest". There really is a lot going on... note that I also share events on Facebook, so look me up there if you're at loose ends.
Local food resources
Mar 30: Sustainability Salon on Food (Part I, Food Justice and the Impact of the New Regime).
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Photo by Matheus Bertelli, via Pexels. |
Overlapping these two series, this month we'll talk about food access and food justice, food apartheid, farming, food safety, the loss of government programs all along the food supply chain (from farms to tables here and abroad), and how we can build a stronger local and regional food system. We'll share some advocacy opportunities through which you can add your voice to the growing clamor for sanity.
We've all heard about the actions taken by the new (barely two months!?) federal administration to unlimber vital assistance programs -- many of which were created to address persistent injustices. Funding cuts and cancelled programs are also harming farmers who receive direct grants or reimbursements that help them operate more sustainably, guarantee markets for their products, and ultimately enables them to retain farmland. Pasa Sustainable Agriculture has a 33-year history of making those connections, helping farmers innovate and navigate business challenges as well as facilitating farmer-to-farmer education and advocating for legislation to strengthen our regional food system. Executive director Hannah Smith-Brubaker will share the impacts of the recent funding cuts, and PASA's responses thus far -- from suing the administration to painful staff furloughs.
What about climate -- and how does it relate to food? Once again, the US has officially withdrawn from the Paris climate accords, and doubled down on fossil fuel development. Not surprising, given the promises made to fossil energy interests in exchange for election results. Although progress is still being made in other countries and many states, it is very likely about to slow down in the US -- and that will result in more extreme weather events, from storms and floods to droughts and wildfires. All of which affect agriculture, and hence food security. Pittsburgher Highland Farm's Mark Smith will talk about climate change and farming, and what current federal policy is (or is not) doing about it.
An earlier installment of our post-election Years Ahead series talked about addressing issues like climate change on the local and regional level when national action isn't happening. Food justice is another area where local governments can help take up the challenge, and Pittsburgh is making progress. The City of Pittsburgh's Food Justice Fund is gearing up to distribute grants (up to $75,000) for projects increasing food security or strengthening the food system. The deadline to apply is April 14th, and there's an information session on April 3rd. Gabriel McMorland, the city's Food Justice Fund Coordinator, will fill us in on this important new initiative.
The next Sustainability Salon will be related to Building with Wood, on April 13th. On May 18th, we'll continue our regular spring two-parter on Food (speakers TBA).
There are also a whole lot of other important events happening in our region; check out the list below!
• Mar 4: "Why is My Electricity Bill So High?" Learn who controls energy prices in this webinar from PennFuture, Conservation Voters of PA, the Black Appalachian Coalition, Keystone Energy efficiency Alliance, Sierra Club PA, and 412Justice. More information and registration here.
• Mar 8: Celebration of Seeds -- the 13th annual seed swap, workshops, and a raffle. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. with Grow Pittsburgh and Phipps Conservatory at the Carnegie Library main branch (Oakland). More info and registration (encouraged) here.
• March 15-23: Free soil lead screening by Allegheny County Conservation District. Drop-off locations around town. More info and registration here.
• Mar 26: Wild Ones symposium, Naturally Connected: Strengthening Communities by Reimagining our Role in Native Habitats. 5:30 at the Frick Environmental Center; $35; info on FB, tickets here.
• Mar 27: Third Act presents Solar 101 -- Taking Back our Power. Get up to speed about solar in 2025! 5 p.m. via Zoom. More info and registration here.
• Mar 27 or 28: Learn about what affects (and how you can improve) air quality in your home. 7 p.m. on the 27th, or noon on the 28th. More info and registration here.
• Mar 29: Communitopia's annual Pittsburgh Youth Climate Action Summit. 10-4 at Museum Lab; info and registration here.
• Mar 29: Instead of holding town halls and saving our democracy, Senators Fetterman and McCormick are scheduled to attend a book promotion event on March 29 in Pittsburgh. Indivisible Pittsburgh will hold an "empty chair" town hall rally and protest at 11:30 a.m. More info and registration here.
• Mar 29: ...and you can support Communitopia, Pittsburgh youth, and our shared climate at a benefit dinner that evening featuring Summit keynoter Wawa Gatheru. 6-9 p.m. at Cafe Momentum downtown; more information and registration here.
• Apr 3: Pittsburgh Food Justice Fund information session. 3 p.m., online; register here.
• Apr 5: Remove/Reverse/Reclaim 50501 Pittsburgh March. 12-2 at Schenley Plaza, in Oakland. More information here.
• Apr 5: Hands Off! Pittsburgh Fights Back rally and march (Indivisible). 12:30-2 at the City-County Building, downtown. More information here.
• Apr 13: Sustainability Salon on building with wood, and related topics.
• Apr 28: GASP and Allegheny Land Trust lead a springtime walk at Barking Slopes Conservation Area. 6-7:30 p.m.; $10; register here.
• May 23-25: The Heartwood Forest Council gathers forest-protection activists to share knowledge and provide support. Keynote speaker will be Dr. Joan Maloof, author and founder of the Old-Growth Forest Network. At Camp Crestfield in Slippery Rock. More information here (registration page yet to come).
• May 26: Save the date for the third annual Back to Roots: Native Plant Fest. Pique your curiosity about native plants and your local environment! More information in this FB event. 11-3, free, Monroeville Community Park West.
• May 29: The third annual Solarpunk Future -- a day of talks, workshops, tabling (organizations and vendors), art, fun, and hopeful visions for the future. 10-2 and 3-7 at the David Lawrence Convention Center. More information here.
• Again, I encourage local folks to sign up for the Indivisible Grassroots Pittsburgh email list, which will bring you lots more listings, more frequently --email Debra.
• Training and running AI models requires a lot of energy and water demand for power and cooling. Big tech companies are currently meeting data center resource demands with fossil fuel energy and huge water withdrawals—actions that clearly contradict their sustainability commitments. Climate Action Now has a petition to pressure Meta to clean up their act.
• The US DOE is currently accepting comments on their recent report on the energy, economic, and environmental impacts of LNG exports. The Better Path Coalition has made it easy for you to submit a comment -- go here to start!
• Energy Transfer is suing Greenpeace for $300M because they supported the Indigenous-led protests at Standing Rock (claiming that Greenpeace orchestrated the protests). This is a classic SLAPP suit (Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation), and itself worthy of protest. Greenpeace has a petition you can sign.
• Liquid and solid waste from gas and oil extraction (much of which is radioactive) is currently being stored in a building (part of a former steel mill, which was never cleaned up properly in the first place) near the municipal drinking water source for thousands of people in Martins Ferry, Ohio. The facility had a permit for 600 tons at a time, but held as much as 10,000 tons. It is in the floodplain of the Ohio River, and waters rose up to the front doors this spring. This petition, by Concerned Ohio River Residents, asks officials to halt waste processing there and keep it out of the Source Water Protection Area, clean up the site, and conduct environmental testing and monitoring. This practice is insane; we have to stop legitimizing dangerous extractive industries.
• Concerned Health Professionals of NY recently released the 9th Edition of the Compendium of Scientific, Medical, and Media Findings Demonstrating Risks and Harms of Fracking and Associated Gas & Oil Infrastructure. Check it out!
• We know that only a tiny fraction of plastic has ever been recycled. And yet, NPR has been airing sponsorship messages for the American Recycling Council, which is continuing to perpetrate the "recycling" hoax. Does that make your blood boil? The national group Beyond Plastics has a petition/sign-on letter to get them to stop -- please sign, for yourself or for an organization you represent!
• It's been two years now! You can support striking Post-Gazette workers here (and consider signing up for the alternative online publication, the Pittsburgh Union Progress -- and maybe even cancel your P-G subscription until they start treating workers fairly!). This strike has garnered national attention; one recent picket even made it into Teen Vogue.
• PRC continues to hold online workshops about composting, rainwater harvesting, and waste reduction. They have several Hard-to-Recycle events each year; upcoming events are listed here. For household chemicals, here's the link.

Feb 23: Sustainability Salon on Activism (& Life) in the Years Ahead (Part III, Mutual Aid)
• Feb 8: Climate rally in Pittsburgh -- 11 to noon at Flagstaff Hill.
• Through Feb 16: Unreconciled, a one-man play about child sexual abuse in the Catholic church, an extraordinary and worthwhile performance. At the Barebones Black Box Theater in Braddock; more information and tickets here.
• Feb 17: President's Day march against fascism and tyranny with the 50501 initiative ("fifty states, fifty protests, one day"). Noon to 3 p.m., starting at the Federal Building, 1000 Liberty Ave. downtown.
• Feb 17: Another protest against the new administration's attacks on education, research, medicaid, diversity, the environment, national parks, international aid, and pretty much everything else we value, in Squirrel Hill. Join Indivisble, Mondays with McCormick, Progress Pennsylvania, Partners for Progress SWPA, and 1Hood Power. Noon at Forbes & Murray.
• Feb 18: Preview clips and discussion of the upcoming PBS documentary Single-Use Planet. 3 p.m. online; information and registration here. (note the local screening of the film on the 20th)
• Feb 20: Join the Black Appalachian Coalition (BLAC) and the Environmental Protection Network for a transformative conversation to protect community resources, build collective power, and amplify our resilient stories. 3-4:30 p.m., register here.
• Feb 20: Premiere screening of the new documentary Single-Use Planet. 7-10 p.m. at the Harris Theater; information and registration here.
• Feb 22: 27th annual Pittsburgh Racial Justice Summit creates opportunities to learn, connect, and act on behalf of racial justice. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the CCAC Allegheny campus. Sliding scale; more information and registration here.
• Through Feb 23: Quantum Theatre's The Return of Benjamin Lay, the story of a radical abolitionist. At the Braddock Carnegie Library; more information and tickets here.
• Feb 23: Demonstration for Democracy -- and if you can, bring a letter to a senator -- they'll be collected and delivered to each of our Senators, Fetterman and McCormick. 12:30 p.m. at Forbes & Murray; more information here.
• Feb 27: Shale Gas and Public Health conference presented by PSRPS, PALWV, and the Duquesne University Department of Environmental and Energy Engineering. Online and in-person at Duquesne University. 9-4:30, free; register here (where you can also find videos from past years).
• Feb 28: Green Drinks with Wild Ones; come learn about the why's and how's of native plants and natural land care. 6-8 p.m. at Velum Fermentation. More information here.
• Mar 4: "Why is My Electricity Bill So High?" Learn who controls energy prices in this webinar from PennFuture, Conservation Voters of PA, the Black Appalachian Coalition, Keystone Energy efficiency Alliance, Sierra Club PA, and 412Justice. More information and registration here.
• Mar 8: Celebration of Seeds -- the 13th annual seed swap, workshops, and a raffle. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. with Grow Pittsburgh and Phipps Conservatory at the Carnegie Library main branch (Oakland). More information and registration (encouraged) here.
• Mar 26: Wild Ones symposium, Naturally Connected: Strengthening Communities by Reimagining our Role in Native Habitats. 5:30 at the Frick Environmental Center; $35; information on FB, tickets here.
• Mar 29: Communitopia's Pittsburgh Youth Climate Action Summit. 10-4 at Museum Lab; information and registration here.
• Apr 13: Sustainability Salon on building with wood, and related topics.
• Apr 28: GASP and Allegheny Land Trust lead a springtime walk at Barking Slopes Conservation Area. 6-7:30 p.m.; $10. Register here.
• May 23-25: The Heartwood Forest Council gathers forest-protection activists to share knowledge and provide support. Keynote speaker will be Dr. Joan Maloof, author and founder of the Old-Growth Forest Network. At Camp Crestfield in Slippery Rock. More information here (registration page yet to come).
• May 26: Save the date for the third annual Back to Roots: Native Plant Fest. Pique your curiosity about native plants and your local environment! More information in this FB event. 11-3, free, Monroeville Community Park West.
• May 29: The third annual Solarpunk Future -- a day of talks, workshops, tabling (organizations and vendors), art, fun, and hopeful visions for the future. 10-2 and 3-7 at the David Lawrence Convention Center. More information here.
• Again, I encourage folks to sign up for the Indivisible Grassroots Pittsburgh email list, which will bring you lots more listings, more frequently --email Debra.
• Training and running AI models requires a lot of energy and water demand for power and cooling. Big tech companies are currently meeting data center resource demands with fossil fuel energy and huge water withdrawals—actions that clearly contradict their sustainability commitments. Climate Action Now has a petition to pressure Meta to clean up their act.
• The US DOE is currently accepting comments on their recent report on the energy, economic, and environmental impacts of LNG exports. The Better Path Coalition has made it easy for you to submit a comment -- go here to start!
• Energy Transfer is suing Greenpeace for $300M because they supported the Indigenous-led protests at Standing Rock (claiming that Greenpeace orchestrated the protests). This is a classic SLAPP suit (Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation), and itself worthy of protest. Greenpeace has a petition you can sign.
• Liquid and solid waste from gas and oil extraction (much of which is radioactive) is currently being stored in a building (part of a former steel mill, which was never cleaned up properly in the first place) near the municipal drinking water source for thousands of people in Martins Ferry, Ohio. The facility had a permit for 600 tons at a time, but held as much as 10,000 tons. It is in the floodplain of the Ohio River, and waters rose up to the front doors this spring. This petition, by Concerned Ohio River Residents, asks officials to halt waste processing there and keep it out of the Source Water Protection Area, clean up the site, and conduct environmental testing and monitoring. This practice is insane; we have to stop legitimizing dangerous extractive industries.
• Concerned Health Professionals of NY recently released the 9th Edition of the Compendium of Scientific, Medical, and Media Findings Demonstrating Risks and Harms of Fracking and Associated Gas & Oil Infrastructure. Check it out!
• We know that only a tiny fraction of plastic has ever been recycled. And yet, NPR has been airing sponsorship messages for the American Recycling Council, which is continuing to perpetrate the "recycling" hoax. Does that make your blood boil? The national group Beyond Plastics has a petition/sign-on letter to get them to stop -- please sign, for yourself or for an organization you represent!
• It's been two years now! You can support striking Post-Gazette workers here (and consider signing up for the alternative online publication, the Pittsburgh Union Progress -- and maybe even cancel your P-G subscription until they start treating workers fairly!). This strike has garnered national attention; one recent picket even made it into Teen Vogue.
• PRC continues to hold online workshops about composting, rainwater harvesting, and waste reduction. They have several Hard-to-Recycle events each year; upcoming events are listed here. For household chemicals, here's the link.
