EcoTuesday Categories

Veriflora Certified Sustainably Grown Plants and Flowers at the Opportunity Green Conference

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flowersVeriflora®, one of this year's Opportunity Green Conference sponsors, is a leading sustainable agricultural certification and eco-labeling program recognized as the gold-standard in the floriculture and horticulture industries. Most of the flowers around the conference as well as the long stem roses that were given out during Thursday evening's party were Veriflora certified.

Veriflora® certified growers who participated include California Pajarosa, www.pajarosa.com; Resendiz Bros., www.resendizbrothers.com; Green Valley Floral, www.greenvalleyfloral.com; and F & B  Farms and Nursery, www.fandbfarms.com.

 

Veriflora certifies cut flowers, potted plants, improved input devices, and peat moss products through its ‘Responsibly Managed’ peatlands annex.  The multiple attributes of sustainability addressed by the Veriflora certification (for more information click here) include:

1. Environmental Sustainability 

Sustainable Crop Production

Resource Conservation and Energy Efficiency

Ecosystem Protection

Integrated Waste Management       

 

2. Social & Economic Sustainability

Fair Labor Practices

Community Benefits

 

3. Product Integrity

 Product Quality

Product Safety

 

If you want to know where to buy Veriflora certified fresh cut flowers or potted plants, go to the Preferred Retailer Program page on the Veriflora website.

Call for Applications: Acterra’s 2012 Business Environmental Awards

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November's speaker in Silicon Valley was Adriane Erickson from Acterra. If you missed the networking event last week, you still have a chance to apply for Acterra’s Environmental Awards, see below for more details.


Applications for Acterra’s 2012 Business Environmental Awards are now available - click here.  

 

This year’s categories are: Environmental Project, Environmental Innovation, Sustainable Built Environment, and the Acterra Award for Sustainability. 


Any business, municipality or organization located in the following counties is eligible to apply: Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz County. Non-profits may also apply if environmental work is not their central mission. 


The deadline to apply is Friday, December 9, 2011. For more information, please contact awards@acterra.org

People for Bikes at Opportunity Green Conference

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Family bikingFrom speakers to sponsors to attendees, this year’s Opportunity Green Conference had many visionaries that spanned the green economy. One particular booth that I loved was peopleforbikes.org. People for Bikes, a non-profit focused on promoting biking across the nation. Many of our cities in the US need to incorporate bike lanes into their city planning.

 

Why do we ride? A few interesting facts from the People for Bikes’ website: 

47% of Americans would like to see more bike lanes, trails, and bridges in their communities.

  • I personally would love to see the Bay Bridge not only create a bike lane from the East Bay to Treasure Island but also from Treasure Island to San Francisco. How many people travel across by foot or by pedal on the Golden Gate Bridge a day? How wonderful would it be if the Bay Bridge would be accessible by foot or by pedal? 

1 pound of CO2 pollution cut for every mile pedaled. 

50% of trips Americans make are less than 3 miles.

  • How wonderful if you could get your exercise while commuting! 

$8,000 spent on average each year owing and operating a car.

3 hours of riding per week reduces the risk of hear disease & stroke by 50%.

$10 saved each day by commuting 10 miles round trip by bicycle instead of car.

 

This year’s conference theme of Accelerate fits perfectly with this non-profit.  “We chose the theme ‘Accelerate’ for this year’s conference because the successes that have gotten sustainably-minded people and companies to where we are today accelerates and offers the momentum to drive to an even better future.”

The goals of People for Bikes align well with the goals of green acceleration.

People for Bikes:

One for all: Build a national movement to improve bicycling in our country.

Opportunity Green:

We facilitate the movement to transform business for good, through advancing change and market transformation by providing open-minded professional unprecedented approaches to sustainability.

People for Bikes:

Let our voices be heard: Every six years, the federal government allocates billions of dollars to expand and improve our country’s transportation infrastructure.  We must improve our bike infrastructure to have the healthy planet everyone dreams of.

Opportunity Green:

Because we have the unique opportunity to do good for our world and our business simultaneously. Now is the time when our leadership is most needed, and will have the most impact on the future of our organization and communities.           


We must Accelerate the use of biking in order to have the future we all wish for.

 

Power to the Pedal People.

Accelerate At The Opportunity Green Conference This Week

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This week on November 10th and 11th, I will be representing EcoTuesday by attending the Opportunity Green Conference in Los Angeles. This is a wonderful conference that happens yearly with visionaries attending from the green economy. Go to the Opportunity Green website for more information.


This year’s theme of Accelerate fits perfectly with the current momentum of the green economy. We must continue this acceleration in order to have the amount of positive change we need in this world.


Personally, I am especially energized to listen to Conde Nast 2011 Designer of the Year, Yves Behar speak about Redefining Design. Founder and Chief Designer of fuseprojects, Behar has lead many inspiring projects including One Labtop per Child, underwear designed with compostable packaging, “See Better to Learn Better” and many more. Redefining the way we design products incorporating sustainability in every step of the way is the design of today.

Green Education, Green Jobs, and You

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What's the value of a green education in getting a green job? Here's your chance to find out!

 

The San Francisco Bay Area Chapter of the Project Management Institute has been holding a series of 3-hour interactive Green Project Management seminars on topics like sustainability at major corporations, case studies on green projects, and even fusion energy. For more, see the PMI SF Bay Area green blog.

 

Our November seminar, on Saturday the 19th, will cover the importance of green education in getting a green job. It’s crucial for project managers to be familiar with current legislation and how it affects the overall supply chain. As we move toward stricter standards and globalization of products and services, we must be informed about how products are harvested, manufactured, and distributed throughout the globe. Kelle McMahon, CEO of the Green Science Academy, will show us how the landscape of the job market has changed, making project management skills even more valuable -- in fact, vital -- in today’s job market. She will explain how the skills she developed as a project manager helped her build a company that supports the triple bottom line: people, planet, and sustainable profits. Moreover, she will explore how you can transfer your skills to a job in a green industry, as well as showing how green education will differentiate you from other professionals in the marketplace. If you’re thinking of moving into a green job, this workshop will be perfect for you.

 

To register, go to the PMI registration page

 

Seminar Series - Details

The Green Project Management Seminar Series is co-sponsored by Keller Graduate School and the Project Management Institute San Francisco Bay Area Chapter. The seminars are held on the third Saturday of each month from 9:00 am to 12:00 noon PDT, at Keller Graduate School’s Daly City location. For details and registration information, click here.

A Green MBA Success Story: The Penny Ice Creamery

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The Penny Ice Creamery, located in downtown Santa Cruz, is one of the many businesses that have made a huge impact on a local economy and launched by a Green MBA graduate. 

 

The owners and creative visionaries, Kendra L. Baker and Zachary E. Davis, use sustainably grown local ingredients, such as wild fruits, vegetable, herbs, and even flowers to bring ice cream lovers new flavors with each season. A recent Yelp reviewer states, "Some of the best ice cream in Santa Cruz. The flavors here are very strange, so be open! You can still get a lot of the classics, too." There are reports that there are often lines out the door on nice, sunny days. 

 

Davis is an alum of the Green MBA and the business plan for The Penny Ice Creamery was his Capstone project before completing the program in 2009. He and Baker secured a loan through the Small Business Administration, funded by federal stimulus funds. Davis had a very unique idea: to thank Obama for the loan with a "THANK YOU" video (it's fun to watch!) instead of a card (his mom must have been proud!). In it, Baker and Davis shared how the loan made it possible to contribute to the local economy through creating jobs and buying goods from other local businesses (when they opened their shop, they hired 11 employees and worked with 20 local businesses). The video got the attention of those at The Huffington Post and the Santa Cruz Sentinel, and was soon after "retweeted" by The White House. 

 

In what came as a complete surprise, in November 2009, Vice President Joe Biden called Davis to thank him for creating the video and recognizing the Administration for the stimulus package. What was even more thrilling was a call the following January, when the pair was invited to sit in Michelle Obama's chamber during the State of the Union address to the nation.

 

The journey to Washington DC seems like an incredibly fantastic event to take place during the infancy of a local business! The Penny Ice Creamery is a clear example of the types of companies that are born during (and after) a student's time at the Green MBA. While a trip to Washington DC wasn't a part of Davis' Capstone plan, the entire Green MBA curriculum is designed to support business professionals reach their goals.

 

Please join us on Tuesday, October 25 in San Francisco for a great speaker and the opportunity to talk directly with Green MBA grads! Register soon and see you there!

 


 

 

Community & Stakeholder Engagement: Your Key to Success

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Your customers, investors, employees, investors, community, suppliers, and family.

This is just a short list of the many types of stakeholders that support your company. All stakeholders are important for the progress and prosperity of a business.

 

Strategic employee engagement is the most effective way to foster successful economic, environmental and social initiatives in a company. Employees are learning more about best practices around sustainability, which in turn helps to save the company money. Companies can support these new ideas to spur innovation that will have a ripple effect with the other stakeholders. When a company focuses attention on the employee stakeholder group, it thrives. 


On Wednesday, September 21, I will be participating in a roundtable discussion entitled, "Community and Stakeholder Engagement: A Sustainable Approach" and will be joined by representatives from B Corporation, The Green Chamber of Commerce, and the Centre for Sustainability and Excellence. We will discuss communities, renewable energy, stakeholder groups, and more. 


The event takes place at the Hotel Palomar from 6:30-8:30. The cost is $30 and food/drink is provided. The first ten people to sign up for the roundtable will gain free entry to EcoTuesday in SF, so register today!


During the roundtable, I will focus on the following: 


Employee Engagement Through Building A Green Team: Your Key To Sustainability

  • Your employees as important stakeholders
  • Tips you can use to get employees enrolled in your company's sustainability intitiatives
  • How strategic initiatives increases motivation and productivity

Please join us this month in cities across the country to meet new business contacts and friends. Our event this month will take place on Tuesday, September 27. We encourage you to register beforehand so that we know you'll be joining us. In San Francisco ten people will have the opportunity to quickly share their "elevator pitch" about their company in supportive environment! We hope to see you at an EcoTuesday this month.


By the way, our November event will be held a week earlier, on November 15. We will not be hosting a December event.

Salesforce.com-Using the Cloud to Benefit the Environment

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Join us this month for an insider’s look into one of the largest growing companies in the world and learn how it focuses on driving sustainability with special guest, Sue Amar, Sustainability Officer at salesforce.com.


Salesforce.com is a true Cinderella story; it began as startup by four people in a small San Francisco apartment a little over ten years ago and now has over $1.3B in annual revenues. Salesforce.com, with its no software motto, has taken cloud computing to the next level. The simple "software as a service" (Saas) model has launched the company as not only the leader in the cloud space but also in sustainability.


According to its website, salesforce.com promotes its cloud system as “The most efficient model for carbon savings” and they have the numbers to prove it. The company shows a reduction in 95% emissions over on- premise hardware and 65% reduction over “private” clouds. In addition to running a lean green operation through optimization, saleforce.com promotes sustainability through an ethical supply chain: procuring energy-efficient services and equipment, choosing environmentally responsible suppliers, providing green tools for clients, and ensuring all leased and owned IT equipment is responsibly managed at the end of their life.


The enormous task of managing all aspects of sustainability at salesforce.com is handled by Sue Amar, Sustainability Officer, who in 2006 realized the importance of the environment and volunteered to spearhead and promote sustainability within the company. Her hard work has paid off and salesforce.com has been become a leader in sustainability and was recently voted as one of the most ethical companies of 2011 by Etisphere Institute.

This month Sue will discuss “Reducing Carbon Emissions in the Cloud” and focus on the following areas:

  •  Collaboration and best practices
  •  Sustainability Leadership
  •  Reducing IT emissions
  •  Community engagement

 

We look forward to seeing you on July 26th at the Adobe Offices (601 Townsend, San Francisco. Please remember to register beforehand! Register HERE.

How New Leaf Changed the Paper Industry

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(This blog post is a wrap up of the San Francisco event on May 24th featuring Jeff Mendelsohn, CEO and Co-Founder of New Leaf Paper)

 

"The paper industry is one of the most resource intensive industries in the world, and one of the slowest to change."

From NewLeafpaper.com

 

"The paper industry is one of the most polluting and resource intensive industries in the world. It is responsible for over a third of worldwide timber harvest and over 40% of all landfill waste in the U.S. When New Leaf Paper was founded in 1998, the paper industry had demonstrated a high resistance to change. With low margins, a commoditized international market, and huge capital investment in the status quo, paper companies resisted efforts to integrate sustainable principles into their business practices," said Jeff Mendelsohn, founder of New Leaf Paper.

 

It was inspiring to hear Jeff Mendelsohn talk about the process of changing the 'stuck-in-its-ways' paper industry into a more sustainable system.  How did New Leaf accomplish this? How did New Leaf survive in a challenging industry and succeed in making positive change.

 

Prior to New Leaf, Jeff started New York Recycled Paper Company in 1991 and is a pioneer of this industry. Around the same time various other recycled paper companies popped up around the US but all of them disappeared - except for New Leaf. 

 

What did New Leaf do differently to be successful as a mission driven company within a challenging industry and actually drive change with in it? 

 

How do you change an industry? 

Jeff says, "There's a lot of barriers and it's challenging. The paper industry is very resistant to change. Paper mills were designed to make paper a certain way for a quarter of a century, non-stop, to make money. To overcome these challenges, New Leaf created a strategic brand strategy. To change an industry, Jeff mentions you have to first present a positive vision for it. Despite the unsustainable ways of the paper industry, New Leaf never pointed fingers at anyone or pointed out how bad they are.  Instead they approached the industry with a "Think and Smile" approach. 

 

"Think and Smile" came to New Leaf due to the understanding that they would never win on a "commodity tunnel vision scenario." "We need people to think about what they're buying and we need them to smile, due to good design, and good products. A lot of environmental messaging before was 'think and frown', which doesn't get you very far."

 

Four principles New Leaf used to change the industry

  • Positive vision
  • Partnership up and down the supply chain
  • Transparency
  • Quantifying benefits 

Jeff says that a company has to start with a Vision and ask questions, such as "What would a sustainable paper industry look like?" 

 

It all boils down to a sustainable design. Designing an industry, designing a process.

 

What is sustainable design?

Wiki: Sustainable design (also called environmental design, environmentally sustainable design, environmentally conscious design, etc.) is the philosophy of designing physical objects, the built environment, and services to comply with the principles of economicsocial, and ecological sustainability.

 

New Leaf created a vision for a perfect sustainable mill and identified existing mills that met this vision. At this time, there where only about 3 or 4 in North America; New Leaf wanted to increase this number. 

 

New Leaf's goal became to make the mills even greener. "In changing the paper industry, no one is just going to invest in a green mill without researching the markets. Our role was to "seed" markets and create new products in all these different product categories where nothing existed beyond 20 or 30% recycled paper." To do this, New Leaf bumped up the recycled content to 100% and gave it a clean bleaching process. The goal: "Attract demand, attract competitors and then eventually shift mill design."

 

Jeff discussed, "attracting competitors," which sounded counter-intuitive to me at first. However, it makes sense when your goal is not just for your own personal gain, but for the betterment of humanity and the planet at large. It would be quite difficult for one company to change an entire industry alone. In this instance, attracting "competitors" is also attracts a more sustainable future. New Leaf was then able to sell their vision to their customers and leverage the demand of these huge companies to drive change up through the supply line. 

 

Bank of America approached New Leaf

B of A wanted to change their letter head to 100% recycled post-consumer paper. New Leaf created their first 100% post consumer letterhead for Bank of America, inspiring most mills in this arena to create competing grades of paper, creating a permanent shift in the market for high-end corporate collateral. 

 

Book publishing - Harry Potter

In 2001, New Leaf created book paper. In 2003, the company provided the paper for the viral book, "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix," catching the attention of the entire book publishing industry. New Leaf decided not to pursue using book paper in its product line, but is proud of the impact it had on getting larger publishing companies to start using 100% post-consumer paper.

 

The event last month went well, and we were very lucky to hear about such an inspiring, dynamic company that truly cares about creating change in their industry.

- - -

Prior to meeting Jeff I already owned a New Leaf notebook which I keep on me as an alternative to taking notes on my tiny-keyboard smart phone. When I open the 'made from old milk carton' notebook, on the first page of the notebook are cool facts on the amount of post-consumer waste New Leaf has saved (greenhouse gases, fully grown trees, gallons of water, etc.) A live updated version of these stats are found at the top of their website.

 

Women in Sustainability

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Over the past few years, women have made great strides in all areas of sustainability. For example, women hold key positions in large solar companies, are driving sustainability initiatives in Fortune 500 companies, and have started businesses that have greatly impacted the food industry.

There's still so much more to accomplish!

As of 2010, there are only 15 women running Fortune 500 companies; this is an extremely small number which has seen movement only in the past few years. Despite this low number, women hold 39% of the leadership positions in the sustainability field. With the proliferation of environmental and sustainability positions in all sizes and types of companies, the number of women in game-changing, influential roles can only continue to increase. Many sustainability roles have been created in the past few years, and the type of work done within these roles and the impact they have will continue to evolve.

As companies begin to see the importance of supporting and cultivating women's leadership, and more women continue to strive in these key positions, the current business paradigm will positively shift. Women a great opportunity to truly make a mark in this field!

Learn From Award Winning Creative Agency: Free Range Studios

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San Francisco EcoTuesday will feature Erica Priggen, Executive Producer at Free Range Studios this coming Tuesday. Please join us to learn from a Bay Area award winning creative agency working towards building a more just and sustainable world.

As the head of Free Range's video and entertainment department, Erica Priggen oversees the creative and strategic development of all of the company's video campaigns. With a Master's in Consciousness Studies, she brings a deep study of sustainability and systems thinking to her work, with a concentration on the importance of storytelling and mythology as tools for cultural transformation. Erica is the producer of Free Range's award-winning The Story of Stuff, as well as other hits such as 350.org, The Good Life, the Alliance for Climate Education's national high school assembly program, and the Autodesk Sustainability Workshop video series.

The mission of Free Range Studios is to enable their clients to communicate key messages and empower individuals to transform society through the innovative use of digital media, storytelling, graphic design and strategy. They amplify the impact of their work by inspiring others through values-driven business practices.

In addition to having Erica lined up as our fabulous speaker this month, we've got a great venue for networking. We are being generously hosted by Adobe at their San Francisco office located at 601 Townsend. This building is the oldest LEED-certified platinum green building in the world and we'll get a chance to hear a few words from the Adobe Green Team. Plus, both Honest Tea and San Francisco's Haamonii Shochu will be there to pour teas and tea-shochu cocktails.

We get started at 6:30, come join us for some great networking, introduce yourself to a room of professionals, and to learn something new!

RSVP here, $5 online or $10 at the door.

Learn all You Ever Wanted about Green Tea in Less than a Week

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Silicon Valley EcoTuesday will feature Paul Kotta, Owner of Mellow Monk Japanese Green Tea, as our speaker in Palo Alto in less than a week!  Want to learn everything you have ever wanted to learn about green tea, then this event should be perfect for you. Paul Kotta will discuss from field to cup, how green tea is made on artisans’ estates in Japan as well as issues associated with small green tea farms.

 

As many of you know, green tea is thought to have many benefits. The antioxidants destroy chemicals known as free radicals, which speed up cell death and are believed to be involved in the body aging process. Ever wonder why Japanese elders look so young? Maybe it is due to their cultural green tea drinking.

 

Mellow Monk’s green tea is thought to contain higher percentage of catechins, antioxidants, due to their tea being produced at independent small tea artisans’ estates. Due to their small size, they harvest only what they can craft into fresh tea that day. If harvested but not immediately produced into tea, oxidation and fermentation occurs that can destroy antioxidants.

 

Mellow Monk’s tea is made by steaming instead of pan frying. In comparison to frying, this is thought to help preserve more of the disease-fighting antioxidants and keep the tea’s natural earthy flavor.

 

The green tea family farms are certified under Japan’s Eco-Farmer Program, a voluntary local government program that is monitored by Japan’s Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries to promote environmentally responsible farming practices. Mellow Monk is also certified under Co-Op America as a green business as well as a certified green business under the San Francisco Bay Area Green Business Program.

 

Paul Kotta along with his wife, Akimi Kotta founded Mellow Monk’s Green Teas in 2004.  For more information on Mellow Monk’s Tea go to http://mellowmonk.com

Scott Cooney Reflects on Sustainability at Re-Opening Event in Palo Alto

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November, the month of elections, is a great opportunity to discuss the political state. Around this time, most individuals have a strong opinion and you can engage many people in what is happening in the national, state and local level. Scott Cooney, our speaker this month, reflected on sustainability and renewable energy policies during the last two years. Recently, there has been a lot in the news about the green economy, policy, and even in offices, green is a topic of choice. However, some people are still really frustrated on the perceived lack of progress that has happened. Two years ago, people in the green economy were really excited by the prospects of Barack Obama and by the Democratic congress that they would be able to push through some comprehensive climate change regulations and progressive policies to move us towards a clean economy, free of coal and foreign oil. 

Come enjoy Frey Vineyards, America's First Organic Wine, at our opening event in Palo Alto!

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Silicon Valley EcoTuesday is very excited to have moved our monthly event from Sunnyvale to Palo Alto. I personally am very excited to have taken over the Ambassador role and hope to organically grow the Palo Alto event. I know this area is full of eco-minded individuals so I hope to merge Silicon Valley's various green industries for a monthly night of networking. 

 

Not only do we have a great speaker for our first event, Scott Cooney, Principal of GreenBusinessOwner.com and author of Build a Green Small Business: Profitable Ways to Become an Ecopreneur but we are very excited to have Frey Vineyards, America's First Organic Winery, sponsor our opening event in Palo Alto on November 16th! 

 

Cooney will discuss what happens to the Progressive movement given some inevitable political stalemate in DC, top opportunities in green business and entrepreneurship, and powerful ways to affect change every day and not just on election day!

 

Frey Vineyard's is the first maker of certified Biodynamic Wines in the US. EcoTuesday is very excited to be part of Frey Vineyards 30th anniversary year. They are nestled on the slopes of the Redwood Valley in Mendocino County, California. Not only do they produce organic and biodynamic wine but with their 17 kilowatt solar system half of the vineyards energy comes from the sun. I was fortunate to try their wines at the Green Festival in San Francisco last weekend and must say it is worth coming to the event just to try their delicious wine. Frey's wines are all made with no added sulfites. For all those people out there that get headaches, sniffles, and other allergic reactions to the synthetic preservatives in most wines can now enjoy wine again! 

 

Organic grape growing resists the use of synthetic pesticides and fertilizers through implementing mechanical cultivation instead of toxic herbicides. Frey Vineyards uses natural sulfur and biological controls instead of chemical fungicides to fight powdery mildew and botrytis brunch rot. Elimination of insecticides through creating a bio-diverse farm landscape that encourages natural predators. Throughout their winery their fertility needs are generated through cover cropping and making compost.

 

In the fall cover crops are planted and tilled under in the spring using green manuring, a fertilization technique. A variety of grasses, legumes and mustards are used as cover crops that protect the soil from erosion, fix nitrogen into the soils and offer a habitat for many beneficial insects. The benefits of cover cropping can be seen in the health of the soil and the quality of the vines. Not only do cover crops keep the soil healthy but they are also a form of companion planting. When mustards are grown alongside grapevines they help discourage soil born nematodes that would otherwise feed on grapevine roots.

 

The use of compost in the vineyard is another important organic practice. To achieve sustainable soil management, Frey Vineyard's recycles all of their grape pumice after it is composted with other organic ingredients including manure, old hay, and garden waste back into the vineyard. Compost helps to maintain a healthy level of organic matter in the soil.

 

Long established USDA organic wine standards are under attack. A proposed amendment would allow the addition of sulfites to organic wine for the first time! Organic wine is defined in the US as "made with organic grapes and no added sulfites". The World Health Organization recognizes the preservative sulfite as a known allergen, which is why the "Contains Sulfites" warning now appears on all non-organic US and European wine labels. 

 

Take Action to Keep Sulfites out of Organic Wine!

 

I hope to see many of you on Tuesday, Nov. 16!  Click here to register!

 

Organic Wine Information from www.freywine.com

John Shegerian Chairman & CEO of Electronic Recyclers International joins us this month

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We are excited to have John Shegerian, the Chairman and CEO of Electronic Recyclers International® (ERI), as our speaker in San Francisco this month. Sheregian will discuss his thoughts on:

•    This green movement is NOT a fad
•    We're only in the first inning when it comes to Sustainability
•    Technology is the enabler that will help lead us
•    Where are we with e-Waste

John Shegerian is the Chairman and CEO of Electronic Recyclers International® (ERI). Established in 2002, ERI is an electronic waste collector and recycler specializing in the environmentally safe and socially responsible dismantling of electronic items such as computers, televisions, monitors and other electronic items.  Under Shegerian’s leadership, ERI has fast become the leading recycler of electronics in North America. John is also founder of the groundbreaking recycling sites 1-800-Recycling.com and urbanmining.org.

Established in 2002, ERI is an electronic waste collector and recycler specializing in the environmentally safe and socially responsible dismantling of electronic items such as computers, televisions, monitors and other electronic items.  Under Shegerian’s leadership, ERI has fast become the leading recycler of electronics in North America. John is also founder of the groundbreaking recycling sites 1-800-Recycling.com and urbanmining.org.
 
Prior to his founding of ERI, Shegerian was also co-founder and CMO of finanicialaid.com, one of the most successful student loan companies in the country. While at financialaid.com, John created rateyourcampus.com (a college student polling and feedback community) which then led to the creation of campusdirt.com (which evolved into the most relevant and trafficked college search engine). Last but not least, campusclix.com was created and became one of the first college social networking properties on the web. In October 2004, Shegerian and his partners sold financialaid.com and all the aforementioned affiliated properties to Education Lending Group, which was purchased for $400M in February 2005 by CIT (NYSE: CIT). Shegerian went on to found Addicted.com, a comprehensive, interactive website dedicated to helping those struggling with the disease of addiction.
For his work with ERI, Shegerian was named the Clean Tech Entrepreneur of the Year for Northern California by Ernst & Young in 2008 and placed into the prestigious Ernst & Young Entrepreneur Hall of Fame.
Beyond his successes in the realm of hi-tech ventures, Shegerian is driven by his commitment to innovate and develop companies that benefit and inspire others and are socially responsible. Shegerian has a 25 year track record of quickly converting start-ups into large, highly successful business enterprises.

Shegerian serves alongside Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger as a member of the California Commission for Jobs and Economic Growth and was recently appointed to serve on the Governor's Gang Advisory Committee, focused on providing the State's top legislators with guidance pertaining to policies geared toward the reduction of gang and youth violence. In 1993, he co-founded Homeboy Tortillas and Homeboy Industries, which continues to serve as a paradigm for urban renewal in America and was awarded the New York Stock Exchange "Building for the Future" Award for creating new jobs and opportunities for gang-impacted youth in post-riot Los Angeles. John is also the recipient of the prestigious "Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Award," presented by the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Unity Committee to businessmen working to provide compassionate solutions for society's problems.  Believing in “recycling lives” by providing second chances to the formerly incarcerated (Shegerian has hired more than fifty formerly incarcerated individuals at ERI), Shegerian speaks passionately on the subject at forums across the country and presently serves as a member of the Increasing Employment Opportunities Advisory Board to the Berkeley Center for Criminal Justice.

Passionately espousing his trademarked mantra that "Green is Good," Shegerian has served as an executive board member of the Alliance Toward Harnessing Global Opportunities, as a board member of the Coalition for Clean Air, as a corporate board member of the Environmental Media Association, as a corporate representative to the California Resource Recovery Association and as a board member on the VerdeXchange for Innovations and Developments in the Green Economy.  He is the Central Valley’s founding member of E2 (Environmental Entrepreneurs), the Independent Business Voice for the Environment and serves on the Media Relations steering committee for the State of California's Integrated Waste Management Board.