Putting Down Roots: Maren's List
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.
Campfire Dispatch archive available
The Campfire Dispatch is a newsletter about climate action and climate news in Pennsylvania. Due to organizational changes, it has moved -- you can view past articles here.
Local food resources
Sep 24: Sustainability Salon on Abandoned Wells (hybrid event)
Weather permitting, this will be a hybrid event. Weather permitting, in this case, means that I will be checking the forecast and studying the radar quite extensively on Sunday, and will decide whether it'll be Hybrid or Zoom-Only fairly close to the event (when the radar becomes really relevant). Thanks for your patience! Everyone who has RSVP'd has the Zoom link, just in case. UPDATE: There's enough risk of rain (reaching us from the former Hurricane Ophelia) that we are resorting to a Zoom-only meeting. Here's the Zoom registration link.
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Photos courtesy of Save Our Streams PA |
We'll also talk about the upcoming Pennsylvania Climate Convergence (October 1 & 2 in Harrisburg) -- and note that there's one more Art Build to help create a giant community climate quilt, the day before this salon. And there are a whole lot of other important events happening in our region; check out the list below!
• Aug 23: Better Path Coalition presents CIEL's Jane Patton on hydrogen science and policy -- as the DOE is set to announce hydrogen hubs. Webinar at 7pm; register here (a little more information on FB here).
• Aug 26: Buy Fresh Buy Local is starting up a new webinar series with local gardening luminary Doug Oster. Thursdays at 5 p.m.; more info and registration are here (along with videos of past sessions).
• Aug 26 and Sept 2 & 23rd: Art Build! In conjunction with the upcoming Pennsylvania Climate Convergence, people around Pennsylvania are creating a community quilt to display, to march with, and to remind our government in Harrisburg that we are watching them. C'mon over and embellish your own square(s)! Email Maren (see above) to participate, or make your own squares and bring them to Maren by Sept 29.
• Aug 27: Gathering, march, festival, teach-in, and resource-sharing for bodily autonomy and reproductive justice (Homestead, 1 p.m.) -- flyer is here; more info and registration are here.
• Aug 29: The Allegheny County Council will be deciding whether to create a Climate Action Plan for the county. Please attend their meeting to demonstrate how much local residents care about climate! If you'd like to speak, please fill out this form.
• Sept 15: Mark Dixon on Exploring Air Pollution: Monitoring and Mitigation. More info here, zoom link here.
• Sept 17: March to End Fossil Fuels in NYC, in conjunction with Climate Week. Sierra Club is sponsoring a bus from Southwestern Pennsylvania.
• Sept 20: Better Path Presents investigative journalist Justin Nobel on radioactive fracking waste. Register here; more info here (check out his new article).
• Sept 20-21: Walk with Little Amal -- this 12-foot puppet symbolizes global refugees. In five events around Pittsburgh she will visit the similarly giant ironworks at Carrie Furnace, share the works of Billy Strayhorn and August Wilson, celebrate with new citizens, and play with children.
• Sept 21: The Audubon Society of Western PA and the Buffalo Creek Coalition are hosting a webinar with Doug Tallamy, who will remind us of the many essential roles insects play in our ecosystem, and the simple changes we need to make in our landscapes and our attitudes in order to keep insects on the ground, in the air, and yes, on our plants. More info & registration here.
• Sept 22: The PA Solar Center is hosting a webinar on Solar + Storage + Microgrids. More info & registration here.
• Sept 22: Local climate rally by Sunrise Pittsburgh and Fossil Free Pitt (3-6 at PNG, 375 N Shore Drive).
• Sept 23: Pittsburgh's annual Urban Farm Tour!
• Sept 23: One more Quilt build! For the Pennsylvania Climate Convergence just over a month from now, people around Pennsylvania are creating a community quilt to display, to march with, and to remind our government in Harrisburg that we are watching them. C'mon over and embellish your own square(s)! Email Maren (with "quilt" in the Subject line) to participate, or make your own squares according to these specs and bring them to Maren by Sept 29.
• Sept 24: Reuse Reunion -- join the Pgh Center for Creative Reuse for an afternoon of art-making and supply-swapping and art-making (12-4 in Westinghouse Park). More info on their events page.
• Sept 24: Sustainability Salon #140!
• Oct 1-2: The second Pennsylvania Climate Convergence in Harrisburg. Virtual opening event with Bill McKibben and on Sept 30th. There's a bus from Southwestern Pennsylvania, organized by ProtectPT and sponsored by Food & Water Watch and Earthworks.
• Oct 10: Air Quality Town Hall on the results of the ACHD's consent agreement with US Steel over Clairton Cokeworks violations -- where has the money gone? More info and registration here.
• Oct 11: The Center for Coalfield Justice and the Donora Smog Museum are hosting a webinar to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the Donora Smog in 1948, the worst air pollution disaster in U.S. history -- and which led to the creation of the Clean Air Act of 1963. Details and registration here; more Donora-related events here.
• PA is considering legislation to (a) greatly increase the renewables portion of our electricity generation, and (b) enable community solar!! The Pennsylvania Solar Center has made it easy to speak out to support this action!
• This spring we learned a great deal about agriculture and the Farm Bill. You can use your voice to advocate for more-sustainable practices being supported at this link.
• 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!
• Clean Air Council has set up a directed donation fund to help residents affected by the train derailment just over the Ohio border in East Palestine. You can contribute here to help fund needed resources for residents of easternmost Ohio and westernmost Pennsylvania.
• Closer to home, 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.
• And speaking of solidarity, the Cop City controversy is still raging in Atlanta. More information and a support fund are here. There's also talk of a similar facility in the works for Pittsburgh.
• Another forest that needs protecting is Sherwood Forest, in Mason Co., WA -- at risk of clear-cutting by a company headquartered here in Pittsburgh. You can learn more (and donate to the legal fund if you can) here.
• PRC continues to hold online workshops about composting, rainwater harvesting, and waste reduction.

Sept 23: Art build for PA Climate Convergence (quilt squares!)
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Lancaster Against Pipelines community quilt at the Clean Energy Revolution march in 2016 |
Sept 2: Art build for PA Climate Convergence (quilt squares!)
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Lancaster Against Pipelines community quilt at the Clean Energy Revolution march in 2016 |
Aug 27: Sustainability Salon on Hopeful Visions
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Susan Kaye Quinn's Nothing is Promised series of hopepunk novels |
Making this the inaugural Summer Author Series (following on our great discussion with Kristina Marusic last month) -- and ending the summer on a positive note -- we will welcome Susan Kaye Quinn, environmental engineer turned writer of speculative fiction, solarpunk, and hopepunk climate fiction; astronomer, author, mentor, organizer, and dark-sky advocate Diane Turnshek; and author and publisher Scot Noel for a conversation about hopeful visions for the future.
Weather permitting, we'll continue our summertime break from online-only salons. The 139th Sustainability Salon may again be hybrid, with an in-person (mostly-outdoor) gathering plus a Zoom option for faraway folks or those otherwise unable to attend in person. If you're interested in the Zoom option for the presentation & discussion portion of this salon, please email me (with "salon" in the Subject line, as always)
What is hope, anyway? Hope is a Plant You Can Care For or Kill. Hope is often derided as Pollyanna-ish, or a not-serious emotion, but in fact, it’s a deeply human tool that we use to persevere, to imagine harder, and to work for a better world. With the climate crisis constantly pounding the world with disasters, record numbers of people are concerned about the climate -- but they often quickly get stuck in despair, which leads to inaction. Stories are how we understand the world, and a shift to positive narratives about the struggle for a just, sustainable world can act as a balm and inspiration for action. Susan Kaye Quinn will talk about the role positive stories play in the fight for a better world. She’ll discuss the ten elements of hopepunk, how activists are increasingly focused on solutions-based narratives, and how efforts to get climate stories on the screen could change how we talk about the crisis. She’ll share her works as well as other stories that can restore, inspire, and help grow the hope we need to work together in this fight.• Aug 23: Better Path Coalition presents CIEL's Jane Patton on hydrogen science and policy -- as the DOE is set to announce hydrogen hubs. Webinar at 7pm; register here (a little more information on FB here).
• Aug 26: Buy Fresh Buy Local is starting up a new webinar series with local gardening luminary Doug Oster. Thursdays at 5 p.m.; more info and registration are here (along with videos of past sessions).
• Aug 26: Art build! For the Pennsylvania Climate Convergence just over a month from now, people around Pennsylvania are creating a community quilt to display, to march with, and to remind our government in Harrisburg that we are watching them. C'mon over and embellish your own square(s)! Email Maren (see above) to participate.
• Aug 27: Gathering, march, festival, teach-in, and resource-sharing for bodily autonomy and reproductive justice (Homestead, 1 p.m.) -- flyer is here; more info and registration are here.
• Aug 29: The Allegheny County Council will be deciding whether to create a Climate Action Plan for the county. Please attend their meeting (5 p.m. in the Gold Room on the 4th floor of the County Courthouse, 436 Grant St.), to demonstrate how much local residents care about climate! If you'd like to speak, please fill out this form.
• Sept 15: Local/global climate march/rally by Fridays for Future.
• Sept 17: March to End Fossil Fuels in NYC, in conjunction with Climate Week.
• Sept 23: Save the date for Pittsburgh's annual Urban Farm Tour! Keep an eye on this page for more information.
• Sept 24: Reuse Reunion -- join the Pgh Center for Creative Reuse for an afternoon of art-making and supply-swapping and art-making (12-4 in Westinghouse Park). More info on their events page.
• Sept 24: Sustainability Salon #140!
• Oct 1-2: The second Pennsylvania Climate Convergence in Harrisburg. Virtual opening event with Bill McKibben on Sept 30th.
• Oct 10: Air Quality Town Hall on the results of the ACHD's consent agreement with US Steel over Clairton Cokeworks violations -- where has the money gone? More info and registration here.
• PA is considering legislation to (a) greatly increase the renewables portion of our electricity generation, and (b) enable community solar!! The Pennsylvania Solar Center has made it easy to speak out to support this action!
• This spring we learned a great deal about agriculture and the Farm Bill. You can use your voice to advocate for more-sustainable practices being supported at this link.
• 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!
• Clean Air Council has set up a directed donation fund to help residents affected by the train derailment just over the Ohio border in East Palestine. You can contribute here to help fund needed resources for residents of easternmost Ohio and westernmost Pennsylvania.
• Closer to home, 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.
• And speaking of solidarity, the Cop City controversy is still raging in Atlanta. More information and a support fund are here. There's also talk of a similar facility in the works for Pittsburgh.
• Another forest that needs protecting is Sherwood Forest, in Mason Co., WA -- at risk of clear-cutting by a company headquartered here in Pittsburgh. You can learn more (and donate to the legal fund if you can) here.
• PRC continues to hold online workshops about composting, rainwater harvesting, and waste reduction.
