Talks: Ecology / 2006-2007: Difference between revisions

No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 6: Line 6:


<font size=4>November 28, 2007 </font size>
<font size=4>November 28, 2007 </font size>
<font size=3> Food Security &amp; Urban Agriculture </font size>
 
<font size=4> Food Security &amp; Urban Agriculture </font size>
 
Our food system is being refashioned by new urban farmers, farmers markets, and community-supported agriculture, and importantly, by savvy shoppers who demand local, organic, and safe food. Still, food security is tenuous for too many of our neighbors. Hear from Amy Franceschini about Victory Gardens, past and present; Willow Rosenthal with the story of City Slicker Farms; and Jason Mark, editor of ''Earth Island Journal'', about the work of Alemany Farm.  
Our food system is being refashioned by new urban farmers, farmers markets, and community-supported agriculture, and importantly, by savvy shoppers who demand local, organic, and safe food. Still, food security is tenuous for too many of our neighbors. Hear from Amy Franceschini about Victory Gardens, past and present; Willow Rosenthal with the story of City Slicker Farms; and Jason Mark, editor of ''Earth Island Journal'', about the work of Alemany Farm.  


Line 15: Line 17:


<font size=4>October 24, 2007 </font size>
<font size=4>October 24, 2007 </font size>
<font size=3> New Politics for Green Cities </font size>
 
<font size=4> New Politics for Green Cities </font size>


This panel represents a wide swath of perspectives on the urban environment, from open space, biodiversity, global warming, fresh water, street design and transit choices, urban farming...  Local historian Dick Walker, author of <em>The City and the Country</em>; Kearstin Krehbiel of the San Francisco Parks Trust; Peter Brastow, executive director of Nature in the City; and Kearstin Dischinger of the Bike Kitchen come together to discuss the historic roots of our current ecological politics, and how they have shaped today's environment and the questions we face now.  
This panel represents a wide swath of perspectives on the urban environment, from open space, biodiversity, global warming, fresh water, street design and transit choices, urban farming...  Local historian Dick Walker, author of <em>The City and the Country</em>; Kearstin Krehbiel of the San Francisco Parks Trust; Peter Brastow, executive director of Nature in the City; and Kearstin Dischinger of the Bike Kitchen come together to discuss the historic roots of our current ecological politics, and how they have shaped today's environment and the questions we face now.  
Line 24: Line 27:


<font size=4>September 26, 2007 </font size>
<font size=4>September 26, 2007 </font size>
<font size=3> San Francisco Water Sources </font size>
 
<font size=4> San Francisco Water Sources </font size>


Most of San Francisco's water is supplied by the Tuolumne River, which flows through a series of reservoirs, aqueducts, and tunnels to our taps. These facilities are being rebuilt now, along with yet another massively expensive sewer system overhaul. Local water historian Joel Pomerantz and ecology activist Ruth Gravanis join with Spreck Rosenkrans of the Environmental Defense Fund in a look at our wet infrastructure and the possibilities of a radically different relationship to our local water supplies, including our aquifer, creeks, and rainfall.
Most of San Francisco's water is supplied by the Tuolumne River, which flows through a series of reservoirs, aqueducts, and tunnels to our taps. These facilities are being rebuilt now, along with yet another massively expensive sewer system overhaul. Local water historian Joel Pomerantz and ecology activist Ruth Gravanis join with Spreck Rosenkrans of the Environmental Defense Fund in a look at our wet infrastructure and the possibilities of a radically different relationship to our local water supplies, including our aquifer, creeks, and rainfall.
Line 32: Line 36:
<hr>
<hr>


    </div>
<font size=4>May 30, 2007 </font size>
    <div class="talk-archive">
 
    <h5> May 30, 2007 </h5>
<font size=4>San Francisco Ecology: Butterflies in the City </font size>
    <h3> San Francisco Ecology: Butterflies in the City </h3>
 
    <p> The Franciscan bioregion is home to several locally endemic butterfly species, such as the mission blue, which only lives on coastal bedrock ridgetops. Despite the revolutionary ecological changes on the San Francisco peninsula over the last 240 years, the City abounds with spectacular native biodiversity, and though like many insects, butterfly species have co-evolved with specific plants in an ecological coevolutionary dance over millions of years, a subset of our native butterflies have adapted to some non-native plants, including weeds.  Barbara Deutsch, Deirdre Elmansoumi, Mia Monroe, and Liam O&rsquo;Brien give an exhilarating and beautiful ride through this fascinating subject. <br />
The Franciscan bioregion is home to several locally endemic butterfly species, such as the mission blue, which only lives on coastal bedrock ridgetops. Despite the revolutionary ecological changes on the San Francisco peninsula over the last 240 years, the City abounds with spectacular native biodiversity, and though like many insects, butterfly species have co-evolved with specific plants in an ecological coevolutionary dance over millions of years, a subset of our native butterflies have adapted to some non-native plants, including weeds.  Barbara Deutsch, Deirdre Elmansoumi, Mia Monroe, and Liam O'Brien give an exhilarating and beautiful ride through this fascinating subject.
    </p>
 
    </div>
<em>audio recording failed.</em>
    <div class="talk-archive">
 
    <h5>May 2, 2007 </h5>
<hr>
    <h3> Immigration, Work, and Agriculture: From Enclosures to Fast-Food </h3>
 
    <p> Grey Kolevzon and Chris Carlsson take you on a journey through the centuries-long process of land enclosure and its continuation with the replacement of subsistence agriculture in the global south by agribusiness export crops. With loss of land the movement of populations into cities starts, eventually leading to migration across borders too. Waves of immigrants have brought many different peoples' favorite foods to California, which slowly have merged into &ldquo;California Cuisine.&rdquo; Ironically—perhaps tragically—today&rsquo;s immigrants very often work in the fields for agribusiness OR in the restaurants and hotels of SF, often in kitchens and food service sector... VIDEO CLIPS: 1) occupation strike in Paris at a McDonalds by largely African immigrant workers; 2) scene from Peter Watkins&rsquo; movie &ldquo;La Commune&rdquo; wherein a group of Algerians sits around a table talking about immigration and capital--in 1871!<br />
<font size=4>May 2, 2007</font size>
    </p>
 
    </div>
<font size=4>Immigration, Work, and Agriculture: From Enclosures to Fast-Food </font size>
    <div class="talk-archive">
 
    <h5>April 25, 2007</h5>
Grey Kolevzon and Chris Carlsson take you on a journey through the centuries-long process of land enclosure and its continuation with the replacement of subsistence agriculture in the global south by agribusiness export crops. With loss of land the movement of populations into cities starts, eventually leading to migration across borders too. Waves of immigrants have brought many different peoples' favorite foods to California, which slowly have merged into "California Cuisine." Ironically—perhaps tragically—today's immigrants very often work in the fields for agribusiness OR in the restaurants and hotels of SF, often in kitchens and food service sector... VIDEO CLIPS: 1) occupation strike in Paris at a McDonalds by largely African immigrant workers; 2) scene from Peter Watkins&rsquo; movie &ldquo;La Commune&rdquo; wherein a group of Algerians sits around a table talking about immigration and capital--in 1871!
    <h3> The National Park Where We Live </h3>
 
    <p> Listen as Amy Meyer reveals the politics of national park conservation.  If not for the heroic efforts of Amy Meyer, essentially the &ldquo;godmother&rdquo; of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area (GGNRA), and other environmental activists, we might not have a GGNRA today. Amy's book with co-author Randy Delehanty entitled, <em>New Guardians for the Golden Gate: How America Got a Great National Park</em>, provides exquisite details of the social and political context for the creation of our local urban ecological jewel, which is internationally important. <br />
<em>audio recording failed.</em>
    </p>
 
    </div>
<hr>
    <div class="talk-archive">
 
    <h5>February 28, 2007 </h5>
<font size=4>April 25, 2007</font size>
    <h3> Laying a Foundation for a Green City (3 podcasts) </h3>
 
    <p> Integrating urban life with local nature, biodiversity, and resources is the challenge of our time. New and veteran activists Peter Berg of Green City Project/ Planet Drum, Peter Brastow of Nature in the City, Bonnie Sherk of A Living Library, Brian Holland of Bay Localize, and Raquel Rivera-Pinderhughes of the Urban Studies Department at San Francisco State University share visions, strategies, and how they are laying the foundation for a truly Green City. <br />
<font size=4>The National Park Where We Live </font size>
    <iframe src="http://www.archive.org/embed/GreenCity-pt1-FINAL" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0"></iframe>
 
    <br />
Listen as Amy Meyer reveals the politics of national park conservation.  If not for the heroic efforts of Amy Meyer, essentially the "godmother" of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area (GGNRA), and other environmental activists, we might not have a GGNRA today. Amy's book with co-author Randy Delehanty entitled, <em>New Guardians for the Golden Gate: How America Got a Great National Park</em>, provides exquisite details of the social and political context for the creation of our local urban ecological jewel, which is internationally important.  
    <iframe src="http://www.archive.org/embed/greencity-pt2-FINAL" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0"></iframe>
 
    <br />
<em>audio recording failed.</em>
    <iframe src="http://www.archive.org/embed/green-city-3-FINAL" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0"></iframe>
 
    </p>
<hr>
    </div>
    <div class="talk-archive">
<font size=4>February 28, 2007</font size>
    <h5>January 31, 2007 </h5>
 
    <h3> Grassroots Activism to Save San Bruno Mountain </h3>
<font size=4>Laying a Foundation for a Green City (3 podcasts) </font size>
    <p> This remarkable and still endangered ecological treasure is the natural southern boundary of San Francisco. The curious cultural and ecological histories that intersect on this mountain are shared by representatives of San Bruno Mountain Watch and Heart of the Mountain, revisiting a quarter century of grassroots activism and presenting their current work to save the mountain.<br />
 
    </p>
Integrating urban life with local nature, biodiversity, and resources is the challenge of our time. New and veteran activists Peter Berg of Green City Project/ Planet Drum, Peter Brastow of Nature in the City, Bonnie Sherk of A Living Library, Brian Holland of Bay Localize, and Raquel Rivera-Pinderhughes of the Urban Studies Department at San Francisco State University share visions, strategies, and how they are laying the foundation for a truly Green City.
    </div>
 
    <div class="talk-archive">
<iframe src="http://www.archive.org/embed/GreenCity-pt1-FINAL" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0"></iframe>
    <h5>November 29, 2006</h5>
 
    <h3> Native Habitat Restoration: Frogs in San Francisco </h3>
<iframe src="http://www.archive.org/embed/greencity-pt2-FINAL" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0"></iframe>
    <p> San Francisco&rsquo;s rich biodiversity is not well known, yet. In fact, many San Franciscans have been involved in preservation and restoration of native habitats for the past decades. Jim McKissock, Chris Giorni, and Josiah Clark highlight a heroic effort to restore native frogs to San Francisco. <br />
 
    </p>
<iframe src="http://www.archive.org/embed/green-city-3-FINAL" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0"></iframe>
    </div>
 
    <div class="talk-archive">
<hr>
    <h5>October 25, 2006 </h5>
 
    <h3> Recycling Activism: Trash and Toxics </h3>
<font size=4>January 31, 2007</font size>
    <p> Recycling and anti-toxics activists Andy Pugni of HANC Recycling and Erica Swinney of Greenaction for Health and Environmental Justice discuss the politics of waste. How do we make meaningful change with respect to the growing mountains of waste? From the ever increasing amounts of garbage we create, to poisoned ground water and numerous toxic waste sites, we have our work cut out for us. Also includes an excerpt from the documentary &ldquo;Gone Tomorrow.&rdquo; <br />
 
    </p>
<font size=4>Grassroots Activism to Save San Bruno Mountain </font size>
    </div>
 
    <div class="talk-archive">
This remarkable and still endangered ecological treasure is the natural southern boundary of San Francisco. The curious cultural and ecological histories that intersect on this mountain are shared by representatives of San Bruno Mountain Watch and Heart of the Mountain, revisiting a quarter century of grassroots activism and presenting their current work to save the mountain.
    <h5>September 27, 2006 </h5>
 
    <h3> Activism in and for the San Francisco Bay Ecosystem </h3>
<em>no audio recording.</em>
    <p> Take an historical look at San Francisco Bay, our region&rsquo;s most impacted and continuously threatened natural resource.  Highlighting the time before European colonization, how it changed over the last 160 years, and the Save the Bay citizens&rsquo; movement, listen and imagine how the Bay might evolve, including the current efforts for ecological restoration. <br />
 
    </p>
<hr>
    </div>
 
    <div class="talk-archive">
<font size=4>November 29, 2006</font size>
    <h5>May 31, 2006 </h5>
 
    <h3> Can San Francisco Feed Itself? (3 podcasts) </h3>
<font size=4> Native Habitat Restoration: Frogs in San Francisco </font size>
    <p> Can urban food production be compatible with urban native habitat conservation and restoration? What are the limits and advantages of systematic effort to grow food within the City? What should our relationship be to local gardening, regional Community-Supported Agriculture, and Slow Food? </p>
 
    <p>Part 1 features Chris Carlsson and Raquel Rivera-Pinderhughes. Part 2 features Antonio Roman-Alcalá of Alemany Farm and Brahm Ahmadi of the People's Grocery.  Part 3 features author Margit Roos-Collins (&ldquo;Flavors of Home&rdquo;), Lane Cunningham, and some Q&amp;A and discussion with the audience. <br />
San Francisco's rich biodiversity is not well known, yet. In fact, many San Franciscans have been involved in preservation and restoration of native habitats for the past decades. Jim McKissock, Chris Giorni, and Josiah Clark highlight a heroic effort to restore native frogs to San Francisco.  
    <iframe src="http://www.archive.org/embed/feed-itself-1" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0"></iframe>
 
    <br />
<em>no audio recording.</em>
    <iframe src="http://www.archive.org/embed/feed-itself-2" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0"></iframe>
 
    <br />
<hr>
    <iframe src="http://www.archive.org/embed/feed-itself-3" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0"></iframe>
 
    </p>
<font size=4>October 25, 2006</font size>
    </div>
 
    <div class="talk-archive">
<font size=4> Recycling Activism: Trash and Toxics </font size>
    <h5>May 10, 2006 </h5>
 
    <h3> San Francisco&rsquo;s Food Revolt </h3>
Recycling and anti-toxics activists Andy Pugni of HANC Recycling and Erica Swinney of Greenaction for Health and Environmental Justice discuss the politics of waste. How do we make meaningful change with respect to the growing mountains of waste? From the ever increasing amounts of garbage we create, to poisoned ground water and numerous toxic waste sites, we have our work cut out for us. Also includes an excerpt from the documentary <em>Gone Tomorrow.</em>  
    <p> Going back to the Victory Gardens of WWII, San Franciscans have long organized to get more control over their food supplies. Jesse Drew, author of <em>Call Any Vegetable,</em> and Christopher Cook, author of <em>Diet for a Dead Planet</em>, discuss recent examples including the People&rsquo;s Food System, the expansion of Farmers&rsquo; Markets in the City, and the community garden movement. <br />
 
    </p>
<em>no audio recording.</em>
    </div>
 
    <div class="talk-archive">
<hr>
      <h5>April 26, 2006 </h5>
 
      <h3> Reclaiming Bay Area Military Bases (2 podcasts) </h3>
<font size=4> September 27, 2006</font size>
      <p> Kat Steele, founder of the Urban Permaculture Guild; Doug Biggs, community resources director of the Alameda Point Collaborative; Ruth Gravanis, coordinator of the Treasure Island wetlands project; and Arthur Feinstein, chair of the SF Bay Joint Venture, address cleaning up after the military, restoring and remaking the Presidio, and discuss how community activists are fighting over the future of Hunters&rsquo; Point, and highlight restoration activity by permaculturists from the Alameda Naval Air Station. </p>
 
      <p>Part 1 features Ruth Gravanis and Arthur Feinstein. Part 2 features Arthur Feinstein, Doug Biggs, and Kat Steele.<br />
<font size=4>Activism in and for the San Francisco Bay Ecosystem </font size>
        <iframe src="http://www.archive.org/embed/militarybases-1" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0"></iframe>
 
        <br />
Take an historical look at San Francisco Bay, our region&rsquo;s most impacted and continuously threatened natural resource.  Highlighting the time before European colonization, how it changed over the last 160 years, and the Save the Bay citizens&rsquo; movement, listen and imagine how the Bay might evolve, including the current efforts for ecological restoration.  
        <iframe src="http://www.archive.org/embed/military-bases-2-FINAL" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0"></iframe>
 
      </p>
<em>no audio recording.</em>
    </div>
 
    <div class="talk-archive">
<hr>
      <h5>March 29, 2006 </h5>
 
      <h3> Natural Disasters and Community Response (4 podcasts)</h3>
<font size=4>May 31, 2006 </font size>
      <p>Tom Athanasiou of Eco-Equity and author of <em>Divided Planet</em>, Sherlina Nager of Literacy for Environmental Justice, Peter Davidson, UCSF director of UFO project, and Chris Carlsson, Shaping San Francisco co-director, discuss earthquakes, tsunamis, floods, epidemic flu, chronic disease, etc. within the frame of a community response based on mutual aid, cooperation, and a renewed commitment to a public health infrastructure. </p>
 
      <p>Part 1 features Tom Athanasiou and Chris Carlsson. Part 2 features Sherlina Nager who works in San Francisco's Bayview/Hunter's Point. She speaks to the class divisions that mean so-called &quot;natural&quot; disasters impact different populations in radically different ways. She describes environmental justice as a movement that is led by communities of color against environmental racism, and the goal is to set up sustainable, self-determined and just communities, dating back to 1982 or so. Part 3 features Chris Carlsson and Peter Davidson. Part 4 features audience Q&amp;A following the discussion of the topic.<br />
<font size=4> Can San Francisco Feed Itself? (3 podcasts)</font size>
      <iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/natural-disasters-1" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 
        <br />
Can urban food production be compatible with urban native habitat conservation and restoration? What are the limits and advantages of systematic effort to grow food within the City? What should our relationship be to local gardening, regional Community-Supported Agriculture, and Slow Food?  
        <iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/natural-disasters-2" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 
        <br />
Part 1 features Chris Carlsson and Raquel Rivera-Pinderhughes. Part 2 features Antonio Roman-Alcalá of Alemany Farm and Brahm Ahmadi of the People's Grocery.  Part 3 features author Margit Roos-Collins (&ldquo;Flavors of Home&rdquo;), Lane Cunningham, and some Q&amp;A and discussion with the audience.
        <iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/WhatsNaturalAboutNaturalDisastersPart3" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 
        <br />
<iframe src="http://www.archive.org/embed/feed-itself-1" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0"></iframe>
        <iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/NaturalDisasters-4.wav" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 
      </p>
<iframe src="http://www.archive.org/embed/feed-itself-2" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0"></iframe>
    </div>
 
    <div class="talk-archive">
<iframe src="http://www.archive.org/embed/feed-itself-3" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0"></iframe>
  <h5>February 22, 2006 </h5>
      <h3> Nature in the Urban Environment </h3>
<hr>
      <p> Nature in the City&rsquo;s Peter Brastow and long-time ecological activist Ruth Gravanis present a comprehensive overview of San Francisco&rsquo;s natural environment, discussing the less-than-obvious meanings of the concept of &ldquo;nature&rdquo; within the urban environment. <br />
 
      </p>
<font size=4>May 10, 2006</font size>
    </div>
 
    <div class="talk-archive">
<font size=4> San Francisco's Food Revolt</font size>
    <h5>January 25, 2006</h5>
 
    <h3> Natural Areas of San Francisco: a Pre-Urban View </h3>
Going back to the Victory Gardens of WWII, San Franciscans have long organized to get more control over their food supplies. Jesse Drew, author of <em>Call Any Vegetable,</em> and Christopher Cook, author of <em>Diet for a Dead Planet</em>, discuss recent examples including the People&rsquo;s Food System, the expansion of Farmers&rsquo; Markets in the City, and the community garden movement.
     <p> Local photographer and photo archivist Greg Gaar specializes in the natural areas of San Francisco such as sand dunes, hilltops, wildflowers and more. Listen to him narrate a slideshow tour of San Francisco before it was paved over and turned into a city. <br />
 
    </p>
<em>no audio recording.</em>
    </div>
 
<hr>
 
<font size=4>April 26, 2006</font size>
 
<font size=4>Reclaiming Bay Area Military Bases (2 podcasts)</font size>
 
Kat Steele, founder of the Urban Permaculture Guild; Doug Biggs, community resources director of the Alameda Point Collaborative; Ruth Gravanis, coordinator of the Treasure Island wetlands project; and Arthur Feinstein, chair of the SF Bay Joint Venture, address cleaning up after the military, restoring and remaking the Presidio, and discuss how community activists are fighting over the future of Hunters&rsquo; Point, and highlight restoration activity by permaculturists from the Alameda Naval Air Station.  
 
Part 1 features Ruth Gravanis and Arthur Feinstein. Part 2 features Arthur Feinstein, Doug Biggs, and Kat Steele.
 
<iframe src="http://www.archive.org/embed/militarybases-1" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0"></iframe>
 
<iframe src="http://www.archive.org/embed/military-bases-2-FINAL" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0"></iframe>
   
<hr>
 
<font size=4>March 29, 2006</font size>
 
<font size=4>Natural Disasters and Community Response (4 podcasts)</font size>
 
Tom Athanasiou of Eco-Equity and author of <em>Divided Planet</em>, Sherlina Nager of Literacy for Environmental Justice, Peter Davidson, UCSF director of UFO project, and Chris Carlsson, Shaping San Francisco co-director, discuss earthquakes, tsunamis, floods, epidemic flu, chronic disease, etc. within the frame of a community response based on mutual aid, cooperation, and a renewed commitment to a public health infrastructure.
 
Part 1 features Tom Athanasiou and Chris Carlsson. Part 2 features Sherlina Nager who works in San Francisco's Bayview/Hunter's Point. She speaks to the class divisions that mean so-called &quot;natural&quot; disasters impact different populations in radically different ways. She describes environmental justice as a movement that is led by communities of color against environmental racism, and the goal is to set up sustainable, self-determined and just communities, dating back to 1982 or so. Part 3 features Chris Carlsson and Peter Davidson. Part 4 features audience Q&amp;A following the discussion of the topic.
 
<iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/natural-disasters-1" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 
<iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/natural-disasters-2" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 
<iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/WhatsNaturalAboutNaturalDisastersPart3" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 
<iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/NaturalDisasters-4.wav" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 
<hr>
 
<font size=4>February 22, 2006 </font size>
 
<font size=4>Nature in the Urban Environment</font size>
 
Nature in the City&rsquo;s Peter Brastow and long-time ecological activist Ruth Gravanis present a comprehensive overview of San Francisco&rsquo;s natural environment, discussing the less-than-obvious meanings of the concept of &ldquo;nature&rdquo; within the urban environment.  
 
<em>no audio recording.</em>
 
<hr>
 
<font size=4> January 25, 2006</font size>
 
<font size=4>Natural Areas of San Francisco: a Pre-Urban View </font size>
 
     <p> Local photographer and photo archivist Greg Gaar specializes in the natural areas of San Francisco such as sand dunes, hilltops, wildflowers and more. Listen to him narrate a slideshow tour of San Francisco before it was paved over and turned into a city.  
 
<em>no audio recording.</em>
 
<hr>


[[category:Ecology]] [[category:2000s]] [[category:Talks]]
[[category:Ecology]] [[category:2000s]] [[category:Talks]]

Revision as of 13:06, 31 October 2019

Primary Source

Shaping San Francisco hosts Public Talks on a variety of topics on Wednesday nights, about 18 times a year. One recurrent theme has been Ecology and urban nature. Here are the Talks we held at CounterPULSE at 1310 Mission Street in 2006 and 2007.


November 28, 2007

Food Security & Urban Agriculture

Our food system is being refashioned by new urban farmers, farmers markets, and community-supported agriculture, and importantly, by savvy shoppers who demand local, organic, and safe food. Still, food security is tenuous for too many of our neighbors. Hear from Amy Franceschini about Victory Gardens, past and present; Willow Rosenthal with the story of City Slicker Farms; and Jason Mark, editor of Earth Island Journal, about the work of Alemany Farm.

<iframe src="http://www.archive.org/embed/FoodSecurityUrbanAgriculture" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0"></iframe>



October 24, 2007

New Politics for Green Cities

This panel represents a wide swath of perspectives on the urban environment, from open space, biodiversity, global warming, fresh water, street design and transit choices, urban farming... Local historian Dick Walker, author of The City and the Country; Kearstin Krehbiel of the San Francisco Parks Trust; Peter Brastow, executive director of Nature in the City; and Kearstin Dischinger of the Bike Kitchen come together to discuss the historic roots of our current ecological politics, and how they have shaped today's environment and the questions we face now.

<iframe src="http://www.archive.org/embed/NewGreenCityPolitics" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0"></iframe>


September 26, 2007

San Francisco Water Sources

Most of San Francisco's water is supplied by the Tuolumne River, which flows through a series of reservoirs, aqueducts, and tunnels to our taps. These facilities are being rebuilt now, along with yet another massively expensive sewer system overhaul. Local water historian Joel Pomerantz and ecology activist Ruth Gravanis join with Spreck Rosenkrans of the Environmental Defense Fund in a look at our wet infrastructure and the possibilities of a radically different relationship to our local water supplies, including our aquifer, creeks, and rainfall.

<iframe src="http://www.archive.org/embed/WetInfrastructure" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0"></iframe>


May 30, 2007

San Francisco Ecology: Butterflies in the City

The Franciscan bioregion is home to several locally endemic butterfly species, such as the mission blue, which only lives on coastal bedrock ridgetops. Despite the revolutionary ecological changes on the San Francisco peninsula over the last 240 years, the City abounds with spectacular native biodiversity, and though like many insects, butterfly species have co-evolved with specific plants in an ecological coevolutionary dance over millions of years, a subset of our native butterflies have adapted to some non-native plants, including weeds. Barbara Deutsch, Deirdre Elmansoumi, Mia Monroe, and Liam O'Brien give an exhilarating and beautiful ride through this fascinating subject.

audio recording failed.


May 2, 2007

Immigration, Work, and Agriculture: From Enclosures to Fast-Food

Grey Kolevzon and Chris Carlsson take you on a journey through the centuries-long process of land enclosure and its continuation with the replacement of subsistence agriculture in the global south by agribusiness export crops. With loss of land the movement of populations into cities starts, eventually leading to migration across borders too. Waves of immigrants have brought many different peoples' favorite foods to California, which slowly have merged into "California Cuisine." Ironically—perhaps tragically—today's immigrants very often work in the fields for agribusiness OR in the restaurants and hotels of SF, often in kitchens and food service sector... VIDEO CLIPS: 1) occupation strike in Paris at a McDonalds by largely African immigrant workers; 2) scene from Peter Watkins’ movie “La Commune” wherein a group of Algerians sits around a table talking about immigration and capital--in 1871!

audio recording failed.


April 25, 2007

The National Park Where We Live

Listen as Amy Meyer reveals the politics of national park conservation. If not for the heroic efforts of Amy Meyer, essentially the "godmother" of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area (GGNRA), and other environmental activists, we might not have a GGNRA today. Amy's book with co-author Randy Delehanty entitled, New Guardians for the Golden Gate: How America Got a Great National Park, provides exquisite details of the social and political context for the creation of our local urban ecological jewel, which is internationally important.

audio recording failed.


February 28, 2007

Laying a Foundation for a Green City (3 podcasts)

Integrating urban life with local nature, biodiversity, and resources is the challenge of our time. New and veteran activists Peter Berg of Green City Project/ Planet Drum, Peter Brastow of Nature in the City, Bonnie Sherk of A Living Library, Brian Holland of Bay Localize, and Raquel Rivera-Pinderhughes of the Urban Studies Department at San Francisco State University share visions, strategies, and how they are laying the foundation for a truly Green City.

<iframe src="http://www.archive.org/embed/GreenCity-pt1-FINAL" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0"></iframe>

<iframe src="http://www.archive.org/embed/greencity-pt2-FINAL" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0"></iframe>

<iframe src="http://www.archive.org/embed/green-city-3-FINAL" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0"></iframe>


January 31, 2007

Grassroots Activism to Save San Bruno Mountain

This remarkable and still endangered ecological treasure is the natural southern boundary of San Francisco. The curious cultural and ecological histories that intersect on this mountain are shared by representatives of San Bruno Mountain Watch and Heart of the Mountain, revisiting a quarter century of grassroots activism and presenting their current work to save the mountain.

no audio recording.


November 29, 2006

Native Habitat Restoration: Frogs in San Francisco

San Francisco's rich biodiversity is not well known, yet. In fact, many San Franciscans have been involved in preservation and restoration of native habitats for the past decades. Jim McKissock, Chris Giorni, and Josiah Clark highlight a heroic effort to restore native frogs to San Francisco.

no audio recording.


October 25, 2006

Recycling Activism: Trash and Toxics

Recycling and anti-toxics activists Andy Pugni of HANC Recycling and Erica Swinney of Greenaction for Health and Environmental Justice discuss the politics of waste. How do we make meaningful change with respect to the growing mountains of waste? From the ever increasing amounts of garbage we create, to poisoned ground water and numerous toxic waste sites, we have our work cut out for us. Also includes an excerpt from the documentary Gone Tomorrow.

no audio recording.


September 27, 2006

Activism in and for the San Francisco Bay Ecosystem

Take an historical look at San Francisco Bay, our region’s most impacted and continuously threatened natural resource. Highlighting the time before European colonization, how it changed over the last 160 years, and the Save the Bay citizens’ movement, listen and imagine how the Bay might evolve, including the current efforts for ecological restoration.

no audio recording.


May 31, 2006

Can San Francisco Feed Itself? (3 podcasts)

Can urban food production be compatible with urban native habitat conservation and restoration? What are the limits and advantages of systematic effort to grow food within the City? What should our relationship be to local gardening, regional Community-Supported Agriculture, and Slow Food?

Part 1 features Chris Carlsson and Raquel Rivera-Pinderhughes. Part 2 features Antonio Roman-Alcalá of Alemany Farm and Brahm Ahmadi of the People's Grocery. Part 3 features author Margit Roos-Collins (“Flavors of Home”), Lane Cunningham, and some Q&A and discussion with the audience.

<iframe src="http://www.archive.org/embed/feed-itself-1" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0"></iframe>

<iframe src="http://www.archive.org/embed/feed-itself-2" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0"></iframe>

<iframe src="http://www.archive.org/embed/feed-itself-3" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0"></iframe>


May 10, 2006

San Francisco's Food Revolt

Going back to the Victory Gardens of WWII, San Franciscans have long organized to get more control over their food supplies. Jesse Drew, author of Call Any Vegetable, and Christopher Cook, author of Diet for a Dead Planet, discuss recent examples including the People’s Food System, the expansion of Farmers’ Markets in the City, and the community garden movement.

no audio recording.


April 26, 2006

Reclaiming Bay Area Military Bases (2 podcasts)

Kat Steele, founder of the Urban Permaculture Guild; Doug Biggs, community resources director of the Alameda Point Collaborative; Ruth Gravanis, coordinator of the Treasure Island wetlands project; and Arthur Feinstein, chair of the SF Bay Joint Venture, address cleaning up after the military, restoring and remaking the Presidio, and discuss how community activists are fighting over the future of Hunters’ Point, and highlight restoration activity by permaculturists from the Alameda Naval Air Station.

Part 1 features Ruth Gravanis and Arthur Feinstein. Part 2 features Arthur Feinstein, Doug Biggs, and Kat Steele.

<iframe src="http://www.archive.org/embed/militarybases-1" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0"></iframe>

<iframe src="http://www.archive.org/embed/military-bases-2-FINAL" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0"></iframe>


March 29, 2006

Natural Disasters and Community Response (4 podcasts)

Tom Athanasiou of Eco-Equity and author of Divided Planet, Sherlina Nager of Literacy for Environmental Justice, Peter Davidson, UCSF director of UFO project, and Chris Carlsson, Shaping San Francisco co-director, discuss earthquakes, tsunamis, floods, epidemic flu, chronic disease, etc. within the frame of a community response based on mutual aid, cooperation, and a renewed commitment to a public health infrastructure.

Part 1 features Tom Athanasiou and Chris Carlsson. Part 2 features Sherlina Nager who works in San Francisco's Bayview/Hunter's Point. She speaks to the class divisions that mean so-called "natural" disasters impact different populations in radically different ways. She describes environmental justice as a movement that is led by communities of color against environmental racism, and the goal is to set up sustainable, self-determined and just communities, dating back to 1982 or so. Part 3 features Chris Carlsson and Peter Davidson. Part 4 features audience Q&A following the discussion of the topic.

<iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/natural-disasters-1" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe>

<iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/natural-disasters-2" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe>

<iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/WhatsNaturalAboutNaturalDisastersPart3" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe>

<iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/NaturalDisasters-4.wav" width="411" height="30" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe>


February 22, 2006

Nature in the Urban Environment

Nature in the City’s Peter Brastow and long-time ecological activist Ruth Gravanis present a comprehensive overview of San Francisco’s natural environment, discussing the less-than-obvious meanings of the concept of “nature” within the urban environment.

no audio recording.


January 25, 2006

Natural Areas of San Francisco: a Pre-Urban View

Local photographer and photo archivist Greg Gaar specializes in the natural areas of San Francisco such as sand dunes, hilltops, wildflowers and more. Listen to him narrate a slideshow tour of San Francisco before it was paved over and turned into a city. no audio recording.