Support BMG PAC!
About BMG PAC
Make a secure credit card contribution using Google Checkout:
$
Or send a check to BMG PAC, PO Box 877, Medford, MA 02155.
View BMG PAC's latest disclosure report


Menu

Make a New Account

Username:

Password:



Forget your username or password?



FREE COPY OF BOB'S BOOK Barack Obama for Beginners to every 50th Facebook Friend!
BMG on Facebook

About
About us
Rules of the road - please read!
Formatting and multimedia tips
Email us
RSS feed

BMG TRAFFIC REPORT
Blue Mass. Swag
Creative Commons License

Event Calendar
February 2010
(view month)
S M T W R F S
* 01 02 03 04 05 06
07 08 09 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 * * * * * *
<< (add event) >>

Active Users
Currently 32 user(s) logged on.

Search




Advanced Search


Blog Roll
Massachusetts Left
.08 Acres
Below Boston
Berkshires Blog
Blue News Tribune
Chimes at Midnight
Eisenthal Report
Granby 01033
Health Care for All
Left in Lowell
MA lefty blogs
Marry in Mass.
Mass Engagement
Massachusetts Liberal
Michael Forbes-Wilcox
My Dedham
Progressive Mass.
Quriltai on the Shore
Ryan's Take
Someday I Will
ShrewsBuried
Talking Stoneham
The Fray
Universal hub

Differently-Winged
John Daley
Mass. Pro-Life
No Looking Backwards
Peter Porcupine
Pundit Review
Red Mass Group
Scaling the Hill 2010

Mass. Media
David S. Bernstein
Cambridge politics
CommonWealth Unbound
Globe bloggers
Herald bloggers
Hub Blog
Jon Keller
MassBeacon
Media Nation (Dan Kennedy)
Open Media Boston
Adam Reilly
Toll Talk (Mary Connaughton)
Weekly Dig Blog

Legal
ACS Blog
Balkinization
Election law
How Appealing
SCOTUSblog
Volokh Conspiracy

General
Accountable Strategies
Billionaires for Bush
Blue Works Better
Crooks and Liars
Daily Howler
Daily Kos
Democracy Arsenal
Eschaton (Atrios)
Glenn Greenwald
Grist (environment blog)
Hullabaloo (Digby)
LiberalOasis
MyDD
Oliver Willis
Pandagon
Political Animal
Political Critic
Political Wire
Poor Man
Progressive Blog Digest
Real Climate
Senate Guru
Swing State Project
Tapped
Talking Points Memo
Think Progress
Truth and Progress
Turn Maine Blue
Wonkette

www.BlueMassGroup.com

Putting the pressure on Markey to support Cape Wind (updated)

by: Charley on the MTA

Fri Feb 29, 2008 at 21:49:26 PM EST


(Bumped -- updated. - promoted by Charley on the MTA)

I went to the action today in Medford Square -- I counted about 75-85 folks there @ about 10:15, although I'm told there were even more a little earlier. IBEW Local 103 represented:

 

Jobs are at stake here -- good ones. 

More pictures on the flip. 

--- 

So, my US Rep. Ed Markey has been dancing around on Cape Wind for a good long time now. But as chairman of the extra-super-special Select Committe on Energy Independence and Global Warming, isn't it time for him to come out in favor of the project? 

Massachusetts Climate Action Network, Clean Power Now, and other groups are holding a rally to ask for Ed Markey's active support for Cape Wind. It's at Markey's Medford Square office on the corner of Forest Street and High Street (across from the Dunkin' Donuts -- but isn't everything?), next Thursday morning, March 6, 10am. You can RSVP with Clean Power Now here.

And while you're at it, you can comment on the project to the Minerals Management Service (the federal agency charged with oversight over the project) until March 20 -- but why wait? 

Charley on the MTA :: Putting the pressure on Markey to support Cape Wind (updated)

Markey's office invites his constituents in ... with coffee and doughnuts for all. "We'd rather have his support!" said a number of folks ... but they still ate the doughnuts.

Markey staffer Mark Gallagher addresses the group, promising a statement later today and talking up Markey's support for wind power elsewhere ...

So, we're waiting for the statement ... and for Markey's outright support of the project. Markey's language has been pretty blank and bureaucratic heretofore; he needs to be a politician -- one who listens to his constituents and acts in the public interest. Massachusetts needs to lead on this issue, not say "another time, another place." 

Tags: , , (All Tags)
Print Friendly View Send As Email
Letter from Union of Concerned Scientists on Cape Wind Hearings 10-13 March (6.00 / 1)
Click here for their website:

America's offshore winds are a vast and untapped source of endless clean energy. If properly developed, they can generate substantial new energy with significantly less environmental impact than the fossil fuels and nuclear energy we currently use. Cape Wind, the first offshore wind farm proposed in the United States, would generate enough clean, renewable energy to supply three-quarters of Cape Cod and neighboring islands' energy needs. The wind farm would include 130 turbines located near the center of Nantucket Sound approximately five miles offshore. For more information on the project, see the links below.

Last month the federal government issued a detailed draft environmental impact statement on Cape Wind. Based on our review of the report, the environmental effects of the project are acceptable and far preferable to those of the conventional energy sources displaced by the project's clean, renewable wind energy.

Public hearings in Massachusetts, March 10 through 13, offer an important opportunity to show strong public support for this precedent-setting project. We invite you to attend and weigh in on the urgent need to develop sensible offshore wind projects like Cape Wind (see the full hearing schedule below). We will also be making it possible for you to submit written comments on the project, so look for that email in the weeks ahead.

Our review of key areas of the environmental impact statement suggests that there is:

No "showstopper" - This thorough and articulate assessment is the most important to date. It continues to show, as have the long string of reviews that have preceded it, that the vast majority of effects will be minor, negligible, or even positive, and finds no significant lasting negative impact.
No alternative - The report's important and comprehensive review of alternatives to Cape Wind-other possible wind farm sites in the area, other technology options, different configurations or approaches, or the no-project option leading to heavier reliance on coal, gas, or oil-show that the project design, the technology, and the location are right for Massachusetts, right for New England, and right for our time.
No time like the present - Since the Cape Wind Project began the permitting process in 2001, the importance of addressing global warming, and the importance of significantly increasing the use of renewable energy toward that end, have become even more apparent. The review process must be allowed to move quickly to conclusion.
Scheduled hearings: Registration for each public hearing will begin one hour before the hearing starts. Attendees wishing to speak will be required to sign up at the hearing.

March 10: West Yarmouth, 6:00 p.m. - 12:00 a.m.
Mattacheese Middle School Auditorium, 400 Higgins-Crowell Road
March 11: Nantucket, 5:00 p.m. - 10:00 p.m.
Nantucket High School Auditorium, 10 Surfside Road
March 12: Martha's Vineyard, 5:00 p.m. - 10:00 p.m.
Martha's Vineyard Regional HS Auditorium, 100 Edgartown-Vineyard Haven Road, Oak Bluffs
March 13: Boston, 6:00 p.m. - 12:00 a.m.
UMASS Boston, Campus Center Ballroom, 100 Morrissey Boulevard, South Boston
The Union of Concerned Scientists will also be presenting testimony. We hope to see you there.

Sincerely,

Ben Larson
National Field Organizer
Clean Energy Program



BMG: Reality-based commentary.

So that's what that was. (0.00 / 0)
As I drove through Medford Square I saw about 40 people holding signs. They signs were hard to make out.

Currently reading A Reliable Wife by Robert Goolrick


I was there ... (0.00 / 0)
I counted at least 75-80 @ 10:15 this morning; I'm told that earlier there were 140 or so. FWIW.

---

Blue Mass. Group
So what politics do you deserve?


[ Parent ]
Forest (0.00 / 0)
I came down forest street and took a right so I didn't see all those people to the left of Citizens (in the picture), so yea including them it must have been more than 40.

PS - I do support Cape Wind.

 

Currently reading A Reliable Wife by Robert Goolrick


[ Parent ]
Follow the money trail (4.00 / 1)
While, I'm sure a few people their are concerned about the environment, I bet the majority of them were paid union people bused in for the event.  

No. (6.00 / 1)
It seemed very strongly to me that most were volunteers. There were some union guys, for sure, but it was not just a union event. Greenpeace folks were there; I saw several local Medford folks; it was really a mix.

Not what you wanted to believe, I'm sure. In any event, yes, there are money and jobs at stake, and I don't think anyone should apologize for that.

---

Blue Mass. Group
So what politics do you deserve?


[ Parent ]
Economical clean energy and job creation? (0.00 / 0)

The horror.  God forbid the enviros and labor have something they can agree on.

[ Parent ]
That's a joke, right? (0.00 / 0)
I got the "horror" sarcasm, but there is a long tradition of labor-green alliance going back to Environmentalists for Full Employment in the 70s.

The economics of renewable energy and conservation versus capital-intensive mega generation have long been compelling.


[ Parent ]
State Rep Frank Smizik (Brookline) had a Cape Wind event last night... (0.00 / 0)
It was a book reading at the Coolidge Corner Theater; Wendy Williams, author of Cape Wind read a bit, and Cape Wind developer Jim Gordon was there to answer questions too.

Pretty good turnout, I wasn't a fan of what I considered Mrs. Williams' disrespectfulness toward Senator Kennedy (even if I do agree with her sentiments), and Jim Gordon clearly knows his stuff.

This project -- and many others -- have got to get built.  Electricity generation is responsible for about 1/3 of tUSA's GHG emissions, and for all sorts of nasty air, water, and ground pollution.  Of course nationally, most of that pollution is from coal; in New England, coal and oil share the dubious honor.  The more we generate from wind in New England, the less coal and oil we'll burn for energy.  As an added bonus, wind energy will actually serve to lower our electricity bills [the highest in the continental US] because the marginal cost of a kWh of wind generated electricity is almost $0.00; the marginal cost of a coal-fired kWh is certainly more than that [though apparently somewhat of an industry secret; little is available with just a click or two of the mouse].

So, why can't we get our politicians to sign on?


Video of the Cape Wind (0.00 / 0)
     
 

Barbara Hill
Executive director of Clean Power Now

Fred Schlicher,
Program manager of the Mass Climate Action Network

Marty Aiken
I.B.E.W. Local 103

Andrea LeClair
Steering Committee Member Planning Team Massachusetts Power Shift

Craig S. Altemose
Executive Committee Sierra Student Coalition
 
Dropping post cards at
Congressman Edward Markey office
 
 
   





I support WWF


Political insider ad network Law blog ad network
Advertise Liberally









Powered by: SoapBlox