Thursday, November 15, 2007

Every day products, every day toxins, report says

Potentially toxic chemicals are entering our bodies from every day items such as tin cans, water bottles, shower curtains, electronics, sofa cushions and other textiles. These are the surprising results of a biomonitoring project released last week that found all three types of industrial chemicals being studied in participants from seven states, including Illinois.

Environmental organizations and health professionals tested participants’ hair, blood and urine samples for evidence of the chemicals. They released the report, Is It In Us?: Chemical Contamination in our Bodies, which included test results and recommendations for fixing what they called a "broken chemical safety system.”

Full story:
http://chicagotalks.org/wiki/every-day-products-every-day-toxins-report-says

(c) Keri Lynch 2008

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Durbin addresses deadly staph infections

News of the so-called "super-bug" continues to swirl around Chicago and the surrounding suburbs, causing concern in schools, communities and hospitals. In several cases, small cuts and scrapes have turned into life-threatening illnesses.

For others, routine visits to a hospital left patients seriously ill with antibiotic-resistant staph infections. The particularly dangerous Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, referred to as MRSA ("mur-suh"), has already caused the death of several area children and an estimated 19,000 people nationwide.

To deal with the growing problem, U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL) authored legislation that would help hospitals and communities prevent, detect and treat staph infections, including the deadly MRSA.

The Community and Healthcare-Associated Infections Reduction (CHAIR) Act, introduced Oct. 30, addresses public awareness, research, reporting and prevention efforts.

Full story:
http://chicagotalks.org/wiki/durbin-addresses-deadly-staph-infections

Friday, October 5, 2007

State legislators share mass transit woes

With tough budget and overtime sessions all summer, state Sen. John Cullerton (D-Chicago) said in some ways it's been a "horrific year." But he still had some positive things to talk about at a recent Town Hall meeting at the Center on Halsted.

"One of the most important issues in my district is the CTA, more important perhaps than the state budget," Cullerton said. "I'm the sponsor of a bill that, if it passes, will be a long-term solution to the RTA /CTA funding crisis."

Mass transit problems are partly due to incompetence and mismanagement of funds, Cullerton said. But raising fares will not solve the problem, he said, because fares cover the cost of just half of mass transit, so more money is needed.

"We've been funding the RTA through a sales tax," Cullerton said. "There's a 1 percent sales tax in Cook County and a .25 percent sales tax in the collar counties" (Lake, McHenry, Kane, Will and DuPage).

Full story:
http://chicagotalks.org/wiki/state-legislators-share-mass-transit-woes
(c) Keri Lynch 2008

Saturday, September 22, 2007

A day in the life...of a refugee camp

Imagine quickly leaving home because of a sudden catastrophe or conflict, not knowing if you would ever be back.

Where would you go? What would you bring? What would you do for food and water? And what if you or a family member got sick?

Few Chicagoans can relate to the experience of displaced persons or refugees, yet every year millions are forced from their homes around the world. Many spend time in refugee camps, where they receive basic services and remain relatively safe.

To help understand the plight of refugees, Doctors Without Borders created a traveling exhibit, which is staffed by aid workers who lead tours and answer questions. Visitors glimpse life in a crowded tent with limited water and makeshift facilities.

"People can put themselves in the mentality of a refugee," said tour guide nurse Lisa Pint, a former aid worker in Sudan, who works at Rush University Medical Center in suburban Chicago.
Full story:
http://chicagotalks.org/wiki/a-day-in-the-life-of-a-refugee-camp

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Beach clean-up: Chicago & 'round the world

Beaches around the world received a makeover over the weekend as volunteers gathered with gloves and garbage bags to clean up trash and debris.

Besides cleaning up items that could pollute or harm wildlife, organizers of the annual event hope to inspire people to stay involved in their local waterways.

On Chicago's North Side, about 200 people signed up to lend a hand at Montrose Beach, including teachers and students from several area high schools, families with children of all ages and members of local environmental groups, such as Sierra Club and the Alliance for the Great Lakes.

For full story:
http://chicagotalks.org/wiki/beach-clean-up-day-chicago-and-round-the-world

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Locals Raise Voices for "Jena 6"

A racially charged case against six black high school students from a small town in Louisiana struck a nerve 900 miles away in Chicago. Last weekend, about 50 people gathered downtown for a march and rally on behalf of the young men known as the "Jena Six."

In September 2006, several black students sat under a shade tree popular with white students at a Louisiana high school. The next day several nooses hung from the tree and, from there, a series of conflicts erupted in the 3,000-person town of Jena.

After allegedly beating up a white student who reportedly taunted them, six black students were arrested in December and charged with attempted murder. The white student suffered minor injuries and was treated and released from a hospital the same day.

Several black students are still in jail, unable to make bond. All six face possible sentences of 15 to 100 years. Civil rights leaders, including Jesse Jackson Sr. and Al Sharpton, have come to the defense of the young men, and the NAACP says the teens are facing "overly aggressive prosecution and extended incarceration."

"We are trying to take a stand for these kids," said Tanisha Wilkerson, who first heard about the case on Democracy Now and helped organize the Chicago rally. "Why the hell are they being charged for attempted murder?"

Full story:
http://chicagotalks.org/wiki/local-voices-raised-to-defend-the-jena-six-in-louisiana

Friday, August 31, 2007

City's Move May "Chill" Class Action

Lawyers for the Chicago Police Department filed a motion last week in U.S. District Court that could have a "chilling effect" on the approximately 800 members of a class-action lawsuit, attorneys for the group of protesters say.

Attorneys from the People's Law Office filed a lawsuit against the police department, accusing officers of falsely arresting and detaining at least 800 individuals March 20, 2003, after a large peace march held the night the Iraq war began. Thousands hit the streets in protest.

Witnesses say police officers initially helped marchers by guiding them onto Lake Shore Drive but later marchers and bystanders were blocked in an area on Chicago Avenue between Michigan Avenue and inner Lake Shore Drive, preventing them from leaving. Hundreds were arrested, including the reporter of this story.

The lawsuit - which was granted class-action status in 2006 - stems from the arrests.

For this update story:
http://chicagotalks.org/wiki/city-s-move-may-chill-lawsuit-filed-by-protesters-lawyers-say

For a detailed story on the arrests and lawsuit: http://chicagocatalyst.blogspot.com/2007/08/public-peace-violation.html

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Schakowsky Sees Iraq Up Close

Congresswoman Sees Iraq Up Close, posted 8/29/07:

Security in Iraq is "horrible" and the troop surge is a "failure," said U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-9th District) at a Town Hall meeting last weekend on the city's North Side. Back from a visit to the Middle East earlier this month, Schakowsky told the crowd of about 300 she's convinced the U.S. should get out of Iraq.

As a consistent critic of the Iraq war and a new member of the House Intelligence Committee, Schakowsky said it was important to see the region for herself. She headed the delegation, which included four Republicans and two Democrats, and said it was very contained and the messages very controlled.

Full story:
http://chicagotalks.org/wiki/congresswoman-sees-iraq-up-close

Thursday, August 23, 2007

John Perkins Interview

Part of my interview with author/environmentalist John Perkins appeared this month in Conscious Choice and its sister publications. Some Q&A did not fit in the magazine. The magazine part is here: http://consciouschoice.com/2007/08/conversations0708.html

Introduction:
I caught up with John Perkins, trained shaman, environmentalist and former “economic hit man,” at the Chicago Green Festival on Earth Day. After leading trips to the Amazon and Andes to work with indigenous peoples for 15 years, Perkins now travels to meet with world leaders - and shakers.

Through books and lectures, Perkins shares shamanic techniques and stories - with five books under his belt on these subjects. In recent books, he exposes the inner workings of the modern American empire. His latest book, Secrets of the American Empire, followed his best-selling Confessions of an Economic Hit Man.

Q: Do you miss the trips and visits with indigenous people?

I miss doing trips very much. I still go to Latin America a lot. I spent New Years Eve 2007 with Eva Morales, the President of Bolivia. I was just in Nicaragua with President Ortega’s people and I’m going to Ecuador and meet with President Correa. I’m still very involved in Latin America but Confessions of an Economic Hit Man opened up a new arena. My roots are still very much with the indigenous people and indigenous people have played a major role in the Bolivian politics and Ecuadorian politics.

So it’s been natural for me to move into this arena along with them. The shamanic work I started in the 60’s was when shamanism was pretty ‘out there.’ Even in Ecuador and Bolivia, shamans were outside the mainstream economy and mainstream politics. Since then, both they and I moved into looking at a global picture: the political picture and the governmental picture. I think there is a certain synchronicity and magic in that shamanism believes in the power to transform, to shape-shift individuals and cultures, which is really what we need to do now, shape-shift culture.

To read more, go to my other blog: http://chicagocatalyst.blogspot.com/2007/08/john-perkins-q-continued.html

Monday, August 20, 2007

Iraq War Costs Illinois Billions

Iraq War Costs Illinois Taxpayers Billions (Posted 8/20/07):

The billions of dollars spent on the Iraq War could instead be used to improve the lives of Americans, according to local MoveOn.org members.

About 40 people gathered during a busy lunch hour at the Thompson Center last week to discuss the cost of the war and what else that money could be spent on here at home.

With financial problems facing Illinois schools, public transit and the healthcare system, state taxpayers' money could be put to better use at home, said organizer Richard Stowell. For example, the CTA is facing service cuts and fare hikes and 7 million Illinois kids lack health insurance.

As Stowell spoke, other organizers held up a giant check signed by "American Taxpayers." Illinois' share of the bill: $24.69 billion. That's $4.8 billion for Chicago alone, according to the National Priorities Project, which tracks spending of federal tax money.

Full story:
http://chicagotalks.org/wiki/iraq-war-costs-illinois-taxpayers-billions

Sunday, August 19, 2007

Public Outcry Leads to Pollution Summit

BP America's plans to dump more pollutants into the Great Lakes resulted in an unprecedented gathering of environmentalists, a company executive and public officials from several states and levels of government in Chicago this week.

They faced a "virtual firestorm of concern" over a new permit that allows BP to discharge increased levels of ammonia and sludge into Lake Michigan from its Whiting, Ind., oil refinery, said a top federal environmental official who convened the summit.

"As the agency with ultimate responsibility for protecting the Great Lakes, we feel it is time to get beyond these headlines and the emotions, no matter how justified, and begin a more practical discussion," said U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Regional Administrator Mary Gade

Full story:
http://chicagotalks.org/wiki/public-outcry-leads-to-pollution-summit

Uptown Community Gardens

Community News story posted on 6/18/07:

Community Gardens Growing in Uptown

Bird calls mix with the loud cheers of baseball fans in the Ginkgo Garden in Uptown. This productive plot is tucked between condo buildings less than a mile from Wrigley Field. Despite its urban location near the "el" tracks, this garden really grows.

The first harvests, in May, are mostly herbs, radishes and a few greens. As summer arrives, the baskets, bags and bins start filling up - with tomatoes, cucumbers, eggplant, peppers, beans, tomatillos, squash and assorted greens, plus plums, pears, apples, grapes and raspberries.

Every Saturday, an all-volunteer crew arrives at 4055 N. Kenmore Ave. and works from 9 a.m. until 1 p.m. They weed, stake plants, harvest and pack up the van. The all-organic goods are delivered to GroceryLand, a local pantry that provides food to low-income people with AIDS.

For full story: http://chicagotalks.org/wiki/community-gardens-growing-in-uptown
(c) Keri Lynch 2007

Green Roofs on Rise

Community News story posted on 7/11/07:

Green Roofs on the Rise in Chicago

More than 20,000 plants and countless birds and bees live 11 stories above the busy city streets and sidewalks of Downtown Chicago. About 150 varieties of hearty and mostly native flowers, grasses and vines grow on this rooftop garden most residents have never seen. But the garden's green impact is beginning to spread well beyond the Loop.

Funded through a $1.5 million settlement with Com Ed, the 20,300-square-foot City Hall rooftop garden is both a showcase and a pilot project for Mayor Daley's efforts to encourage green building and design. Since its completion in 2001, the number of green roofs continues to grow.

"Seven years ago, it was a novel idea (green roofs)," said Mark Farina, spokesman for Chicago's Department of Environment. "Now there are over 300 green roofs in Chicago, in various stages. That's how much we have grown."

Although it's one of the highest-profile roof gardens in the world, access for the general public is very limited. This is partly due to the landmark status of the building, Farina said, which is not accessible to persons with disabilities, and also for security reasons.

Besides not having a fence, visitors must walk through a mechanical room to get onto the roof, after taking an elevator to the 10th floor and walking up another flight of stairs. Occasionally, the Department of Environment will arrange tours for small groups of 10 to 15 people with a guide, such as Farina.

"This is an elaborate green roof that gives us an idea what we can do elsewhere," Farina said.

Currently, 60 percent of all roofs in Chicago are dark-colored, according to the city's rooftop garden guide, and these surfaces absorb - or trap - heat. This raises the temperature of the surrounding area and requires more energy to heat and cool buildings. Urban areas are warmer than outlying areas due to this "heat island" effect, which also creates more smog.

For full story:
http://chicagotalks.org/wiki/green-roofs-on-the-rise-in-chicago

(c) Keri Lynch

State Not Doing Enough to Recycle

Illinois is taking steps to reduce global warming emissions, but much more could be done to improve the state's recycling programs, say members of the Illinois Green Government Coordinating Council, managed by Lt. Gov. Pat Quinn.

"Current practices are detrimental to total recycling," said Marc Miller, senior policy analyst for Quinn, who coordinated the council's quarterly meeting in Chicago in late June. "This is the view, voiced numerous times, of this council."

In Springfield, where thousands of state workers are based, only cardboard is recycled from paper waste, said George Vander Velde of the Illinois Waste Management Research Center, a division of the Department of Natural Resources that analyzes waste issues. "The current status of recycling is inadequate."

At the council's last meeting, agency representatives announced that a new five-year recycling contract was signed for state offices in Springfield that maintains the current program. This prompted Quinn to ask if the Thompson Center - where his office is located and where the meeting was held - and other state buildings in Chicago were recycling.

Council members agreed that this contract - and Illinois' recycling programs in general - needs to be reviewed on a broader level.

"It's embarrassing," Quinn said.

Full story:
http://chicagotalks.org/wiki/state-not-doing-enough-to-recycle-illinois-officials-say
(c) Keri Lynch 2007

Uptown Crime & Grime Update

Community News story posted on 7/2/07:

Burglaries have been on the rise in parts of Uptown recently, causing concern for area residents and police officers. At recent community policing meetings (CAPS), officers said this is not unique to the 46th Ward or the 23rd police District, which runs from the lake to Clark Street between Lawrence and Fullerton avenues.

"Burglaries have gone up all over the city," said officer Margaret Murphy, Beat 2313 in Uptown. "My house was just burglarized, and we have an alarm system and a big dog."

With nine reported in a two-week period between June 8 and June 21 in Beat 2312 alone, burglaries were at the top of the list at three Uptown-area CAPS meetings in June. Citywide, burglaries have decreased 4.4 percent and auto thefts dropped 21 percent in the first five months of 2007 compared to 2006, according to crime summary reports released by the Chicago Police Department of so-called "index crimes."

Other crimes on the "Top Ten" lists for three Uptown beats in May 2007 included battery (15 to 21 incidents) and narcotics (13 to 20 incidents), followed by theft, which includes motor vehicles, with 12 incidents per beat. Burglaries were much lower, with 2 or 3 incidents per beat.

Murphy and other 23rd District beat officers have been checking doors, garages and cars to try to reduce the number of break-ins and thefts in the North Side neighborhood. They say a warm-weather spike is normal, and residents can help prevent these crimes.

Full story:
http://chicagotalks.org/wiki/crime-and-grime-update-from-uptown

(c) Keri Lynch 2007

Uptown Writers Space

Community News story posted on 6/25/07:

New Space for Writers Opens on Northside

Confessions of love, lust and loss opened the first-ever Chicago Lions and Typers Festival earlier this month on the Northside.

About 100 people attended the three-day festival, which organizers hope to make an annual affair. The event was hosted by and held at the Uptown Writers Space, at 4802 N. Broadway Ave., where area writers hang out to work, collaborate and socialize.

"Diary Night" began with Uptown Writers Space member Marianna Swallow sharing her teenage crush on pop star Rick Springfield, which filled up much of her dreams as well as a diary she began writing at age 10. Swallow also shared stories of real life loves, as a 20-something living in Oakland who had feelings for a co-worker while involved with another man.

Swallow said she "pestered" the organizers to let her read from her diaries, and other writers agreed to participate and kick off the first festival at the space. Over the three days, 26 pre-selected writers from a variety of backgrounds read from their work, including short stories, plays, monologues, poetry and some very personal journals.

Two area writers, Susan Karp and Julie Saltzman, joined forces in September 2006. They rented office space above the famous Green Mill Jazz Club, redesigning and decorating it to create an inviting space where writers - who can be members for one month, six months or a year - can work and drink free coffee.

Full story:
http://chicagotalks.org/wiki/new-space-for-writers-opens-on-northside
(c) Keri Lynch 2007

Hunger Walk Helps Thousands

Community News story posted on 6/14/07:

Thousands to Benefit from June 16 "Hunger Walk"

On a recent Wednesday, residents arrived at 3831 N. Broadway Ave. with empty carts. When the doors opened, dozens of people streamed inside. Each took a number, placed their carts in back, out of the way, and sat down. By 4 p.m., about 125 people filed out with carts, backpacks and bags full of fresh produce, bread, meat and canned goods - about 40 pounds' worth per person.

This is a typical day at Lakeview Pantry, one of the most-used food pantries in Chicago. It expects 26,000 visits to its two locations this year from seniors, homeless people and other individuals and families struggling to make ends meet.

Lakeview Pantry is one of 600 organizations connected with the Greater Chicago Food Depository that will participate June 16 in the 22nd Annual Hunger Walk. Registration starts at 8 a.m., and the 2.5-mile walk begins at 9:30 a.m. near Montrose Harbor. About 4,000 walkers are expected to raise an estimated $300,000 for the depository's network.

Full story:
http://chicagotalks.org/wiki/thousands-to-benefit-from-june-16-hunger-walk

(c) Keri Lynch 2007

It's Easy Being Green

Community News story posted 6/13/07:

It's Easy Being Green, Experts Say

It's easy being green - that's what a recent event announcement proclaimed. With environmental issues at the forefront, many Chicagoans are wondering what they can do to reduce global warming and live more sustainably. A June 7 event, part of an Illinois Humanities Council series hosted at the Chicago History Museum, gave residents some ideas about how to lead a greener life.

The city's newest green building, the Center on Halsted, grabbed much of the event's spotlight. Center Chairman Robert Kohl spoke proudly of the building at 3656 N Halsted St. - for both its design and purposes.

"When we began planning and designing the building, we knew of (Mayor) Daley's fondness for green," Kohl said, and thought "how cool it would be to have a green roof."

One center advocate understood the LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) codes and knew that "a lot of grant money was available," Kohl said. "And because we had significant commitments from city and federal government, it felt like good stewardship for us as leaders of our communities to do this green building."

The center earned a silver rating in the LEED program, which provides points for design, construction and operation. The five areas evaluated are: sustainable site development, water savings, energy efficiency, materials selection and indoor-environmental quality, according to the U.S. Green Building Council, which established the rating system.

In Illinois, there are more than 300 LEED-registered projects, according to the U.S. Green Building Council project list dated April 12, 2007. These projects include government and office buildings, libraries, schools and non-profit organizations. Slightly more than half of the projects are in Chicago.

For full story:
http://chicagotalks.org/wiki/it-s-easy-being-green-experts-say
(c) Keri Lynch 2007

Asians Face Domestic Violence

Community News story posted 6/6/07.

Asian Communities Find Fighting Domestic Violence Big Challenge

"Therapy is for white people."

That's what Ginger Cacnio recently said to an Asian-American audience at a recent forum at Truman College. And this belief, she said, makes it harder to deal with domestic violence in minority communities.

Cacnio shared her childhood experience of sexual abuse and resulting problems with drugs, promiscuity and suicide attempts at the May 23 town hall - one of a number of forums that's part of a year-long initiative to make Illinois a safer place for women and girls called What Will It Take?

About 60 people and eight Chicago police officers participated in the discussion co-sponsored by 12 Uptown non-profit organizations that serve minorities from Asian countries. Speakers explained how cultural differences keep many Asian victims of violence from seeking help and shared suggestions for dealing with the problem.

Full story: http://www.creatingcommunityconnections.org/node/599

(c) Keri Lynch 2007

Homeless but not Hopeless

Community News story posted 6/5/07

Homeless by choice for nearly 10 years, Harry Madix says he wasn't ready for help, even though a lot of services were available. Struggling with addiction, in 1995 he walked into an Uptown homeless organization and got the support he needed to get his life back together.

"I got a second chance," he says. "It's like a miracle."

Madix and 30 others involved with Inspiration Café shared their stories with Karen Skalitzky, who cooked up a book, A Recipe for Hope, Stories of Transformation by People Struggling with Homelessness, which recently won a merit award from the Midwest Independent Publishers Association. The book combines recipes and stories to reveal what makes this Chicago non-profit organization unique: hospitality and relationships.

Full story:
http://chicagotalks.org/wiki/homeless-but-not-hopeless

(c) Keri Lynch 2007