Articles by Katharine Wroth
All Articles
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How green is their Red Hill Valley?
Canada -- that blissful, forward-looking, do-gooding land to the north -- has some problems of its own. In Hamilton, Ontario, a battle is raging over the construction of a multi-lane expressway through Red Hill Valley. The 1,600-acre urban park, which accounts for a third of the city's green space, extends from the Niagara Escarpment (a U.N. Biosphere Reserve) to the shores of Lake Ontario. A native burial site, it was protected in 1929, and is now home to the city's last remaining creek -- and critters including the rare southern flying squirrel.
So hey, why not build a road through it? Uproot 44,000 trees and reroute Red Hill Creek? The massive project, first proposed in the 1950s, is finally underway. But defenders of the valley are not going down without a fight. They are occupying the land, organizing petitions, and funding studies. Meanwhile, the city isn't pulling any punches; in December, it sued several federal environmental officials, accusing them of standing in the way.
But even with all the nastiness, it's still Canada, eh:
The Red Hill Valley Treesit ended on September 11, 2004 when the remaining treesitter, Clarence, decided it was time to come down ... The day was Clarence's 19th birthday and 105th day in a tree. Clarence descended to the cheer of supporters who had gathered to celebrate his birthday. He was then arrested by Hamilton Police and taken to the East Hamilton station. Over a dozen supporters overtook the station's waiting room while Clarence sat in a holding cell waiting for the police to complete his trespassing papers. About an hour after arrival, he was released. Most of the group then proceeded to take Clarence out for his first "legal" beer.
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Mad about saffron
This weekend, after decades of planning, Christo opens a massive installation in Central Park. The Bulgarian-born "environmental artist," best known for wrapping Berlin's Reichstag in 1995, has draped 7,500 16-foot-tall structures in saffron-colored fabric to create The Gates. New York officials originally rejected the artist's plans in 1980 due in part to environmental concerns. So he modified the structures to sit on the pavement instead of in the soil, pledged to avoid paths with low-hanging branches, and shifted the two-week event from fall to comparatively quiet winter. Its materials -- including 5,290 tons of steel and more than 1 million square feet of fabric -- will be recycled, and proceeds from related merchandise will be donated to Nurture New York's Nature. Hundreds of thousands of tourists are expected, and everyone seems to be on the bandwagon now, with nearby hotels offering binoculars in every room and serving saffron soup.
But do I have to like it?
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They’ll be back
At a U.N. conference in Bangkok this week, nations and NGOs are debating the merits of the Terminator. No, not the esteemed governor; the controversial biotechnology developed by the USDA and the agricultural industry in the late '90s that can make plants produce sterile seeds. As a result, farmers would be forced to buy seeds anew each year. They'd benefit from hardier crops and higher yields, proclaim the corporate giants; growers and their advocates -- especially in poorer countries -- beg to differ.
The U.N. has placed a moratorium on the Terminator, and governments in Asia and Africa have called for an outright ban. But Canada is making a splash this week by recommending case-by-case assessments instead. "The Canadian government is doing the dirty work of the multinational gene giants and the U.S. government," says a concerned Canadian foundation.
Follow the latest developments -- or just check out the scintillating action shots. Hey, Greenpeace: If you're not gonna wear a tie, could you at least button up?
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He loves it because it’s trash
Occasionally a politician is not full of himself, and we like that. When Nebraska's former lieutenant governor, Dave Heineman, stepped in to fill the shoes of governor Mike Johanns -- who left to head up the Department of Agriculture -- it was Heineman himself who broke the news to a restless Nebraska press corps. And then, earning the love of envelope-enviros everywhere, Heineman noted that he was going to instruct state offices to use up all of Johanns' old stationery rather than chucking it. "They can just put 'Dave Heineman' on the bottom [of letters]," Heineman told the Lincoln Journal Star. "We're not going to waste that paper." The Student Conservation Association jumped all over that, giving Heineman its Call of Conservation award and proclaiming his decision "letter-perfect." And when he submitted a budget that included a 10 percent increase in education funding? Well, let's just say swooning occurred.