300 Groups Ask Senate for More Powerful Climate
Bill
WASHINGTON, DC, August 26, 2009 (ENS) - A coalition of more than 300 groups, representing the faith, human-rights, social justice, and environmental communities, sent a letter to U.S. senators today demanding energy and climate legislation that is much stronger than the measure approved by the House of Representatives in June.
The coalition says that bill, the American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009, HR 2454, known as the Waxman-Markey bill, contains "massive giveaways to polluting special interests and would fail to ensure a rapid transition to clean energy." The bill establishes a market-based cap-and-trade system for the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide.
"We haven't yet seen the bold leadership from Congress that's required to solve the climate crisis," said Church World Service Director of Education and Advocacy Rajyashri Waghray. "We're sending this letter to demonstrate broad grassroots support for such leadership."
"We have to have a stronger climate bill than the watered-down version that passed the House," said San Bernardino Valley Audubon Society Conservation Chair Drew Feldmann.
The groups plan to hand deliver the letter to senators' state offices next week as part of a larger, grassroots mobilization demonstrating support for what the coalition calls "bold leadership in the fight to solve the climate crisis."
In the letter, the groups express "profound concern" about the the Waxman-Markey bill and ask senators to usher in "the transformational change and greenhouse emissions reductions required to avert catastrophic climate impacts."
The front burner issue in Congress at the moment is health care reform, and as soon as that is resolved, the climate change legislation is the next big issue before the Senate.
There
is an urgent deadline. The Obama administration wants to have a climate law in
place before December 7 when the United Nations climate change conference opens
in
Members
of the coalition feel that urgency too. "We're organizing on the ground,
in communities around/throughout the country, to mobilize the everyday people
who will feel climate impacts, and to defeat the entrenched, polluting special
interests in
"The
everyday people of
The coalition's letter calls for legislation that:
"There's an impressive breadth of groups on this letter, and it demonstrates that the status quo isn't acceptable. Congress must pass a bill that actually gives us a fighting chance of avoiding runaway global warming. There's no other option," said Tyson Slocum, who directs Public Citizen’s energy program.
Other organizations signing the letter include the Center for Biological Diversity, Center on Race Poverty and the Environment, Central California Environmental Justice Network, Corporate Ethics International, CREDO, Communities for a Better Environment, Franciscan Sisters of Mary, Friends Committee on National Legislation, Friends of the Earth, Global Exchange, Greenpeace, International Rivers, Network for Environmental and Economic Responsibility United Church of Christ, Rainforest Action Network, the Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations, and hundreds of others.
True tales of the Huckleberry Finn type adventures of a boy who journeys from
delinquency in California to Southern culture in the Missouri Ozarks. Although told
through the eyes of a twelve year old who never grows old, much of the real life
adventure is emotionally timeless with appeal to all ages. Brutally honest at
times but never off colored.
A sample from Roubidoux may be read here.
The book may be ordered here.
