Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Renewable energy installer

We had a SOLARBRATION at school today!  What's a SOLARBRATION you might ask?  
We gathered today to celebrate SOLAR!  

Check out the portal to the panels that the students were all informed of today.  After meeting with the Earth, Wind, and Solar experts, the students at SPC have gained useful background knowledge already in regards to how our school is supporting clean energy.  The portal is linked to the school's website with the Earth Wind and Solar logo.  The portal will also be a useful tool for the students in the computer lab on the desktop throughout the coming days, months, and years!  Harnessing the sun's energy through the installation of these panels (and hopefully more to come someday?!) is a great way to care for creation!

Check it out while you have a minute!  
(sunny days make the panel array on the computer image/model turn BLUE!)

rain, rain, go away!

https://enlighten.enphaseenergy.com/public/systems/BFza148040

Thursday, January 17, 2013

Green Club meeting January, Part II

Green Club is prepping for one of our most out-spoken and important campaigns to date. Wednesday we created a "tool" to help support our message, picked names for PA announcements and discussed our public speaking opportunities. Are you surprised to hear that most of our Clubbers are eager public speakers? We aren't!
Stay tuned to learn more about the SPC No Idling Campaign!

We are starting the 2013 year off by turning our engines OFF!
Parents and caregivers dropping off or picking up their children have seen No Idling signs posted around our campus for a few years.  These No Idling Zones have become part of our
2013 No Idling Campaign.
We are working to protect the health of our students and the health of our environment, and we ask you to show your support by turning off your engine while waiting on school grounds.  Please be aware that St Paul of the Cross has adopted a No Idling Policy that will be posted on the website as well as in the handbook.  The emissions that come from our tailpipes harm all of us, especially children who breathe more and at a faster rate than adults. Air pollution also poses particular risks for our children with asthma, and even low levels of pollution can trigger an asthma attack or respiratory symptoms.

So, if you’re going to be sitting still for more than 30 seconds, please remember to turn your car’s engine
off. You’ll not only improve our air, you’ll also save money in fuel and vehicle wear and tear costs!
To learn more about air pollution, its effects and how we can all breathe easier, visit
www.earthday.net/Noidling

If you’re interested in purchasing our SPC No Idling magnet please contact
Amy Bartucci at aeb925@gmail.com.
They are $4 each for the month of January!

This No Idling informational campaign will be shared with the students at school as well as through the Thursday Mailings in the upcoming weeks.

Thursday, January 10, 2013


Not Even Close: 2012 Was Hottest Ever in U.S.

Daniel Acker/Bloomberg via Getty Images
A dry section of the Morse Reservoir in Cicero, Ind., in July.
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The numbers are in: 2012, the year of a surreal March heat wave, a severe drought in the Corn Belt and a huge storm that caused broad devastation in the Middle Atlantic States, turns out to have been the hottest year ever recorded in the contiguous United States.
Multimedia
Green
A blog about energy and the environment.
Steve Hebert for The New York Times
An unusually warm March left the soil dried out in much of the country, helping to set the stage for a drought that peaked during what became the warmest July on record. Parched corn in Paola, Kan.
Chang W. Lee/The New York Times
Coney Island in March.

Readers’ Comments

Readers shared their thoughts on this article.
How hot was it? The temperature differences between years are usually measured in fractions of a degree, but last year’s 55.3 degree average demolished the previous record, set in 1998, by a full degree Fahrenheit.
If that does not sound sufficiently impressive, consider that 34,008 daily high records were set at weather stations across the country, compared with only 6,664 record lows, according to a count maintained by theWeather Channel meteorologist Guy Walton, using federal temperature records.
That ratio, which was roughly in balance as recently as the 1970s, has been out of whack for decades as the country has warmed, but never by as much as it was last year.
“The heat was remarkable,” said Jake Crouch, a scientist with the National Climatic Data Center in Asheville, N.C., which released the official climate compilation on Tuesday. “It was prolonged. That we beat the record by one degree is quite a big deal.”
Scientists said that natural variability almost certainly played a role in last year’s extreme heat and drought. But many of them expressed doubt that such a striking new record would have been set without the backdrop of global warming caused by the human release of greenhouse gases. And they warned that 2012 was probably a foretaste of things to come, as continuing warming makes heat extremes more likely.
Even so, the last year’s record for the United States is not expected to translate into a global temperature record when figures are released in the coming weeks. The year featured a La NiƱa weather pattern, which tends to cool the global climate over all, and scientists expect it to be the world’s eighth- or ninth-warmest year on record.
Assuming that prediction holds up, it will mean that the 10 warmest years on record all fell within the past 15 years, a measure of how much the planet has warmed. Nobody who is under 28 has lived through a month of global temperatures that fell below the 20th-century average, because the last such month was February 1985.
Last year’s weather in the United States began with an unusually warm winter, with relatively little snow across much of the country, followed by a March that was so hot that trees burst into bloom and swimming pools opened early. The soil dried out in the March heat, helping to set the stage for a drought that peaked during the warmest July on record.
The drought engulfed 61 percent of the nation, killed corn and soybean crops and sent prices spiraling. It was comparable to a severe drought in the 1950s, Mr. Crouch said, but not quite as severe as the legendary Dust Bowl drought of the 1930s, which was exacerbated by poor farming practices that allowed topsoil to blow away.
Extensive records covering the lower 48 states go back to 1895; Alaska and Hawaii have shorter records and are generally not included in long-term climate comparisons for that reason.
Mr. Crouch pointed out that until last year, the coldest year in the historical record for the lower 48 states, 1917, was separated from the warmest year, 1998, by only 4.2 degrees Fahrenheit. That is why the 2012 record, and its one degree increase over 1998, strikes climatologists as so unusual.
“We’re taking quite a large step above what the period of record has shown for the contiguous United States,” Mr. Crouch said.
In addition to being the nation’s warmest year, 2012 turned out to be the second-worst on a measure called the Climate Extremes Index, surpassed only by 1998.
Experts are still counting, but so far 11 disasters in 2012 have exceeded a threshold of $1 billion in damages, including several tornado outbreaks; Hurricane Isaac, which hit the Gulf Coast in August, and, late in the year, Hurricane Sandy, which caused damage likely to exceed $60 billion in nearly half the states, primarily in the mid-Atlantic region.
Among those big disasters was one bearing a label many people had never heard before: the derecho, a line of severe, fast-moving thunderstorms that struck central and eastern parts of the country starting on June 29, killing more than 20 people, toppling trees and knocking out power for millions of households.
For people who escaped both the derecho and Hurricane Sandy relatively unscathed, the year may be remembered most for the sheer breadth and oppressiveness of the summer heat wave. By the calculations of the climatic data center, a third of the nation’s population experienced 10 or more days of summer temperatures exceeding 100 degrees Fahrenheit.
Among the cities that set temperature records in 2012 were Nashville; Athens, Ga.; and Cairo, Ill., all of which hit 109 degrees on June 29; Greenville, S.C., which hit 107 degrees on July 1; and Lamar, Colo., which hit 112 degrees on June 27.
With the end of the growing season, coverage of the drought has waned, but the drought itself has not. Mr. Crouch pointed out that at the beginning of January, 61 percent of the country was still in moderate to severe drought conditions. “I foresee that it’s going to be a big story moving forward in 2013,” he said.

Saturday, January 5, 2013

Happy New Year!
On Friday we had a fantastic meeting of the eco-minded which gave us another reason to be so impressed with the members of Green Club. Thanks to those who were able to make it to the computer lab to help get this project started off on the right foot.

The Club's New Year's Resolution this year is to educate and encourage our grown ups to turn off their vehicle while parked. This is called IDLING. By definition,  Idle (idling) means using fuel to run a motor or machine while it is not in gear or moving. -Beginner Dictionary, 1979)

An easy way to remember to turn off one's vehicle is this:
RULE OF THUMB: 
If you're in a drive-through restaurant/business line or waiting for someone and you'll be parked and sitting for 10 seconds or longer... turn off your car's engine.
Why??
For every two minutes a car is idling, it uses about the same amount of fuel it takes to go about one mile. Research indicates that the average person idles their car five to 10 minutes a day. 
-ComsumerEnergyCenter.org 

We are well on our way to a positive and productive "No Idling Campaign". Signs were made that will be posted around school to help reinforce the message. Information via the Thursday mailing will be sent out over the next few weeks that include myths, facts, and other fun ways we can all do our part to protect the planet.
We just might have a few more tricks up our sleeves as well....Stay tuned for more info in the coming weeks!

Ecologically yours,
Jamie Hasemeier + Amy Bartucci