• The Year of Living Car-lessly

    This is week ten of the car-less in Seattle experiment (go here) and I want to talk about one of the greatest fears car-lessness unleashes for parents. But first, some big news: My wife Amy and I decided—with the support of all three of our children—to remain without a car for at least a full year. That’s right: family of five; busy schedule of work, school, and extracurricular activities; and...
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  • Monday's Tidepool: Hot Hot Heat

    Good day from your Tidepool news editor. In today’s edition: The papers mark the occasion of Earth Day with a number of stories exploring the angles of climate change and energy consumption. For today’s top Tidepool story, New York Times science reporter Andrew Revkin unpacks the media’s sudden acknowledgement of climate change in one handy article. (Meanwhile, the Wall Street Journal’s editors snipe at environmentalists’ ongoing alarm-bells.) Closer to home,...
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  • Friday's Tidepool: The Garbage Patch

    Today’s notes from your Tidepool editor: Two strong stories today on air and ocean pollution affecting our region in the Seattle Times. Also a journal piece in the New York Times on the Satsop nuclear plant. In BC, the Gitga’at First Nation of Hartley Bay gets a fly-in visit and an “award” from Premier Gordon Campbell for rescuing passengers from the Queen of the North—but all they really want is...
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  • The Tide Table: Tidepool's Editor's Notes

    (I’m Kristin, Tidepool’s editor. I’ll be offering up some “cliff notes” to important Northwest news stories every morning, along with the daily edition of Cascadia’s sustainability news source.) In Tidepool today, the Salem Statesmen Journal reports on new efforts to clean up the Willamette—it’s ranked no. 3 in American Rivers’ annual endangered rivers report. (The Boise River is at no. 6, which I picked up from the Idaho Statesman in...
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  • RIP: Cascadia Scorecard Weblog

    If you’ve found your way to the Daily Score, then you probably already know our news. The Cascadia Scorecard Weblog is now the Daily Score; Northwest Environment Watch has changed its name; and we’ve launched this nifty new website that we intend to be a phenomenal resource to exactly the kind of outspoken, active Cascadians that have been frequenting this blog (ie, you). We’re a little tired. The Daily Score...
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  • Toxic Liability

    With the introduction of flat screens and HDTV, Americans are expected to toss over half a billion analog TV sets and computer monitors—containing thousands of tons of lead and other persistent toxins—in just the next three years. This fact, combined with the momentum of e-waste legislation at the state level, means a new (big fat) liability has reared its ugly head on electronics companies’ balance sheets. A couple of weeks...
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  • Power Roundup

    There have been a couple of interesting energy stories in the news for the last few days. First, from BC comes this story, about what happened when the provincial electric utility asked for proposals to ramp up generating capacity in the province: Green power projects, including small hydro and wind facilities, comprise the overwhelming majority of private-sector bids submitted to BC Hydro in an ambitious call for new sources of...
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  • Say It Ain't So, Joe

    I picked up a copy of the March edition of Seattle Magazine the other day, and happened across an article (print only, I’m afraid) by the estimable Joe Follansbee. The article claims that Seattle suffers from an inferiority complex: whenever Seattle residents compare their home town with Portland, Oregon and Vancouver, BC, they always decide that Seattle comes up short. Follansbee argues that Seattle should just learn to love itself...
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  • Parking Paradigm Shift?

      Editor’s note: This post was contributed by Todd Litman, author of “Parking Management Best Practices,” and founder and executive director of the Victoria Transport Policy Institute. For more information see his free summary report (pdf), Parking Management: Strategies, Evaluation and Planning. A great example of the maxim “no free lunch” is the common struggle over parking. Motorists often assume that parking should be abundant and free at nearly every...
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  • One Mile from Home

    2007 update: Inspired in part by this post, a Sightline friend/tech whiz created Walk Score, an online tool to explore and score your neighborhood’s walkability. Check your score and comment on it ! Last week, I displayed the wreckage of our 1986 stationwagon; this week, its replacement: our 1996 Burley stroller/bike trailer. (It’s Cascadia-made in Eugene, Oregon.) The kids have long-since outgrown the thing. But since we decided to experiment...
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