| Published
July 15, 2008 |
Volume
16, Number 7
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Learn How to ‘Blue’ Your Business at
Spare the Air Employer Summit
Add “blue” to the lexicon of terms that describe efforts to improve the
environment. Evoking the image of clear, pollution-free skies, the Bay
Area Air Quality Management District (BAAQMD) is using the color as a
motif in its second annual Spare the Air Employer Summit slated for
Tuesday, August 19, in Oakland.
The theme for this year’s summit is Spare the Air, Every Day: Employer
Perspectives on How to “Blue” Your Business. According to Kristine
Roselius, senior public information officer in the district’s San
Francisco office, “blue-ing” a business is similar to “greening” a
business, a reference to actions that reduce an organization’s carbon
footprint. BAAQMD is using “blue” to denote a specific focus on
measures that improve air quality by keeping the sky blue.
Many of the options that fall into this category relate to
transportation, specifically reducing the amount of driving. At the
individual level, positive clean air choices range from using public
transit and car-pooling to limiting the use of wood-burning devices
that emit harmful particulate matter, Roselius explains. When people do
get behind the wheel, she recommends bundling errands to make fewer
trips and driving “smart,” at steady, fuel-conserving speeds.
But there are many other things that can be done, and at next month’s
meeting BAAQMD representatives will join a panel of leading employers
to explore the possibilities. The preliminary line-up of panelists
includes William C. Acevedo, Senior Counsel at Wendel, Rosen, Black
& Dean, in Oakland; Jennifer Freitas, manager of Sustainability
Benefits at Clif Bar & Co., in Berkeley; and Rick Taylor, owner of
Elder Creek Landscapes in Sebastapol.
All three of these firms have demonstrated leadership in implementing
innovative environmentally friendly initiatives. Wendel Rosen was the
first law firm in the country certified as a green business, back in
2003, and is currently involved in a number of Bay Area and national
programs associated with environmental and sustainable business
practices. To encourage recycling, Clif Bar has a program that collects
used energy bar wrappers and turns them into eco-chic products. It also
promotes Cool Tags, natural wind energy credits that help offset carbon
dioxide emissions. Elder Creek Landscapes eschews toxic herbicides,
pesticides, and synthetic fertilizers and uses products approved for
certified organic agriculture wherever possible.
Summit attendees will get information on how to start a clean air
program from scratch and encourage the expansion of existing workplace
efforts. Panelists and other employers will share their experiences
building cost-effective sustainable programs and demonstrate how they
benefit employees and clients.
“This is an opportunity for companies to come together, share and
compare notes, and learn how to inspire employees to make clean air
choices to protect air quality and our climate,” Roselius observes.
Running from 8 to 10:30 a.m., the summit will be held at the Wendel
Rosen office at 1111 Broadway, 24th floor, in Oakland, near the 19th
Street BART station. The event is free and breakfast is included. Those
interested in attending will find more information at www.sparetheair.com. Online
registration details will be posted shortly.
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