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(Unless
otherwise noted, all films shown at 6:30 pm at the Fairfax Library)
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This
month we will show A Clearer View, a documentary
by Al Mayberry. The film shows Marin County high
school students eloquently making their case for an upgrade from
the current, purely academic, competitive, school system. It goes
on to showcase a model school in Colorado where the changes the
students are requesting are already developed and proven. Students
in the Jefferson County Open School learn by a
self-directed, open system that focuses on education as a form of
personal growth. The open school system helps build confidence in
students because they are able to direct their energies in areas
that personally interest them. The process encourages self-direction,
which prepares students to excel in the real world. This film is
a must see for those interested in state of the art education for
our kids.
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| Join
us for an evening of film, song, stories, and a bird-calling contest
as we learn how to create and protect songbird habitat in Marin.
The evening will feature Melissa Pitkin, Pt.
Reyes Bird Observatory’s Education & Outreach Director,
who will teach you about the songbird-breeding season and explain
why it is such a critical time in a bird’s life. In addition,
she will outline simple ways individuals can help birds at their
homes, schools, ranches, and public lands. Also on hand will be
writer & director Claire Blotter, who will
screen her video documentary, Wake-Up Call: Saving The Songbirds.
Her film celebrates migratory birds and their beautiful, complex
songs. It also shows why songbirds are rapidly disappearing throughout
the world and how both children and adults can help to preserve
them by working in their "own backyards." Includes humorous
footage of acclaimed Piedmont High bird callers. We will also
be treated to a performance by singer and storyteller Sheilah
Glover. Start practicing your bird calls! The person
with the best call will receive a copy of Claire’s video.
These events are wheelchair accessible and children are especially
welcome!
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|
Join
us for the third film in our Summer Permaculture Series!
Guest speaker Erik Ohlsen is a permaculturist
and co-founder of Planting Earth Activation (PEA).
PEA is a non-profit collective of gardeners, permaculturists and
activists that work to build community, save seeds, educate about
ecological design systems, and activate cultural renewal towards
sustainability. Erik will talk about how permaculture can create
ecologically sustainable systems appropriate to the scale of our
communities, solve communal and individual problems, and serve
as a guide to a more sustainable lifestyle. His presentation will
include practical and easy steps to community self-reliance, involving
food, water, shelter & other community needs. |
Join
us for the second film in our Summer Permaculture Series!
Guest speaker Trathen Heckman is a permaculturist
who will present a slide show chronicling the transformation of
his hillside home in Sonoma County. Topics will include use of
local and recycled materials to build retaining walls, erosion
control on steep hills, and growing in mixed light conditions.
Trathen also publishes a ‘zine, Ripples,
as part of Daily Acts, an organization promoting
greater awareness of how choices we make each day can be used to “speak
truth to our values.”
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Join
us for the first film in our Summer Permaculture Series:
Global Gardener, featuring practical visionary,
Bill Mollison, known as the father of Permaculture. In this series
you will learn how Permaculture uses principles of sustainability
to go beyond the garden and create a closer sense of community!
Guest speaker Capra J’neva, of the Permaculture
Institute of Northern California, will be on hand to
talk about Urban Permaculture - designing integrated home systems
to provide food, water, and energy. Topics discussed will include
solar design and alternative fuels.
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This month, our Sustainability Film Series hosts the Circle of Life
Midwifery Center for an evening focused on home birth. The program
includes 2 videos: Giving Birth: Challenges and Choices
& Birth Day. Circle
of Life, is located at 145 Bolinas Road in Fairfax, right next to
Sustainable Fairfax's Sustainability Center!
For more information, you can reach the Circle of Life folks at
(415) 456-2961.
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| Jon
us for the first film of 2002 the Green Peace film:
Arctic Meltdown shown as part of our Local Solutions
to Global Problems! presentation. Fairfax Mayor Lew Tremaine
will host Sustainable Fairfax in an evening focus on local solutions
to global climate change at the Fairfax Women's Club. Come and
learn more about what we can do to help! Featuring: Abby Young,
US Director, Cities
for Climate Protection Campaign; Lew reporting back from the
Cities for Climate Protection Campaign 2002 International Workshop
for Local Governments; plus the film. 7 pm at The Fairfax Women's
Club, 46 Park Road in Fairfax, California |
The
film nights for November and December have been cancelled to allow
us to focus our energies on the Sustainability
Center. Join us in January for the showing of another thought
provoking film examining problems and celebrating solutions!
|
The
film nights for November and December have been cancelled to allow
us to focus our energies on the Sustainability
Center. Join us in January for the showing of another thought
provoking film examining problems and celebrating solutions!
|
Due
to the Candidate
Debate Night, we will not be offering a film on this night.
Check back for our November film selection to be shown on November
28th so as not to interfere with Thanksgiving plans.
|
Due to the many requests a 3rd showing of...
PUBLIC
EXPOSURE: DNA, Democracy & the "Wireless Revolution"
PUBLIC
EXPOSURE takes a cutting-edge look at the science, the economics,
the politics and potentially irreversible health effects of the
so-called wireless revolution. International in scope, like the
escalating problems it portrays, PUBLIC EXPOSURE unfolds through
the Individual, local stories of diverse scientists, activists
and concerned public decision-makers. It is the only educational
documentary on the subject at the moment made in English, and
one of the few which exists globally in any language. A
timely and provocative 58 minute film, co-produced by Libby Kelley,
Council on wireless Technology Impacts, and EON International,
Public Exposure portrays public health issues related to the emerging
"wireless age" from a citizens rights and consumer advocacy
perspective.
About
the Filmmakers: Mary Beth Brangan and Jim Heddle, partners
for eighteen years in Options 2000 International, are documentary
video and radio producers, educators and community and international
campaign organizers. They are the award-winning producers of 15
social/environmental issue documentaries which have been broadcast
and toured nationally and internationally, aired in Congress,
the United Nations, PBS, CNN, ABC, cable and used in Parliaments,
universities and libraries worldwide. Successful human rights
and environmental issue campaigners, they are cofounders of the
Nuclear Democracy Network, the Bay Area Nuclear (BAN) Waste Coalition,
the Council for Alternative Security in the Asia Pacific and EON,
the Ecological Options Network. (415)868-1900; opt2000@veriomail.com
Mary Beth Brangan will be present to speak to the issues raised
in the film.
For
more general information on the impact of wireless technology
in our communites, contact the Council
on Wireless Technology Impacts at 415 892-1863 or the EMR
Network Website. |
Taken
for a Ride
Why
Does America Have the Worst Public Transit in the Industrialized
World, and the Most Freeways?
Taken
for a Ride reveals and little known story of an auto and oil industry
campaign, led by General Motors, to buy and dismantle streetcar
lines. Across the nation, tracks were torn up, sometimes overnight,
and diesel buses placed on city streets. The
highway lobby then pushed through Congress a vast network of urban
freeways that doubled the cost of the Interstates, fueled suburban
development, increased auto dependence, and elicited passionate
opposition. Seventeen city freeways were stopped by citizens who
would become the leading edge of a new environmental movement.
With
investigative journalism, vintage archival footage and candid
interviews, Taken for a Ride presents a revealing history of our
cities in the 20th century that is also a meditation on corporate
power, city form, citizen protest and the social and environmental
implications of transportation. By Jim Klein and Martha Olson.
Wendi
Kallins from Go Geronimo and Safe Routes to School and Debbie
Hubsmith from Marin
County Bicycle Coalition will be our guests to discuss solutions
to Marins Transportation issues . |
We
All Live Downstream
America's
most historic river, the Mississippi, has become a 2,300 mile
toxic waterway. Over half the industrial toxic waste discharged
into our lakes and streams is dumped directly into the Mississippi.
Cancer and mortality rates are among the highest in the nation
along the chemical corridor stretching from Baton Rouge to New
Orleans. Entire towns have been shuttered as the direct result
of unchecked air and ground water pollution. Meanwhile, the debate
rages between environmentalists and government officials over
how dangerous the pollutants are and what regulations should be
put in place or enforced. We All Live Downstream explores
the problems and the stories of people who live along the river,
many of whom are now fighting to save the Mighty Mississippi.
Produced by A.C. Warden and Karen Hirsch / 30 Min.
Guest
speaker Kelly Campbell from California
Pesticide Reform will give an update on Fairfax's Pesticide
Neighbor Notification Ordinance . Mitzy Staley from Marin
Master Gardener's will also be present to demonstrate alternatives
to toxic pesticides. Turn out and see how you can help your town
protect it's residents from pesticide exposure. |
Thinking
Like a Watershed
A
small, coastal community in Northern California has been restoring
its watershed for the past twenty years. Originally determined
to save the nearly extinct native salmon, they realized that "salmon
don't just live in streams, they live in watersheds." Through
trial and error, the residents learned how to hatch thousands
of salmon in homemade hatchboxes.
They convinced the Fish and Game to close their river to salmon
fishing and began restoring the river, planting hillsides, removing
old logging roads. They wrote and performed a hilarious musical
comedy "Queen Salmon" which highlighted the cooperative
spirit required to reverse a deteriorating situation.
They
have rediscovered what our grandparents took for granted: a
community that works and plays together with common goals is a
more satisfying place to live. Now sustainable timber
harvesting is being practiced, watershed education is practiced
in the schools and the salmon have returned to the Mattole River.
Environmental restoration is explained and demonstrated in this
inspiring model of citizen initiative. A guest speaker from Friends
of Corte Madera Creek Watershed will be present to update
us on local creek restoration efforts. Produced by Johan Carlisle
* 27 minutes · 1998 |
ENCORE
PRESENTATION!
Public Exposure: DNA, Democracy & the Wireless Revolution
Please
join us for the second local screening of this very timely film.
Public Exposure is a timely and provocative 58 minute film, co-produced
by Libby Kelley, Council on Wireless Technology Impacts, and EON
International, portrays public health issues related to the emerging
wireless age from a citizens rights and consumer advocacy
perspective. Libby will be there to answer questions about the
film and participate in a discussion about
local concerns surrounding this issue.
*This
showing takes place at the Women's Building on Park Road
Libby
Kelley will also be speaking June 6 at the Environmental Links
to Cancer Public Forum, 5:30 to 7:00 pm at the SF Public Library,
sponsored by the Bay Area Cancer Coalition on Cell Phones
and Cancer, Panel moderator is Michael Krazny, KQED, who
will interview Kelley on his radio show, KQED Forum starting
at 9:00 am that day.
|
Trade
Secrets: A Moyers Report
In
Trade Secrets, correspondent Bill Moyers and producer Sherry Jones
report on how the chemical revolution of the past 50 years has
produced thousands of man-made chemicals that have not been tested
for their effect on the public's health and safety. The report
is based on documents that have never been published and on interviews
with historians, scientists and physicians who are exploring how
chemicals affect the body.
Alise
Cappel will be with us to speak on the film and answer questions
. She is the former research director for the Louisiana law firm
whose legal case brought to light the chemical industry papers
which lead to the Moyers Documentary. She is currently doing toxics
research for the Center
for Environmental Health, in Oakland. |
Residential
Solar Electricity with Johnny Weiss
At
Solar Energy International in Carbondale, Colorado, Johnny Weiss
and his partner, Ken Olson, teach the practical use of renewable
energy technologies to students from all over the world. Johnny
has been teaching, designing and installing solar electric Photovoltaic
systems for over fifteen years. In this video, Johnny gives and
demonstrates practical answers to the questions most asked by
homeowners as they consider the purchase and installation of their
own solar electric system.
*
This showing takes place at the Women's Building on Park Road
as part of our Follow-up to the Solar Energy
Forum Event |
Public Exposure: DNA, Democracy & the Wireless Revolution
Public
Exposure takes a cutting-edge look at the science, the economics,
the politics and potentially irreversible health effects of the
so-called wireless revolution. International in scope, like the
escalating problems it portrays, Public Exposure unfolds through
the individual, local stories of diverse scientists, activists
and concerned public decision-makers. It is the only educational
documentary on the subject at the moment made in English, and
one of the few which exists globally in any language. Filmmaker
Mary Beth Brangan will be present to speak about the film and
answer questions. Please join us as we educate ourselves about
this pervasive technology.
About
the Filmmakers: Mary Beth Brangan and Jim Heddle, partners
for eighteen years in Options 2000 International, are documentary
video and radio producers, educators and community and international
campaign organizers. They are the award-winning producers of 15
social/environmental issue documentaries which have been broadcast
and toured nationally and internationally, aired in Congress,
the United Nations, PBS, CNN, ABC, cable and used in Parliaments,
universities and libraries worldwide. Successful human rights
and environmental issue campaigners, they are cofounders of the
Nuclear Democracy Network, the Bay Area Nuclear (BAN) Waste Coalition,
the Council for Alternative Security in the Asia Pacific and EON,
the Ecological Options Network. (415)868-1900; opt2000@veriomail.com |
Ecological
Design: Inventing the Future
An
illuminating film on the emergence of ecological design in the
20th century .The film features the ideas and prototypes of pioneering
designers who have trail blazed the development of sustainable
architecture , cities , energy systems transport and industry.
Beginning in the 1920s with the work of R. Buckminster Fuller
, moving through the 1960s and the counter culture and ending
on the doorstep of the 21st century : the film follows the evolution
of ecological design from the visions of a few independent thinkers
to the powerful movement it is becoming. |
The
Greening of Cuba
When
trade relations with the socialist bloc collapsed in 1990, Cuba
lost 80% of its pesticide and fertilizer imports and half of its
petroleum - the mainstays of its highly industrialized agriculture.
Challenged with growing food for eleven million people in the
face of the continuing US embargo, Cuba embarked on the largest
conversion to organic farming ever attempted. Told in the voices
of the women and men - the campesinos, researchers, and urban
gardeners who are leading the organic agriculture movement. |
Building
Sustainability with The Natural Step
Guided
by the scientific principles of The Natural Step, the University
of Texas, Houstons Health Science Center is designing one
of the most ecologically friendly large scale buildings ever constructed.
This film shows the amount of care being put into planning and
collaboration between the nursing faculty, students, architects,
and engineers. Experts in lighting, renewable resources, life
cycles, climate control, recycling, composting and energy conservation
are also involved. University of Texas, Houstons Journey
Brian Yeoman, UTH, Patsy Northcutt Productions. Honorable Mention
- Earthvision 99 Film & Video Festival. |
The
Barefoot College: Knowledge Demystified
Situated
in the state of Rajasthan, India The Barefoot College trains "barefoot"
teachers, doctors, solar engineers, hand pump mechanics, designers,
chemists, communicators, construction engineers and accountants.
It has created a non -formal education process for children, youth,
and adults that assist students to develop and maintain sustainable
communities. The video illustrates each of the areas in which
they have been so successful and interviews formerly uneducated
men and women who are now directing major programs for community
sustainability. (A UNESCO-Opeongo Line Co-Production)
A
discussion will follow the showing of the video. |
Greenplans
Hosted
by CNNs Jack Hamann, Greenplans presents a hopeful
look at how two countries have moved beyond the usual environmental
conflicts to develop widely supported national plans for sustainable
development. Competing interests in the Netherlands and New Zealand
were brought together to hammer out a comprehensive national environmental
policy - or Green Plan - aimed at creating both a sustainable
environment and economy within one generations time. Greenplans
travels to these two countries to profile how this new approach
works, and also looks at efforts underway in the United States
and in other countries to adopt Green Plans. (Produced by John
de Graaf & Jack Hamann) |
The
Natural Step: Overview & Discussion
featuring Karl-Henrik Robert, Founder & Chair
The
Natural Step (TNS) is both the name of an international nonprofit
educational organization and a scientifically approved process
for determining whether the actions of individuals, organizations,
or corporations are sustainable. TNS was first developed by Dr.
Karl-Henrik Robert in Sweden and approved by the scientific community
at large. He skillfully presents the key concepts of TNS showing
its affect on companies, its application in schools and universities,
its compatibility with economic models and its relationship to
the Swedish Government. |
*Each
of the showings will be held at the Fairfax Library at 6:30 p.m. Call
415-459-3768 for more information.
|
Home-scale, applied Permaculture
Saturdays in downtown Fairfax this Summer!
Every 2nd and 4th Saturday from July 8th through October 29th Sustainable
Fairfax is conducting a hands-on workshop in the backyard of what will
become the Sustainability Center at 141 Bolinas Road.
Click here for more info... |