Ever wonder how the term "parking lot" got into our vocabulary? How in the world did the mechanized behemoths of our car culture ever get associated with the idea of a park? Car parks, parking spaces, and parking meters all seem pretty oxy-moronic when given a second thought. This odd clash of phrasing has given a very creative group of artist/activists the fuel they need to present some fresh ideas about city life and urban planning.
Last September 18th, in cities across the globe, thousands of people participated in activities designed to take back the streets, one parking space at a time. New York to San Diego, Los Angeles to Minneapolis, in Poland, New Zealand, Norway, South Korea, the idea has caught fire in the imaginations of urbanites who are exploring a re-purposing of their cityscapes. Drop some quarters in the meter and create a mini-park for a day on the asphalt. (Can you even put a parking ticket on a lawn chair?) Many of these installations used sod or artificial turf, patio furniture and potted plants, educational displays and musical performances to get the attention of other city dwellers. These curbside activists are trying to focus attention on the need for more parks and green spaces in our urban centers. In the name of community health, vitality and creative approaches to land use, this has become a global event in four years.
First realized in 2005 by a San Francisco artist's collective called "Rebar", Park(ing) Day had over 500 sites in 100 cities on four continents in 2008.
This year was even bigger, and the concept inspired some people in my own Little Italy neighborhood of San Diego, thanks to SEZIO.ORG, a local non-profit artist's organization. With the help of local msuic legend Steve Poltz, this group raised up the flag of urban creative activism and were rewarded by some effective press coverage: local TV news spots and a picture of the installation on the front page of the local paper, the San Diego Union Tribune.
This kind of fresh perspective and thought-provoking action is sorely needed just now, as people world-wide question the status-quo of development and urban growth with new ideas and challenges to the standard definition of how the idea of public space can serve the spirit as well as the body politic.
Historically, we know about the pitfalls of our reliance on coal as an energy source. (All puns intended.) Directly affecting human health, the dreaded Black Lung Disease was the impetus for much of the union organizing that was accomplished in the hills of West Virginia, Kentucky and Pennsylvania last century. The shocking evidence of how destructive strip mining and "mountain-topping" is to our scenic heritage in both the Eastern and Western mountain ranges has helped to make conservationists of millions of Americans. Research linking coal-fired electricity plants to soaring asthma rates among young children in the urban areas of our nation has energized many communities to take political action to protect these most innocent of victims. Recently the scientific studies confirming the global warming effects of greenhouse gas emissions has re-exposed the dirty secret about how we generate our power. Now one more lump of coal hits the fan.
The Boston Globe has a brief article today from Reuters reporting on a wide-ranging study conducted by the United States Geological Survey confirming the damage done to domestic, freshwater fish stocks by our continued reliance on coal. The lethal heavy-metal mercury has long been known to permeate the larger fish in our oceans. Top predator species like tuna, swordfish and marine mammals, notably porpoise, are known to harbor dangerous levels of the toxin. Now the USGS shows how this by-product of coal-burning plants is contaminating trout, bass, and catfish we once thought were free of the worst effects of pollution, and not just in still waters. In over 1,000 individual fish taken from 291 rivers and streams nationwide they found not one single catch was free of mercury and more than one in four fish had levels exceeding what is considered dangerous to people with an average amount of fish in their diet. 48 states, according to the article, have already issued advisories regarding eating fish caught in the wild due to the mercury contamination.
http://www.boston.com/news/science/articles/2009/08/20/mercury_tainted_fish_found_widely_in_us_streams/
This isn't just about global warming, friends. It isn't only about kids getting sick in our cities or laying waste to some of the most beautiful landscapes in America. It's about the survival of our species, nothing less. Pick your own reason to stop coal plants, there are so many to choose from, but pick one quick and get involved with supporting real change in our energy policy. Wait too long to move on this and we'll all be looking at a lump of coal in our childrens' Christmas stockings for many generations to come.
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greenarrow9
San Diego, CA USA
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