Call Senator Warners office about the Senator Markey Net Neutrality bill.

https://www.markey.senate.gov/news/press-releases/senator-markey-leads-resolution-to-restore-fccs-net-neutrality-rules

http://www.dailyprogress.com/newsvirginian/news/politics/kaine-joins-resolution-to-reverse-fcc-rollback-of-net-neutrality/article_e710db44-e456-11e7-909b-6fc0b7f5a037.html

The Markey bill on net neutrality would undo the FCC’s recent decision repealing title 2 regulation on the issue. This is something I completely support. Preserving net neutrality is extremely important, and the FCC decision was a transparent giveaway to the communications industry at the expense of the everyday internet user.

For some fantastic info on why it’s a bad idea to repeal title 2 protections, and threaten net neutrality, I would suggest reading Commissioner Clyburns comments in her extended dissent on the FCC decision, which can be found here:

FCC Commissioner Clyburn guts anti-net neutrality order in extended dissent

It’s interesting that we see Senator Kaine as a co-sponsor of the Markey bill, but not Senator Warner. Senator Kaine has been more vocal than Senator Warner on this issue in the past, so maybe I shouldn’t be surprised. As our best shot at correcting the horrible decision by the FCC is for Congress to overturn it, I have called Senator Warners office and asked them to support the Markey bill, and would ask everyone else in Virginia to as well.

Senator Warners contact information can be found here: https://www.warner.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/officeinformation

 

Tim Kaine, Ralph Northam, and FERC, What’s going on?

After the Federal Energy Regulatory Authority (FERC) approval of the Mountain Valley Pipeline and Atlantic Coast Pipeline, Senator Tim Kaine had some interesting comments on the matter. He called the approval “very suspicious circumstances”, and added “If you do not like this decision there are other agencies that still have to weigh in,” he said. “If you are active about this, please do not stop your activism. Please let these other agencies know what you think about it.”

http://www.roanoke.com/news/local/roanoke_county/politicians-react-to-ferc-pipeline-certifications/article_f9cbecc5-26a6-54b7-98d2-4f773e2ba8de.html

And recently, Senator Kaine has suggested that the permits on those two pipeline projects be reviewed again, now that FERC has a full complement of commissioners.

http://www.richmond.com/news/kaine-supports-reconsideration-for-controversial-virginia-pipelines/article_739962da-673d-5f2e-8a02-d19928457f07.html

Governor-elect Ralph Northam apparently supports Senator Kaines idea of revisiting the FERC approval.

Northam says he supports a proposal from Senator Tim Kaine for the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to reconsider its vote on the Atlantic Coast Pipeline.

http://www.nbc29.com/story/37210640/governor-elect-ralph-northam-attends-sunday-service-in-charlottesville

I love that Senator Kaine is talking about this. Frankly, having an elected official of Senator Kaine’s visibility talking about his concerns with the approval process is something I see as helpful for the movement against the pipelines, and I’m glad he’s paying attention. His questions about tolling orders are apt, as there is a lot of funny business going on w/ the FERC approvals.

That said, Senator Kaine’s letter is not an official request for rehearing, as the second link says. Another factor here is that even if the projects got their rehearing, 4/5 of the FERC commissioners are Trump appointees, and 3/5 are Republicans. Neither factor inspires confidence that a rehearing would result in a different outcome on the MVP or ACP. The ACP is high priority for the current president, and FERC has a long history of shady behavior anyway. It evaluates pipeline projects in sections, seemingly to avoid evaluating the full impact of an entire project as a whole, and ignores the climate impact of transmission projects.

Due to the outcome of some court cases, there might be cause for hope that those factors change in the future, but I’m not terribly optimistic. So I wonder, why are Senator Kaine and Governor-elect Northam talking about FERC instead of Virginia’s own DEQ? Either elected official could simply ask the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality to either vacate their permits, or to revisit them and include a stream-by-stream water crossing evaluation. If that ask wasn’t legally binding, as I suspect it wouldn’t be, similarly, asking FERC to do a new assessment isn’t legally binding either.

I’m looking at this with a degree of hopeful skepticism. It’s helpful to have more conversation on the issue, but the FERC route has a lot of potential to mislead people. Governor-elect Northam, and Governor Terry McAuliffe have been fond of suggesting in the past that Virginia has no role to play in the approval process, which is simply false. Virginia can and should deny certification under section 401 of the clean water act. Pointing to FERC seems like it could be a political move to deflect attention away from the states responsibility to protect water quality.

 

 

Comments at Loudoun County Public Hearing with Members of the General Assembly 1-7-2018

Good afternoon Senators, and Delegates. Thank you for taking the time to be here today.

I’m Chris. I’ve lived in Loudoun practically my entire life.

I’m extremely concerned about Virginia’s energy future, and numerous threats to the environment. Virginia ranks 37th in the county in renewable energy, at only 10.54% according to the US Department of Energy. Dominion Energy engages in PR campaigns that make it look like it is investing in solar, which would be great if it were true, but the numbers just don’t bear that out. Instead, Dominion plans to build a 42inch gas pipeline that has been condemned by every environmental group I can think of. Amanda and I have been to some of these pipeline counties in Virginia and talked to folks that would be directly affected, and I’m convinced that what’s goin on in Virginia is a far cry from justice. Imagine if you suddenly had to decide your families future where your options are something like taking a 50% hit to your property value, or living in the blast zone of a 42inch gas pipe. These things frequently explode. There were pipeline explosions in the US on November 20th in Oakland County Michigan, December 5th in Dixon IL, and December 6th near Carlsbad NM. The Dixon one killed two people, and I’m sure there have been more explosions since those. These things are dangerous, and that’s before we get to the climate impact as building these two pipelines would at least double the greenhouse gas emissions of the Commonwealth of Virginia.

I ask all of you to do what you can to stop these projects. Senator Kaine has been speaking out about the FERC approval of MVP and ACP and called it “very suspicious circumstances”, and suggested that (and I’m quoting here) “If you are active about this, please do not stop your activism.” Senator Kaine has asked the commission to grant new hearings for the Mountain Valley and Atlantic Coast pipeline projects, and were that to happen it would at least be a helpful delay.

We have to also make certain that offshore oil drilling is prevented. The Atlantic Ocean must not have a spill like we saw in 2010 at the Deepwater Horizon in the Gulf of Mexico. Spills like that aren’t really fixable. They are tragedies that threaten the livability of the planet that future generations inherit. Virginia must shift to renewable energy as aggressively as possible. That’s what I ask each of you to work on, and I hope to support you as you do.

Thank you again for your time today, and everything that you do for Loudoun County and Virginia.

Comments at Loudoun County Public Hearing with Members of the General Assembly

Polar Plunge!

Once a year, 350 Loudoun, the environmental group that Amanda Tandy and I do most of our work with, participates in the polar plunge with Chesapeake Climate Action Network.

350 Loudoun is about as grassroots as a climate change activism group gets. It’s members are passionate, engaged, and putting a lot of time into local issues. This year we’ve put a lot of effort into fighting the ACP and MVP. We show up at county Board of Supervisor meetings and put in public comments, we organize, work with other local and with larger non-profits on statewide efforts. This year we also helped organize on Peoples Climate March, and in cooperation with Sierra Club, we brought 86 Loudouners to DC to protest for Climate, Jobs, and Justice in DC.

CCAN is an excellent nonprofit that we’ve worked with on a lot of projects. They’re the tip of the spear in the pipeline fight in Virginia, and they had quite a bit to do with the fracking ban that got passed in Maryland. In October this year, 350 Loudoun worked with CCAN on a 2 day protest at all 7 DEQ offices in Virginia, and helped organize the Woodbridge location.

The polar plunge is really our one fundraiser a year, and the proceeds we raise are split between our group and CCAN. Last year we raised around $1500 for our group, which is essentially 350 Loudouns entire operating budget for a year. We’re big on work, and low on costs, so we make that budget go pretty far.

Your support on this is greatly appreciated, and allows Amanda and I, and the rest of 350 Loudoun to continue our work in Loudoun and Virginia. Here’s the links, and thank you.

http://keepwintercold.org/amanda-tandy

http://keepwintercold.org/chris-tandy

Stop the True North Data Center

In Loudoun, we’re asking our county Supervisors to vote against a zoning change that would allow a data center to be built in the transition policy area. It’s a bad idea for a lot of reasons. Our friends at Piedmont Environmental Council have put together quite a bit of information on this, which can be found here:

https://www.pecva.org/our-region/loudoun/growth-development-traffic/1343-why-true-north-data-is-worse-than-current-zoning

https://www.pecva.org/our-region/loudoun/growth-development-traffic/1335-true-north-data-wrong-direction-for-loudoun

To show how vocally opposed to the rezoning the community has been, I worked w/ 350 Loudoun and PEC to put together this 7 minute video showing some of the comments against the rezoning.

Launch Post

Hello world. We’re Amanda and Chris and this is our blog.

We’ve known each other since 2008 and got married in 2012. We have a happy marriage, but do get stressed out at times. We’re middle-aged, and never had kids. We’re writing this blog as a bit of a personal catharsis and to chronicle our adventures together.

She’s a political science major with a minor in international relations and he’s an animation student turned web developer. We’ve both read up on science and politics and all that stuff most of our adult lives, which started close to 20 years ago now. About a year after we got married, we figured it was time to have kids or….not. At that point, we’d read enough science about the state of the environment and where we were headed as a globe. We considered the evidence and arrived at the conclusion that the state of things isn’t just far from perfect, it’s alarming. Given that there are friends and family whose kids call us aunt and uncle, we figured our time might be better placed in working with others to try to fix some of these problems, at least in our local area, which is Northern Virginia outside of Washington, D.C.. Kids or adoption might come later if it made sense, we thought at the time.

We started looking for groups and organizations that are acting to preserve the environment for future generations, because even back then the government wasn’t, at least not adequately. At first, we were armchair activists. We’d sign petitions, donate money and post articles about destruction of the natural world on Facebook. It was probably the articles showing the graphic horror of the whaling industry or the harmful effects of plastics in the oceans that lost us Facebook “friends”. Around the same time, we realized that we were decreasingly seeing our existing friends. It seemed like a natural result of their recreation time moving from bars to babies as most of them were having families and devoting their time to their wonderful children.

The moment we became volunteer community organizers in the climate movement was probably late June, 2016. We were asked to captain a bus to Richmond by organizers with Sierra Club, and Chesapeake Climate Action Network for a protest. We thought about it, realized that we had everything we needed to take it on, and said yes. After some initial trepidation, we managed to do a pretty decent job (we hope). We made phone calls to help fill up the bus and thought that every seat would be full. On July 23rd, 2016, the temperature was 99 degrees and an air quality warning was in effect. The bus left mostly full all the same and Loudoun County, Virginia showed up in Richmond and joined around 700 others to protest against two massive natural gas pipelines, toxic coal ash storage, and rising sea levels. We stopped traffic (with help from truly fantastic Richmond local law enforcement and first responders) and sent a message to the Governor of Virginia that we didn’t want a monopoly energy company running roughshod over Virginians. We both got overheated and varying degrees of sick, as did a lot of other people. But, we did it and every one of our passengers got home safe.

Over the subsequent years, we were asked to fill in as co-chairs of our local 350.org affiliate group, 350 Loudoun, which we did for roughly a year. We still remain extremely active in that group, as well as with Sierra Club, and CCAN. We started getting into local politics and joined our local Democratic Committee. We started meeting elected officials. We looked at local fossil fuel infrastructure projects and met with county Supervisors to try to bring research, and explain the problems with various projects like the Dominion Loudoun Compressor Station.

We did a lot of work on Peoples Climate March. On April 29th 2017, over 200,000 Americans protested in Washington for Climate, Jobs, and Justice. We were bus captains on that one, too, and brought 86 of them from Loudoun County on buses. Hopefully our other organizing efforts brought others as well.

In the run-up to the 2016 election, we both worked on the Democrats’ campaigns, even though we both voted for Bernie Sanders in the primary. Amanda was canvass captain in Ashburn and trained every canvasser covering 13,000 homes. Virginia went blue, but it was the only southern state that did. Waking up on Wednesday, November 9th, 2016 was a gut punch. At that point we knew that we would be ramping up our efforts and that we wouldn’t be alone. Amanda got a bullhorn for Christmas that year and we joined well over 550,000 in DC for the Womens’ March on January 21st, 2017. Loudoun County exploded with progressive energy the following year and, thankfully, Virginia went pretty hard left in 2017. Loudoun County is amazing and don’t forget it.

In Charlottesville, Virginia on August 12th, 2017, white supremacists killed a teenager who was there protesting their white nationalism demonstration. We had tried to make the environment our primary focus until that point, and it still is, but we couldn’t sit by and watch white supremacists disenfranchised, intimidated and killed people in our State. We joined our local NAACP chapter shortly after and are hoping that we are proving helpful to their efforts (incidentally, your local NAACP chapter needs you, too. It is intimidating to join a new group, but if our experience is any indicator, you will meet some of the most lovely neighbors you might not have known you had.).

We find some interesting intersections between grassroots environmentalism and politics sometimes. In the late summer of 2017, we helped write and introduced a resolution calling on Governor Terry McAuliffe to stop the Atlantic Coast Pipeline (ACP) and the Mountain Valley Pipeline (MVP) at the Loudoun County Democratic Committee.

So now…. we still do organizing work for the environment. We still work with the Democrats and support candidates as we see fit and we’re thinking about what’s next. We’ve built a network of some absolutely incredible people in Virginia that inspire us every day. We’ve gotten a little bit thick skinned. We’re comfortable with disagreement and public speaking (although, both honing that skill, still!). We’ve been involved in Virginia’s fight against the ACP and MVP since mid-2016. If there are stories from that effort that are compelling, and don’t harm the effort against the pipelines, or the people involved, maybe this will turn out to be a place to share those.

We’ve learned over the years that people are powerful and can change the world, but there’s a lot of work that needs to be done. If our own thoughts, projects, and whatever else can help people do that, that would be great. We’re not perfect, and we don’t expect anyone else to be, but being perfect isn’t the point. To you dear reader, may your life be full of joy and electrifying purpose.

To close with a quote:
“One person can make a difference, and everyone should try.”
-John F Kennedy