Sunday, April 24, 2022

Should we burn trash at Los Reales "Sustainability Campus?"

Los Reales 'sustainability campus' plan 

Included (below) is a link to an article by Sustainable Tucson's Zero Waste Working Group chair Kevin Greene. Please, read this important article and share it widely on your email lists and social media pages. "Like" it on Sustainable Tucson's Facebook page and Zero Waste Tucson.

Burning trash won't fix problems - by Kevin Greene, chair of Sustainable Tucson's Zero Waste Working Group

Our country has a trash problem. We live in a disposable society, one which doesn't value the importance of materials and resources. On average, every American produces close to 5 pounds of solid waste daily. For decades, we've relied on landfilling as the main option for managing items we throw away. In fact, the U.S. landfilled about 146 million tons of waste in 2018 alone.

Here in Tucson, the Los Reales Landfill serves as the primary disposal site for waste materials. The 370-acre landfill is owned and operated by the city of Tucson through its environmental and general service department. Each day, the landfill receives approximately 2,300 tons of waste.

Last July, Tucson Environmental and General Services (TEGS) announced a plan to convert the Los Reales Landfill into a 'sustainability campus' to help address global warming. TEGS has produced a creditable vision of the campus as a place for technological innovation that would divert waste from the landfill.

There are promising ideas in the campus plan. Unfortunately, as currently written, the plan would make waste-to-energy (WtE) a key method for reducing our dependence on landfilling.

WtE is a high temperature process where energy (typically heat and electricity) is generated using waste materials as a fuel source. Incineration is the most common type of WtE in the U.S.

WtE also includes gasification and pyrolysis systems, which attempt to convert waste materials into combustible fuels and other feedstocks.

Creating energy from waste sounds like a win-win. However, a closer look reveals WtE comes with significant downsides. When we burn materials to produce energy, the resources used to make those products and packaging are destroyed.

This means we must continue to extract more resources from the Earth to make new products.

WtE is not climate-friendly like solar and wind energy. When plastics, paper and other materials are burned, their stored carbon is released into the air.

In 2016, U.S. waste incinerators generated the equivalent of 12 million tons of carbon dioxide, more than half of which came from plastics. True sustainability requires getting those carbon molecules back into new products, not burning them to add to the climate crisis.

WtE companies often assert that by burning waste, they are helping to reduce landfill emissions like methane, a potent greenhouse gas. But the methane produced at landfills largely comes from decomposing organic materials like food and yard waste. A more direct way to avoid methane emissions is to prevent food loss and turn inedible scraps and other organic materials into compost.

Converting wastes like plastic into fuel for vehicles and other equipment has the same climate drawbacks as traditional waste incinerators. Most plastics are manufactured from petrochemicals, sourced from oil and natural gas. This means plastic-derived fuel functions as a fossil fuel, and burning it generates greenhouse gases and other air pollutants.

Studies have shown that recycling plastic saves more energy — by reducing the need to extract fossil fuel and process it into new plastic — rather than burning it.

Producing plastic from recycled resins instead of manufacturing it from scratch also reduces the carbon footprint of plastic production and contributes to a circular economy that keeps materials in use. In contrast, burning plastic perpetuates our 'take-makewaste' linear economy. This moves us away from zero waste solutions that allow people to use less plastic and to reuse and recycle more through sustainable methods.

Now is not the time to lock ourselves into a costly, high-carbon future by incinerating waste.

We can't burn away our waste problem. The focus should be on waste prevention, in which we rethink the use of disposable packaging; reduce food waste; support reuse, repair and resale initiatives; and improve the collection of materials for both recycling and composting. More and more cities across the country are taking this zero-waste approach, and we can, too.

https://arizonadailystar-az-app.newsmemory.com/?publink=06f762552_134842b

Wednesday, April 20, 2022

Weigh in On Rio Vista Nature Reserve Park Master Plan


Open Town Hall for Rio Vista Nature Reserve Park Master Plan is tonight, April 20th from 5pm-6pm

Rio Vista Natural Resource Park, 3974 N. Tucson Blvd. • Tucson AZ

The City wants to hear from you about the Master Plan for Rio Vista Natural Resource Park
Wednesday, April 20th 5pm at the Park Entrance off Tucson Blvd.
for more information and to take the survey:

Tuesday, April 19, 2022

Urge your Legislators to vote NO on these bad bills


These bills have passed through all committees and are scheduled for a floor vote. Please, contact your Legislators to vote NO on these bad bills. 

SB1211, sponsored by Nancy Barto (R-15), would require public schools to post a list of every single item teachers use or discuss with students. The burden this places on already overworked, underpaid Arizona teachers cannot be overstated. After filing a written complaint, if the school board or administration fails to address the issue to a parent's “satisfaction,” the parent (or any other entity) could sue — a recipe for baseless litigation. Private schools and microschools are exempt. Contact your representatives to OPPOSE.

HB2161, sponsored by Steve Kaiser (R-15), would require public schools to give parents access to all their children's records unless the information is subject to abuse reporting law. The bill language is disturbingly broad; any parent would be allowed to sue if an issue was not resolved to their "satisfaction." This is part of a host of partisan attacks from national conservative think tanks on K-12 schools, intended to breed conflict between parents and teachers and fuel baseless lawsuits. OPPOSE

HB2439, sponsored by Beverly Pingerelli (R-21), would get Arizona into the book-banning business by requiring school boards to approve every single book purchase in advance. Cookie-cutter attempts to ban books in schools are being proposed nationwide. As one columnist points out, the push is politically motivated, based on “​​a nightmare vision of schools as filtered through focus groups and political messaging tests… None of this is really about improving education, of course — it’s about political power.” OPPOSE

HB2498, sponsored by Jake Hoffman (R-12), would ban state and local governments from requiring anyone to be vaccinated for COVID-19. Appears aimed at Pima County, which requires the vaccine for employees working with vulnerable populations (and recently reported a 92% vaccination rate). Unvaccinated Arizonans are 31 times more likely to die of COVID-19 than their vaccinated counterparts. Passed on party lines with an amendment to exempt government-run healthcare institutions. OPPOSE

HB2616, sponsored by Joseph Chaplik (R-23), would require public district and charter schools to obtain opt-in consent for each student in order to require mask usage. This bill is not only an untenable burden on public health, but a local issue best left to public health experts and school boards, not the state legislature.  OPPOSE

To find out who your legislators are, first look up out your legislative district:


Find your legistors and their contact information here:

Representatives:  https://www.azleg.gov/MemberRoster/

Monday, April 18, 2022

Weigh in on Tucson Water's One Water 2100 Master Plan


The One Water 2100 Master Plan is ready for action. Tucson Water is developing a long-range plan for managing water resources and infrastructure over the next eight decades. They’ve been analyzing existing conditions and establishing a roadmap for the plan. They need your input to help shape Tucson’s long-range water plan! This Master Plan will be informed by the public and stakeholders who participate online or by attending outreach events throughout the community.

They are gearing up for the community engagement campaign. This is your opportunity to shape our water future. 

Tuesday, April 12, 2022

STOP HUDBAY, COPPERWORLD, ROSEMONT, SAVE THE SANTA RITAS RALLY - FRIDAY, April 15 at 4 PM – 5:30 PM


STOP HUDBAY, COPPERWORLD, ROSEMONT, SAVE THE SANTA RITAS RALLY 

FRIDAY, April 15 at 4 PM – 5:30 PM

140 West Congress St. Tucson, Az.

Rally to protest the destruction of the Santa Rita mountain range, south of Tucson and pollution of our drinking water by Hudbay Minerals, Inc.

More information: 

Rosemont mining company plans to begin site preparation work soon:

https://www.kgun9.com/news/local-news/mining-company-plans-to-begin-site-preparation-work-soon

Clearing begins for big mine in Santa Rita Mtns.


Thursday, April 7, 2022

Urge members of Congress to co-sponsor Save Oak Flat Act

Tomorrow, April 8, 2022,  is an international call to action to protest Rio Tinto's inapproporiate mines and proposals around the world.  Please take action today via email and social media and spread the word widely!

On April 8, 2022, Rio Tinto will be holding its Annual General Meeting. Across the globe, this giant mining company continues to destroy Indigenous heritage, put communities under water stress, harm the environment, and loot resources.

This year, campaigners from Australia, Madagascar, Mongolia, Finland, Serbia, the UK, and the USA have come together to say enough is enough! It’s time for Rio Tinto to stop causing grief and misery to communities and the environment around the world. Add your voice to our call of international solidarity and send a message to Rio Tinto!

Please go to our action page for actions you can take.  

You can act locally by asking your member of Congress to cosponsor the Save Oak Flat Act.

And, you can act internationally by emailing or Tweeting Rio Tinto directly.
  • To send an email to Rio Tinto’s Board of Directors and chief executives, go our Action Page.

Our action pages give you plenty of information about our fight to protect Oak Flat, but for more information about other struggles around the world against Rio Tinto, go here

Please ask your members of Congress to co-sponsor the Save Oak Flat Act to right a wrong, protect the religious freedom of Indigenous people, save an important recreational area, and protect the plants and animals that inhabit this biologically rich part of the Tonto National Forest.

The Save Oak Flat Act corrects Section 3003 of the 2015 National Defense Authorization Act, which currently allows the US government to give Oak Flat, a sacred recreational and ecological haven, which is US public land, to foreign mining companies.

The House version of the Save Oak Flat Act, HR 1884, was introduced by Congressman Grijalva (D-AZ) on March 12, 2021, and  the Seante version, S 915, was introduced by Senator Sanders (I-VT) on March 23, 2021.

Section 3003 of the land exchange was added to the 2015 National Defense Authorization Act at the last minute in the dead of night because the supporters of the exchange were repeatedly unable to pass the bill as a stand-alone measure.  

The Tonto National Forest released a Draft Environmental Impact Statement in 2019. It details some of the harm the mine will cause. The proposed Resolution Copper Mine would:

  • * Create a crater roughly two miles wide and 1,000 feet deep right there at Oak Flat due to subsidence of the land.
  • * Dump nearly 1.4 billion tons of toxic mining waste into an unlined tailings dump -- the preferred alternative tailings site will ultimately cover six square miles with a dam 490 feet high.
  • * Use more water annually than the City of Tempe, AZ, a minimum of 50,000 acre-feet per year.
  • * Permanently destroy about 16,000 acres of public land, state trust land, and private land.

Please ask your members of Congress to co-sponsor the Save Oak Flat Act:

https://org.salsalabs.com/o/676/p/dia/action4/common/public/?action_KEY=23970

REP. ANN LEILA KIRKPATRICK
District: US Representative
PHONE:(202) 225-25422
SEN. MARK EDWARD KELLY
District: US Senator
Phone:(202) 224-2235
Fax:(202) 228-2862

SEN. KYRSTEN LEA SINEMA
District: US Senator
Phone:(202) 224-4521
Fax:(202) 228-0515
For More Information

Arizona Mining Reform Coalition Resoluton Copper DEIS comments

Arizona Mining Reform Coalition website page

Monday, April 4, 2022

Bad bills that won't die at the AZ legislature

Governor Doug Ducey continues to drag Arizona into a gutter relative to democracy and human rights. This week he signed a bill to hinder voting that could result in a purge of thousands of voters, signed two bills to cause harm to trans youth, and signed a bill to implement a 15-week abortion ban, infringing on a basic right to privacy. There is already a legal challenge to the voting bill, HB2492 voter registration; verification; citizenship. Thank you Mi Familia Vota!

Unfortunately, that is not the end of the bad voter bills. Remember they already referred a bad voter ID bill to the ballot and there are still bills to ban voting centers, prohibit automatic voter registration, and more.

Here are some bad bills that could still make it to the floor for a vote. Below are the Sierra Club's petitions on these bills. Please, sign them if you haven't. Also, find the link to the senators' contact numbers.   

In other news, HB2101 electric energy; reliability; public policy (Griffin: Abraham, Blackman, et al.) will be hanging over the session like a dark cloud as they are allowed to reconsider it at any time. HB2101 repeals provisions in the law that create parameters for retail competition of electricity. This bill could negatively affect community choice aggregation of electricity which allows cities to purchase or generate electricity for their residents, as well as rooftop solar in Salt River Project (SRP) territory. SRP brought this to the legislature without any kind of stakeholder process or thorough review of the impacts of the bill. Call your senator and tell them to vote No on HB2101!

You can find senators phone numbers here.

HB2055 Harquahala non-expansion area; groundwater transportation (Griffin: Bowers) is now ready for Senate Committee of the Whole. HB2055 allows private water companies such as EPCOR to import water from the Harquahala Valley and into the active management areas (AMAs) for development. This exacerbates creation of this groundwater depletion sacrifice zone and gives private water interests more control of water. The legislature should be placing additional limits on groundwater pumping not facilitating more.

Use this petition to contact your Senator. Ask them to Vote NO on HB2055!

HB2411 coal combustion residuals program (Griffin) will be voted on in a Third Read in the Senate early next week. It authorizes the Arizona Department of Environmental Quality (ADEQ) to seek assumption of the coal ash program from the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Coal ash is toxic and can result in contamination of our waters if not adequately regulated. We are concerned that ADEQ is too cozy with the utilities and that it would not properly enforce this program, plus ADEQ is already not properly implementing some of the federal programs it already has.

Use this petition to contact your Senator to oppose HB2411!

This week, the US Fish and Wildlife Service came out with the official count for Mexican gray wolves. The good news is the number of wolves is up. The bad news is that those numbers are not up nearly as high as they should be due to, among other things, unlawful killings. The last thing Mexican wolves need is a bill that encourages killing them. HB2181 Now: game and fish; taking wolves (Cook) forbids the Arizona Game and Fish Commission from prohibiting any person from killing a wolf that is actively threatening or attacking a person (unnecessary as anyone can kill an animal if they feel threatened), livestock, or other domestic animal. These latter provisions will invite baiting of wolves and sends a message that it is okay to kill these highly endangered animals.

Use this petition to tell your Senator to vote No on HB2181!

Until the legislature gets to the budget or takes action in a special session, there will not be any Request to Speak actions, but please use this time to sign up for it, if you have not. Civic Engagement Beyond Voting (CEBV) will sign you up. Just go to this link.

To view bills we are tracking go here.

To find your legislators' email addresses and phone numbers, go here.

- Sierra Club Grand Canyon Chapter