Great Lakes Bioneers Chicago Presents a Bioneers Network Event, "Celebrating Community Resilience"
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Transcript of Great Lakes Bioneers Chicago Presents a Bioneers Network Event, "Celebrating Community Resilience"
Exploring Solutions Guided by Nature
Celebrating Community Resilience
November 1-3, 2013 | Roosevelt University, Chicagowww.bioneerschicago.org
Printedgreen® – carcinogen, toxin and petroleum free.
Great Lakes Bioneers Chicago Presents a
Thanks to Our SponsorsPartners and Major Donors
Innovators
Cultivators
Nurturers
Pioneers
Pollinators
Supporters ContributorsRevolution Brewing Bodega Ramos Fine WinesRoland and Darlene Dehne, ChicagoStephanie Leite, ChicagoPam Richart, Chicago
William McInnes, ChicagoAna Pittella, BrazilMaris Grossman, ChicagoChris Parson, Chicago Great Lakes Bioneers Chicago is a local,
self-organized Bioneers Group. To learn more about Bioneers, visit www.bioneers.org
3
Sponsors 2About the Great Lakes Bioneers Conference 4Acknowledgements 5Event Information 6 - 7Friday Schedule 8 - 9Saturday Schedule 10 - 11
Sunday Schedule 12 - 13Program Descriptions 14 - 27Map 17 - 19Sing for the Climate, Do It Now 24Plenary Speaker Biographies 28 - 29Speaker Biographies 30 - 34
WELCOM
E/ TABLE OF CONTENTS
On behalf of the Great Lakes Bioneers Chicago Board, our partners and sponsors, we want to welcome you to the second annual Bioneers gathering in Chicago. Many have worked hard to bring you an informative and inspirational experience – one that we hope will motivate you to make a positive difference in our world. Our theme, “Celebrating Community Resilience”, recognizes that we are capable of bouncing back from social, economic and environmental challenges, provided we call upon the myriad of resources that exist, working together to blend new ideas with proven ones, and moving forward agendas and inclusive polices that not only adapt to the limits of our changing world, but also heal and restore our planet.
This year we are excited to be partnering with Roosevelt University, whose commitment to transformative learning and dedication to social justice make it an ideal match with the Bioneers movement. The cooperation and support of the University’s staff have been invaluable in bringing this event to fruition.
The site of this year’s conference also allows us to appreciate the changing physical and social contexts of our city. During the weekend, we will be hosted in two contrasting facilities: the historic Auditorium Building, with its 19th century splendor designed by architects Dankmar Adler and Louis Sullivan; and the 21st century Wabash Building, a 32-story, state-of-the-art vertical campus, certified LEED Gold by the US Green Building Council. Both structures lie on a continuum of what was, is and will be, as we respond to the changing world before us.
Our program format for 2013 is designed to offer a rich experience for both the seasoned practitioner, as well as those who are ready to explore issues and topics new to them. Friday’s intensives have been structured to allow participants to dig deeply into critical areas, share ideas and develop collaborative approaches to solving critical problems. Saturday and Sunday will offer opportunities to hear about a wide range of subjects, interact with local and national experts, and learn new skills important to building resilient communities.
And yes, if it is Bioneers, there will be music, poetry, dance and celebration! We must enjoy the work that we are doing and celebrate the visions we have for the future.
We hope that you find your experience at Bioneers to be enriching and motivational. In a resilient community there is a place for all of us. Together we can do great things.
For the Great Lakes Bioneers Chicago Planning Team and Board of Directors,
Pam and Lan Richart Eco-Justice Collaborative
Welcome, Bioneers!
Table of Contents
Visit www.bioneerschicago.org for more details
4
ABOUT GREAT LAKES BIONEERS AND ACKNOWLEDGEM
ENTS
Great Lakes Bioneers Chicago (GLBC) is a local, self-organized and self-funded National Bioneers affiliate. The 2013 Great Lakes Bioneers conference is a Bioneers Network Event offering a leading-edge forum where participants can see tomorrow today: a future environment of hope. As part of an on-going movement, we host an annual gathering, bringing together social and scientific innovators who are focusing on breakthrough solutions inspired by nature and human ingenuity. These visionaries already are creating the healthy, diverse, equitable and beautiful world we want to live in – our legacy for future generations and the web of life on which we depend.
GLBC’s mission is to promote sustainable community that fosters life-giving relationships, nurtures connections, and celebrates solutions for restoring and healing Earth’s communities.
We do this through a variety of strategies including:
• Educating the community on innovative solutions.
• Offering a systemic framework, i.e. a way of “connecting the dots” that is holistic, systemic, and multi-disciplinary.
• Linking individuals and networks in order to foster connection, cross-pollination, and collaboration of people and ideas, all focused on positive change.
• Advocating for opportunities to heal and restore our damaged and depleted community.
• Being an oasis of hope that sparks mass creativity and engagement.
About Great Lakes Bioneers
AcknowledgementsCore Planning TeamPam RichartCarolina CifuentesStephanie LeiteLan RichartElizabeth WenscottJulie Peterson
OutreachCarolina Cifuentes, ChairPatricia DiamondJulie PetersonLauren BlockBrock JanikowskiChristine WellmanMarina SantaellaBeth Carleton Noemi Kopp-Tanaka
ProgramPam Richart, ChairJulie PetersonAmy Coffman PhillipsNance Klehm
Noemi Kopp-TanakaStephanie LeiteTim MangarCarolina CifuentesLauren BlockBlake DavisLan RichartBrock Janikowski
MarketingStephanie Leite, ChairCarolina CifuentesPam Richart
Fundraising and LogisticsLan RichartPam RichartPaul Dickenson
FoodJulia GarfieldLan RichartPam Richart
VolunteerElizabeth Wenscott, Chair
ConsultantsIsabel Schechter, Attention to Detail Event Productions
Sas Stark
Special Thanks to Roosevelt University Staff
Michael Bryson, Sustainable Studies Program
Bridget Collier, Student AffairsRobert Firszt, Campus Planning and Operations
Susan Lamparter, Instructional Technology and Multi-Media Services
Paul Matthews, Campus Planning and Operations
Kathleen Mordecai, CateringCarol Pyron, Administrative Services
Roosevelt University, host of this year’s gathering, is an urban, independent university committed to student success, academic quality, and social justice.
5
OUR PARTNERS
Our Partners
Eco-Justice Collaborative (EJC) is serving as lead organizer for this year’s event. EJC advocates for a future based on sufficiency and a respect and care for all who inhabit this planet.
Peace Productions, an Illinois non-profit, is serving as fiscal sponsor. This organization is dedicated to making films that speak to the injustices of the human condition.
The Pierce Family Foundation’s primary focus is on non-profits working in housing and homelessness. Principals of the foundation believe in the core mission of Bioneers and are helping underwrite this event.
thank you
GREAT LAKES BIONEERS CHICAGOfor bringing the best and the brightest together.
Let’s have a great weekend.
6
EVENT INFORMATION
Event InformationFriday Evening Reception with Dr. Sandra Steingraber 5:00 PM to 6:00 PM
Join us in the historic Fainman Lounge as we enjoy gourmet appetizers, wine, beer and non-alcoholic beverages. Listen to pianist Rhapsody Snyder and talk with our keynote speakers, including Dr. Sandra Steingraber. Socialize with friends and colleagues, then move to Congress Lounge, where Dr. Steingraber will give her kenyote address.
Tickets for the reception/keynote or keynote only are available at the registration desk:
Reception / keynote address: $30.00 Keynote address only: $15.00
Sunday Breakfast with Albert Bates and John Michael Greer 7:30 AM to 8:45 AM
This is your chance to meet two of our keynotes in an informal setting and enjoy a healthy and scrumptious breakfast. Albert Bates, author and Director of the Global Village Institute for Appropriate Technology and John Michael Greer, author and scholar of ecological history and human ecology, will join us in the historic Spertus Lounge. This is a unique opportunity to converse with two nationally-renowned experts about important issues of our time.
Please note that this is a separately ticketed event. Tickets are available at the registration desk for $25.00.
Lend your Talents and Make a Statement Bioneers Chicago participants are invited to contribute to a “No Fracking” banner on the sun deck, outside Fainman Lounge. We’ll unveil this work of art on Sunday at our afternoon celebration in Congress Lounge, which begins at 5:30 pm. Dan Godston, Director, the Borderbend Arts Collective, will lead us in a project that will have utility beyond Bioneers. Dan teaches and lives in Chicago, and is the author of numerous articles that have appeared in Teachers & Writers Magazine, Teaching Artist Journal, and The English Record; and poems that have appeared in Chase Park, After Hours Drunken Boat, The Smoking Poet, and other print publications and online journals.
The Borderbend Arts Collective is a 501(c)(3) organization whose mission is to promote the arts by giving artists opportunities to collaborate and show their work to a variety of audiences.
Close Your Waste Loop Please help us keep our event space and common areas free from debris. You’ll notice there are recycling bins placed at strategic locations throughout the campus for your convenience.
Our lunches will be served on china, and any other compostable materials used for refreshments during the day will be composted on site. Roosevelt University grinds and dehydrates its waste on site. Each week, approximately 1,000 pounds of this partially-dehydrated pulp is picked up by the Resource Center, who grinds the matter down further, adds wood shavings and other carbon-rich materials, and then lets it decompose. When finished, the composted material is delivered back to the Wabash Building and Schaumburg Campus garden sites so Roosevelt can close its own sustainability loop. _________________________________________
Social MediaDon’t forget to share your photos and comments about the event • Our Twitter hashtag is: #chibioneers • For the GLBC Facebook page go to: www.facebook.com/ChicagoBioneers
_________________________________________
Finding your wayOur conference takes place in two general areas of Roosevelt University’s Loop campus. Directional signs and volunteers will be on-site to assist.
Historic Auditorium Building Enter at 430 S. Michigan Avenue • First Floor - Registration and AUD 178 • Second Floor - Reception, Congress Lounge, Exhibitor’s Area and Bookstore • Third Floor - Friday Lunch and volunteer room
Gold LEED Wabash BuildingEnter at 425 S. Wabash Avenue and connect via 2nd floor of Auditorium Building • Second Floor - Cafeteria, Elevators to classroom floors • Floors 3 through 11 - Workshop and Intensive Classrooms
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EVENT INFORMATION
NOTE: Registration is in the Auditorium Building. If you enter the campus from Wabash, a volunteer will direct you back outside and around the corner to the Michigan Avenue Entrance.
See pages 17, 18 and 19 for a detailed maps.
Information/EmergencyIf you have any questions or require assistance, please come to the registration desk located on the first floor of the Auditorium Building.
For immediate emergency assistance dial 911.
Set Your Clocks Back! Daylight savings ends on Sunday, November 3rd, 2013 at 2 a.m. So what does this mean for all of you Bioneers? Set your clocks BACK one hour when you go to bed, and you will arrive on time and fully-refreshed on Sunday morning!
_________________________________________
FoodOur food is being prepared and served by the staff of Roosevelt University. All meals offer vegetarian, vegan and gluten-free options and, where possible, are locally sourced and organic. A limited number of meal tickets have been reserved for those who did not register in advance and can be purchased at the registration desk.
Friday Lunch Enjoy choice of tacos (blackened tilapia; crimini mushroom and poblano peppers and roasted tomato pico de gallo) with shredded napa cabbage and queso fresco on the side. Includes grilled corn salad; homemade tortilla chips with salsa; and mini cinnamon churros. Lunch will be served on china plates and linen table cloths. Enjoy time to network with peers. Room 320.
Saturday Lunch Build your own sliders (vegan & pulled chicken). Includes country-style mac and cheese; candied pecan and fresh apple salad with cheese crumbles (green goddess dressing on the side)’ and fruit salad. Catered in Cafeteria.
Sunday Lunch Build-your-own salad and sandwich bar, with assorted baked breads, hearty grilled vegetables (including large portabellas), and turkey and tuna salad, with assorted mixed greens and vegetables,
provolone cheese, and pesto mayo, hummus, yellow mustard and choice of salad dressings. Includes homemade kettle chips and assorted fresh-baked cookies. Catered in Cafeteria.
Refreshments There is a refreshment station on the 2nd floor in Fainman Lounge. Please help yourself to water, coffee and tea throughout the day.
_________________________________________
ParkingRoosevelt University does not own a parking structure or lot at the Chicago Campus. Your best bet is public transit, but if you must drive there are several options within close proximity of the University.
Park One 434 S. WabashParking Validation from Roosevelt University for these rates is required and can be provided from the security post at either the Auditorium or Wabash entrance.Time Rate1 hour or less $8.001 to 2 hours $10.002 hours to midnight $14.00Evening after 4pm $8.00
Park One 525 S. WabashParking Validation from Roosevelt University for these rates is required and can be provided from the security post at either the Auditorium or Wabash entrance.Time Rate1 hour or less $6.001 to 2 hours $8.002 to 4 hours $11.004 hours to midnight $12.00Evening after 4pm $8.00
Other lots are at the following locations (rates are listed on our website: http://bioneerschicago.org): Grant Park Garage 325 S. Michigan Ave. Loop Auto Parks 524 S. Wabash Millennium Park Garage 5 S. Columbus Drive
Event Information
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9 am
8 am
12 pm
GROUP EVENTS INTERACTIVE WORKSHOPS
10:00 AM – 12:30 PM
SHELTER – Interactive WorkshopFEATURING:
Colin Rolfing, HOKJamie Ponce, Chicago City Director,
C40 Cities Climate Leadership GroupJoseph Clair, IIT
Brian Dolan, Living Building ChallengeJoel Freehling, Shaw Environmental
and InfrastructureAmy Coffman Phillips,
The B-Collaborative, ModeratorWabash Building 317
WASTE – Interactive WorkshopFEATURING:
Elise Zelechowski, Rebuilding ExchangeJohn Edel, The Plant
Nance Klehm, Social EcologiesMichael Repkin, Executive Director,
Urban Habitat ChicagoJohn Michael Greer, Keynote
Naomi Walker, National Engagement Coordinator, ITVS, Moderator
Wabash Building 418
ENERGY – Interactive WorkshopFEATURING:
Nathan Kipnis, Nathan Kipnis Architects, Inc. Lisa Medearis, Sierra ClubMike Johnson, Greenpeace
Lisa Albrecht, Solar Service Inc. / Mike Nowak ShowKim Wasserman, 2013 Goldman Prize winner
Albert Bates, KeynoteKaty Hogan, Live from the Heartland, Moderator
Auditorium 17812:30 PM – 2:00 PM
LUNCH / NETWORKINGAuditorium Building 320
10 am
FRIDAY SCHEDULE
8
Friday Schedule
2 pm
7:30 AM – 8:15 AMREGISTRATION AND
CONTINENTAL BREAKFASTFainman Lounge
8:15 AM – 8:30 AMOPENING AND WELCOME
Bill Buchholtz, Playing from Spirit;Dr. Douglas Knerr, Executive Vice President and
University Provost and Professor of History; Pam and Lan Richart, Eco-Justice Collaborative
Congress Lounge
8:30 AM – 9:30 AMKEYNOTE ADDRESS
Professor David Orr, Chair of the Environmental Studies Program at Oberlin College
Congress Lounge
9:30 AM – 10:00 AMBREAK
4:30 PM – 5:00 PMBREAK
5:00 PM – 6:00 PMRECEPTION
Meet this year’s keynotes and connect with peersEnjoy Rhapsody Snyder at the piano, with music
ranging from classical, jazz to rockFainman Lounge
6:00 PM – 7:00 PMKeynote Address, Dr. Sandra Steingraber
Acclaimed Author and EcologistCongress Lounge
7:00 PM – 8:00 PMBook Signing
Fainman Lounge
GROUP EVENTS INTERACTIVE WORKSHOPS
4 pm
5 pm
6 pm
2 pm2:00 PM – 4:30 PM
FOOD – Interactive WorkshopFEATURING:
Wes King, Illinois Stewardship AllianceMichelle Hickey, The Resiliency Institute
Blake Davis, IIT / The PlantOrrin Williams, Center for Urban Transformation
Gunther Hauk, KeynoteMonica Eng, WBEZ, Moderator
Wabash Building 317
WATER – Interactive WorkshopFEATURING:
Emily Carroll, Food and Water WatchJim Patchett, Conservation Design Forum
Debra Shore, Commissioner, Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago
Karen Kabbes, Kabbes EngineeringSandra Steingraber, Keynote
Mike Nowak, Mike Nowak Show, ModeratorWabash Building 418
COMMUNITY RESILIENCE –Interactive Workshop
FEATURING:Naomi Davis, Blacks in Green
Karen Weigert, Chief Sustainability Officer, ChicagoDoug Farr, Farr Associates
Martha Boyd, Angelic Organics Learning CenterDavid Orr, Keynote
Don Washington, The Mayor Tutorial, ModeratorAuditorium 178
7 pm
Friday ScheduleFRIDAY SCHEDULE
9
11 am
10 am
12 pm
2 pm
1 pm
9:00 AM – 9:15 AMOpening and Welcome
Bill Buchholtz, Playing from Spirit;Michael Bryson, Sustainability Studies
Program Director;Pam and Lan Richart, Eco-Justice Collaborative
Congress Lounge
9:15 AM – 9:30 AMAlex Yoffe and the Art of Javanese Gamelan
Congress Lounge
9:30 AM – 10:30 AMKeynote Address, Albert Bates
Global Village Institute for Appropriate TechnologyCongress Lounge
10:30 AM – 11:30 AMKeynote Address, John Michael Greer
Author and VisionaryCongress Lounge
11:30 AM – 12:00 PMBook Signing
Fainman Lounge
12:00 PM – 1:00 PMLUNCHCafeteria
1:00 PM – 1:45 PMReverend Billy TalenChurch of Stop Shopping
Congress Lounge
1:45 PM – 2:00 PMBREAK
GROUP EVENTS BREAKOUTS
SATURDAY SCHEDULE
10
Saturday Schedule
2:00 PM – 3:30 PM
Workshop: Using Creative Methods of Non- Violent Direct Action as a Tool for Change
Kathy Kelly, Voices for Creative Non-ViolenceRev. Billy Talen, Church of Stop Shopping
Kelly Mitchell, GreenpeaceLan Richart, Eco-Justice Collaborative, Moderator
Wabash Building 1016
Workshop: Workplace DemocracyKathleen Duffy, Board Member,
Center for Workplace DemocracyDennis Kelleher, Executive Director,
Center for Workplace DemocracyWabash Building 612
Workshop: Voices from the Frontlines: Extreme Energy Expansion andAlternatives to Hydraulic
Fracturing & Silica Sand Mining in IllinoisAngie Viands, Rising Tide
Tabitha Tripp, Southern Illinoisans Against Fracturing Our Environment
Bill Rau, Professor Emeritus, Illinois State UniversityTerry Evans, Terry Evans Photography
Wabash Building 1111
9 am
5 pm
4 pm
3 pm
GROUP EVENTS BREAKOUTS2 pm 2:00 PM – 3:30 PM CONTINUED
The Great Reskilling: The ABC’s of Time Banking – An Alternative Economics Practice
Jami Becker, Chicago Time ExchangeLara Openheimer, Chicago Time Exchange
Wabash Building 611
The Great Reskilling: Sustainable Local FuelBlake Davis, IIT, The Plant
The Power of Mushrooms and How to Grow ThemRachel Swenie, The Plant
Wabash Building 418
National Bioneers Plenaries 100% Clean Energy For and By the People
Re-imagining Citizenship, Democracy and NatureWabash Building 911
3:45 PM – 5:15 PM
Workshop: Dismantling Barriers to Ecological Plans, Places and Buildings
Doug Farr, Farr AssociatesWabash Building 1111
Workshop: Biking to Soccer Practice, Groceries and the Hair Salon: What’s the Real Potential
for Replacing Car Trips in the MidwestRandy Neufeld, SCARM Cycling Fund
Jane Blew Healy, Cycling advoateRobert Hoell, Cycling advocate
Wabash Building 1016
Workshop: Working the Cosmos Underfoot: Bioremediation Strategies for Our Cities
Nance Klehm, Social EcologiesWabash Building 611
The Great Reskilling: Tai Chi – Health, Meditation and Self-Defense
Elizabeth Wenscott, Tai Chi Center of ChicagoThe Permaculture Toolbox: Sensible
Strategies for Senseless TimesWilliam Faith, Chicagoland Permaculture Guild
Wabash Building 418
The Great Reskilling: You Don’t Have to Be White Pete Leki, Riverbank Neighbors
Wabash Building 612
Strategy Session: Take Action to Protect Ilinois from Fracking & Silica Sand Mining
Kelvin Ho, Chicago 350.org, ModeratorAngie Viands, Rising Tide
Tabitha Tripp, Southern Illinoisans Against Fracturing Our Environment
Bill Rau, Professor Emeritus, Illinois State UniversityTerry Evans, Terry Evans Photography
Wabash Building 911
3:30 PM – 3:45 PMBREAK
Saturday ScheduleSATURDAY SCHEDULE
11
5:15 PM – 5:30 PMBREAK
5:30 PM – 6:00 PMClosing: Sing for the ClimateLed by Wellington Avenue UCC’s Peace and Justice choral group.
Will be filmed and posted on singfortheclimate.comAimee Bass and SheBoom –
Chicago’s all-woman percussion ensembleCongress Lounge
CONTINUED
8 am
1 pm
11 am
10 am
9 am
12 am
GROUP EVENTS BREAKOUTS
2 pm
12
SUNDAY SCHEDULE
Sunday Schedule
7:30 AM – 8:45 AMBreakfast with Keynotes Albert Bates
and John Michael GreerSeparately ticketed event (see page 6)
Spertus Lounge
9:00 AM – 9:15 AMOpening and Welcome
Bill Buchholtz, Playing from Spirit;Paul Matthews, Assistant Vice President of
Campus Planning and Operations; Pam and Lan Richart, Eco-Justice Collaborative
Congress Lounge
9:15 AM – 9:30 AMInternational Capoeira Angola Foundation
Congress Lounge
9:30 AM – 10:30 AMKeynote Address, Ameena Matthews
Cure Violence and The InterruptersCongress Lounge
10:30 AM – 11:30 AMKeynote Address, Gunther HaukSpikenard Farm Honeybee Sanctuary
Congress Lounge
11:30 AM – 12:00 PMBook Signing
Fainman Lounge
12:00 PM – 1:00 PMLUNCHCafeteria
1:00 PM – 2:30 PM
Workshop: How to Design a Food ForestMichelle Hickey, The Resiliency Institute
Jodi Trendler, The Resiliency InstituteWabash Building 1016
Workshop: Keystone is Just the Tip of the Iceberg: Voices from the Tar Sands Movement
from Alberta to the Midwest and BeyondDebra Michaud, Tar Sands Free Midwest
Earl Hatley, Cherokee activist and Grand River Keeper MacDonald Stainsby, author and activist
Wabash Building 1111
Workshop: Renewable Energy for Resilient Communities
Lisa Albrecht, Solar ServiceNathan Kipnis, AIA, LEED BD+C,
Kipnis Architecture + PlanningWabash Building 612
The Great Reskilling: Change Your Mind – Change the World
Gen Kelsang Dorje, Vajrayana Kadampa Buddhist CenterHealthy Food Demo: Quick, Easy & On the Go!
Elena Marre, Founder, The Kids’Table, LLCWabash Building 611
National Bioneers Plenaries The Biomimicry Network Effect: What Will We Solve Together?
Choosing LifeWabash Building 911
5 pm
4 pm
3 pm
GROUP EVENTS BREAKOUTS2 pm
4:15 PM – 4:30 PMBREAK
2:45 PM – 4:15 PM
Workshop: Interface – A Business Model for the Future
Steve Arbaugh, Vice President Creative Strategy & Planning at Interface America
Wabash Building 611
Workshop: Community Resiliency Inspired by Nature
Amy Coffman-Phillips, The B-CollaborativeWabash Building 1016
Workshop: It’s Way Past Time to Get Off the Coal Train
Traci Barkley, Prairie Rivers NetworkAmanda Kass, The Center for Tax and
Budget AccountabilityWabash Building 1111
The Great Reskilling: So You Want to Be a Beekeeper: What You Need to KnowKeynote Speaker Gunter Hauk, Spikenard
Farm Honeybee SanctuaryWabash Building 612
Strategy Session: Building a Movement to Stop the Refining and Distribution of Tar
Sands in the MidwestDebra Michaud, Rainforest Action Network
Earl Hatley, Cherokee activist and Grand River KeeperMacDonald Stainsby, author and activist
Wabash Building 911
2:30 PM – 2:45 PMBREAK
4:30 PM – 5:15 PMTRIBUTE TO BOB RUSSELL
Great Lakes Bioneers, Traverse City
MUSICAL CELEBRATION! Bossa Tres, a Chicago-based Brazilian group
that plays a wide repertory ranging from traditional Brazilian music styles, including samba, samba-reggae
and baião; as well as jazz and bossa nova.Congress Lounge
Sunday Schedule
13
SUNDAY SCHEDULE
14
PROGRAM INFO – FRIDAY
Program Info – Friday
OPENINGNative Flute
William BuchholtzWelcome
Dr. Douglas Knerr Executive Vice President University Provost and
Professor of HistoryWelcome
Pam and Lan Richart Eco-Justice Collaborative
William Buchholtz, Playing from Spirit. Bill educates people about the history, spiritual significance, culture, and traditions of the Native flute and is widely known and respected in the inter-faith community in Chicago.Dr. Douglas Knerr, Executive Vice President and University Provost Dr. Knerr has taught and held key administrative positions for Roosevelt in Chicago, Schaumburg and Online since 1998. He was appointed executive vice president and university provost of Roosevelt University, this past spring.Pam and Lan Richart, Eco-Justice Collaborative (EJC). EJC works through education, advocacy and collaboration to address issues of eco-justice and environmental sustainability, bringing people together to work for a healthy planet. EJC is lead organizer for this year’s conference.
8:15 to8:30 amCongress Lounge
KEYNOTE ADDRESSResilience in a
Black Swan WorldProfessor David Orr
Increasingly, we live in a black swan world, where unexpected events such as the collapse of financial markets, a changing climate and threats to public safety and human health threaten to upend the fragile and vulnerable systems that underpin our society. In this talk, Professor Orr will use case studies such as the Oberlin Project to explore how we can design communities, regions and even nations to improve their resiliency in the face of “Black Swan” events.
8:30 to9:30 pmCongress Lounge
PARTICIPATORY WORKSHOPSHELTER
Colin Rolfing; Jamie Ponce Joseph Clair; Brian Dolan
Joel Freehling; andAmy Coffman Phillips, Moderator
Most of our buildings were built at a time when fossil fuels were plentiful and cheap. But today’s challenges of climate change and resource limits mandate a new way of thinking and acting. Can we create dwellings that generate their own energy, process their own waste, grow their own food and, at the same time, are affordable? If so, what are the barriers that keep us from achieving these goals, and how might we overcome them?
10:00 to12:30 pmWB 317
PARTICIPATORY WORKSHOPWASTE
Elise Zelechowski; John EdelNance Klehm; Michael Repkin
John Michael Greer; andNaomi Walker, Moderator
We are the only species that generates waste as a byproduct that either can’t be – or just isn’t- turned into a resource. We are dumping industrial wastes into our waterways; incinerating our waste streams, sending toxic pollution into our air; and burying it in landfills located near communities of color. We are filling in wetlands where pollution of groundwater is a concern. What actions can we take to reduce our waste streams, and protect our communities and environment, implementing closed loop systems that turn our waste streams into resources?
10:00 to12:30 pmWB 418
PARTICIPATORY WORKSHOPENERGY
Nathan Kipnis; Lisa Medearis Mike Johnson; Lisa Albrecht
Kim Wasserman; Albert Bates and Katy Hogan, Moderator
Coal, oil, and gas predominated the 20th century as sources of fuel, and allowed human productivity to increase exponentially. Yet these same resources are now polluting the atmosphere and destroying our planet, on which we depend for human survival. The transition away from fossil fuels is not one of convenience, but one of moral and ecological necessity. What are the barriers to moving towards a reliance on clean, safe, renewable energy sources? What steps should we take to substantially reduce our dependence on fossil fuels, before it is too late?
10:00 to12:30 pmAUD 178
15
PROGRAM INFO – FRIDAY
Program Info – Friday
PARTICIPATORY WORKSHOPFOOD
Wes King; Michelle HickeyBlake Davis; Orrin Williams
Gunther Hauk; andMonica Eng, Moderator
Food nourishes and sustains us. It connects the urban to the rural, both locally and globally. Yet challenges mount: soil health, fuel & fertilizer availability, pollution, a growing population (eating more meat), inter-connected global markets, climate change, equity/food security and food safety. How will the Chicago region feed itself? What efforts are under way and what steps are necessary to create a food system in nature’s image, accessible to all? What are the obstacles to broadening and accelerating the Food Movement?
2:00 to4:30 pmWB 317
PARTICIPATORY WORKSHOPWATER
Emily Carroll; Jim PatchettDebra Shore; Karen Kabbes
Sandra Steingraber; andMike Nowak, Moderator
A changing climate has taxed Chicago’s infrastructure with record floods. During increasingly more frequent record rains, the locks and sluice gates are opened, allowing millions of gallons of raw and partially treated waste to flow into Lake Michigan, the region’s water supply for 7 million people. Meanwhile, toxic wastes are being dumped into Lake Michigan each day, and budget crises threaten the privatization of our most precious commodity. What actions can be taken to ensure that all people have access to affordable, clean water to meet their basic needs, and governments are held accountable by their residents to manage essential resources sustainably?
2:00 to4:30 pmWB 418
PARTICIPATORY WORKSHOPCOMMUNITY RESILIENCENaomi Davis; Karen Weigert
Doug Farr; Martha BoydDavid Orr; and
Don Washington, Moderator
Community resilience is a measure of the sustained ability of a community to use available resources and to respond to, withstand, and recover from adverse situations. What actions should be taken to help our communities adapt to global warming, peak oil and the confounding influence of global-scale resource depletion, pollution and continued economic upheavals? What do we need to do to ensure excessive poverty and excessive wealth are outside the community norm, and people live with the grace-filled bounty of this planet rather than destroying it?
2:00 to4:30 pmAUD 178
Learn about the manifold ecological and human health hazards posed by oil and gas extraction via hydraulic fracturing, which uses high volumes of water, sand and chemicals to shatter bedrock deep below the earth’s surface. Then hear about the rise of a new grassroots abolitionist movement in Illinois – recently opened to this controversial practice by the passage of permissive legislation – and explain why Steingraber was thrown out of the Illinois statehouse last May.
6:00 to7:00 pmCongress Lounge
KEYNOTE ADDRESSThe New Abolitionists
of Illinois and their Fight Against Fracking
Dr. Sandra Steingraber
RECEPTIONMeet many of this year’s keynotes
Connect with peers
Enjoy Rhapsody Snyder at the piano, with music ranging from
classical, jazz to rock
Friday Evening Reception includes great food, wine and beer. Refer to the “Event Information” section on page 6 for more information.Rhapsody Snyder plays in numerous bands and ensembles, ranging from classical to rock in venues such as House of Blues Chicago, The Metro and Lincoln Hall. She also has played on WBEZ’s Live from Studio 10 with her band, The Lifeline. As a pianist and harpist, Rhapsody has made it her artistic mission to bridge the gap between seemingly differing mediums through improvisational collaboration between dancers, visual artists and writers.
5:00 to6:00 pmFainman Lounge
714 S. Dearborn St. • Chicago, IL 60605 • 312.922. 2104
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PROGRAM INFO – FRIDAY
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Translator
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Private Lessons
Carolina Cifuentes [email protected]
LinkedIn.com/in/carolinacifuenteschicago
Member of the Chicago Time Exchange
Building community via
Spanish language services
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PROGRAM INFO – SATURDAY
OPENINGNative Flute
William BuchholtzWelcome
Michael Bryson Sustainability Studies Program Director, Associate Professor
of Humanities and Sustainability Studies
Welcome Pam and Lan Richart
Eco-Justice Collaborative
William Buchholtz, Playing from Spirit. Bill educates people about the history, spiritual significance, culture, and traditions of the Native flute and is widely known and respected in the inter-faith community in Chicago.Michael Bryson, Sustainability Studies Program Director, co-founded Roosevelt’s Sustainability Studies program – the first of its kind in the Chicago region. As a key leader of Roosevelt’s Sustainability Initiative, Mike teaches interdisciplinary programs and specializes in designing field study opportunities for his students.Pam and Lan Richart, Eco-Justice Collaborative (EJC). EJC works through education, advocacy and collaboration to address issues of eco-justice and environmental sustainability, bringing people together to work for a healthy planet. EJC is lead organizer for this year’s conference.
9:00 to9:15 amCongressLounge
Program Info – Saturday
KEYNOTE ADDRESSBeyond the Same Old ‘New’ Ideas
John Michael Greer
One of the most pervasive challenges we face in moving toward a saner relationship between natural systems and human communities is the way that a set of repeatedly failed ideas about the future keep being recycled in the popular imagination. By recognizing these stereotyped “new ideas” for what they are – business as usual under another label – we can step past some of today’s least useful controversies and engage creatively with the emerging de-industrial future.
10:30 11:30 amCongressLounge
Alex Yoffe is a Chicago-based composer and multi-instrumentalist. Composing both acoustic and electroacoustic music, Yoffe has written for solo, chamber, and large ensembles. Alex also is the sole member of Bode Radio, an electroacoustic mess of gamelan-induced clarinets interwoven with melodious guitars and fresh beats, and has collaborated with several video artists to compose music for independent films.
9:15 to9:30 amCongressLounge
KEYNOTE ADDRESSCool! – Ecovillage
Responses to Climate Change
Albert Bates
Overpopulation, climate change, peak net energy, limits to growth and economic malaise are auguring a crisis in human civilization and a search for alternatives. But there are flourishing communities all over the world that have a high degree of self-determination and diversity in culture, “green enterprise” and built environments. How might these communities, or self-described “ecovillages”, rebalance human ecosystems with in-fashioned patterns of cool living?
9:30 10:30 amCongressLounge
“SERMON”Reverend Billy Talen
Hear what this secular preacher, actor and activist has to say about the intersection of consumerism: our addiction to fossil fuels; and climate change, in this wildly engaging, multi-media performance.
1:00 to1:45 pmCongressLounge
CULTURAL PERFORMANCEThe Art of Javanese
GamelanAlex Yoffe
21Peace Productions • 2500 North Lakeview Avenue, Suite 2401 • Chicago, IL 60614
[email protected] • www.peaceproductions.org • 773.935.9775
DocumentariesTo Turn a Blind EyeThe Arc of HistoryWar on the FamilyEyes Wide OpenToo Flawed to FixIn a Time of SiegePeace Like a River
In Solidarity with Bioneers!Founded as an Illinois Not-for-Profit 501(c)3 Corporation, Peace Productions is dedicated to making films that speak to the injustices of the human condition.
We are proud of our history of giving voice to those marginalized and victimized by creating films decrying racism, violence against women, nuclear proliferation, the death penalty, the war in Iraq and the war on drugs, among others.
Interested in Purchasing Our Films?Our library of films are available for individual purchase from Amazon.com and institutional purchase from Peace Productions. Contact Jackie by phone or email.
PROGRAM INFO – SATURDAY
Program Info – Saturday
2:00 to3:30 pmWB 1111
2:00 to3:30 pmWB 1016
2:00 to3:30 pmWB 612
WORKSHOPCreative Methods of Non-Violent Direct Action As
Tools for ChangeKathy Kelly; Rev. Billy; Kelly Mitchell
Debbie Southorn; Lan Richart
WORKSHOPVoices from the Frontlines:
Extreme Energy and Alternatives to Hydraulic
Fracturing & Silica Sand MiningTabitha Tripp; Terry Evans;
Bill Rau; Angie Viands
WORKSHOPWorkplace Democracy
Dennis KelleherKathleen Duffy
Illinois is caught in the crosshairs of extreme energy expansion with oil and gas companies leasing land in central and southern Illinois and the uptick in mining for silica sand. Not even our precious natural areas are immune to this threat with a sand mine next to Starved Rock State Park and the Shawnee National Forest vulnerable to hydraulic fracturing. Learn about local threats from those on the frontlines, and how people are working to protect their communities.
We live in a representative democracy. We spend more than 50% of our time awake at work. Why not more democracy at work! A business owned by the employees and/or the community can be an integral part of a strong local economy. Cooperative business principals encourage a company to make decisions based not only on rates of growth and profit, but also on the effect on employees, owners, customers and the surrounding community of stakeholders.
Real change will not come easily from within the systems that hold tightly to the status quo. But how important is direct action in today’s social-political context? Is broader public acceptance and participation possible? What are some practical considerations in mounting an effective action? Learn about the role non-violent direct action can play in today’s social struggles and be encouraged to participate when opportunities arise.
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PROGRAM INFO – SATURDAY
Program Info – Saturday
2:45 to3:30 pmWB 418
3:45 to5:15 pmWB 1111
3:45 to5:15 pmWB 1016
2:00 to3:30 pmWB 911
2:00 to3:30 pmWB 611
2:00 to2:45 pmWB 418
FILM SCREENINGNational Bioneers Plenaries
October 18 through 20, 2013
WORKSHOPDismantling Barriers to
Ecological Plans, Places and Buildings
Doug Farr
WORKSHOPBiking to Soccer Practice,
Groceries and the Hair Salon: What’s the Real
Potential for Replacing Car Trips in the Midwest?
Randy Neufeld; Robert HoelJane Blew Healy
SKILL SHAREThe Power of Mushrooms and How to Grow Them
Rachel Swenie
SKILL SHARESustainable Local Fuel
Blake Davis
100% Clean Energy For and By the People Billy Parish, change-maker turned entrepreneur, shows how we can shift from fossil fuels to a world 100% powered by clean energy, and we can do it in a way that makes all of us richer, healthier and happier. Re-imagining Citizenship, Democracy and Nature Danny Glover shares the long view of how change happens, and how we are called upon to reclaim our rights and responsibilities as citizens. He scans the convergence of the movements to restore justice and nature.
This fast interactive session will immerse you in cutting edge ecological design practice and engage you in how to accelerate its adoption. Doug Farr seeks feedback on how to overcome barriers to cutting edge ecological design at three scales: the plan, the place and the building. Three Peccha Kuchas will highlight implementation barriers. Each will be followed by 15-20 minutes of quick discussion. Get inspired and contribute your insights!
Chicago and the region are seeing the growth of protected bike lanes and bike share. But how do we increase cycling use and political support in the awkward years while a safer more complete network is being built out? We’ll explore practical tools, products and strategies for changing behavior in urban, suburban and small town communities now, in order to build broader support for future reallocation of street space. This promises to be a fun and mind-opening workshop.
This session will give you the inspiration, and starting skills to grow mushrooms and become part of the movement to bring this DIY, local, highly nutritious food into your diet and learn about other uses such as soil detoxification.
This workshop will cover opportunities to salvage and grow sustainable fuel for stationary engines (power generation) and space heating. We will examine high efficiency wood burning equipment, and how to develop and maintain a reliable, sustainable fuel source for them. We will look at using brownfields to grow energy crops locally. And we will investigate the opportunities for coppicing with hybrid poplars (rapid tree growing) and growing oil plants for engine fuels.
SKILL SHAREThe ABCs of Time Banking:
An Alternative Economics Practice
Jami BeckaLara Oppenheimer
A time bank is a web-based social networking skill pool where the currency is time and everybody’s time is equal. There are 276 time banks active in the US, with creative exchange of services in such fields as health care, home maintenance, food production and the arts. Learn about the relationship between natural economies of abundance and human sharing economies. Share exercises to identify our gifts and needs and offer ways to connect to the Chicago Time Exchange!
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PROGRAM INFO – SATURDAY
Program Info – Saturday
CLOSING“Sing for the Climate”
We need your voices! Led by Wellington Avenue UCC’s Peace and Justice choral group, “Sing
for the Climate” will be filmed and then posted on the international
website of the same name.American Women, African Rhythms
Sheboom
Wellington Avenue UCC’s Peace and Justice Choral Group is led by Rhapsody Snyder and Chris Inserra. They use various musical styles and genres including classical, Latin, gospel, global, traditional and contemporary songs and hymns, to create a thoughtful and inclusive, musically-eclectic experience which builds community among all ages and inspires people to live their faith in action. Sheboom is an all-female drum ensemble playing an energetic mix of music inspired by tradiitonal West African grooves. Sharing their passion for percussion, the “Sheboomers” are: Aimee Bass, Kim DeVore, Donna Donahue, Laila Lee, Corkie Neuhaus and Beth Pestka.
5:30 to6:00 pm Congress Lounge
WORKSHOP Working the Cosmos
Underfoot: Bioremediation Strategies for Our Cities
Nance Klehm
How can we wisely work with living systems to heal and transform polluted and damaged urban lands into safe and fertile places once more? Learn how first responders: microbes, fungi and plants work together and how as humans, we can support their healing the soils of our backyards, vacant lots and public spaces.
3:45 to5:15 pmWB 612
SKILL SHAREYou Don’t Have to be White
Pete Leki
Racial divides plague our society and the movement towards a more healthy, peaceful and sustainable world. This session will assert that rejection of “white” self-identity is a first step toward building multi-racial trust and understanding. It will conclude, with its final assertion, that what is missing in our attempts to deal with the endlessly festering wound of racism, is a healthy relationship to the land in general, and to one place specifically.
3:45 to4:30 pmWB 418
SKILL SHARE Tai Chi – Health, Meditation
and Self-DefenseElizabeth Wenscott
Tai Chi Chuan has its historic origins in ancient Taoist philosophy and longevity practices. Taoism maintains there is no separation between celestial beings (all that is above), earth (all that is below) and humanity. Learn how to better harmonize your internal world with the natural external world around you. Explore how to learn to see yourself returning to a sustainable lifestyle that values and takes into account all strands to the web of life.
4:30 to5:15 pmWB 418
SKILL SHAREThe Permaculture Toolbox:
Sensible Strategies for Senseless Times
William Faith
Urban life in the face of peak energy and climate change can be a daunting prospect, but there is a better path than the one we’re currently on. In this presentation, we will discuss what permaculture is (and isn’t), and how to apply its simple-but-effective solutions to our day-to-day lives by learning to use the right tool for the right job — all from the permaculture toolbox.
3:45 to5:15 pmWB 911
STRATEGY SESSIONTake Action to Protect
Illinois from Fracking & Silica Sand
Kelvin Ho; Tabitha Tripp; Bill Rau Terry Evans; Angie Viands
Come to our action session to meet others who are working to protect people from hydraulic fracturing and frack-sand mining in Illinois. Join us in a brainstorming session designed to generate fresh ideas for fighting extraction and for promoting earth-friendly energy. Leave with tangible steps you can take to join and strengthen these movements in Illinois and to work for clean, renewable energy.
3:45 to5:15 pmWB 611
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Sing for the Climate
SING FOR THE CLIMATE
Do It Now (to the tune of “Bella Ciao” , a song sung by the anti-fascist resistance movement active in Italy between 1943 and 1945)
We need to wake up We need to rise up We need to open our eyes and do it NOW, NOW NOW We need to build a better future And we need to start right now
We’re on a planet That has a problem We’ve got to solve it, get involved and do it NOW, NOW, NOW We need to build a better future And we need to start right now
Make it greener Make it cleaner Make it last, make it fast and do it NOW, NOW, NOW We need to build a better future And we need to start right now
No point in waiting Or hesitating We must get wise, take no more lies and do it NOW,NOW, NOW We need to build a better future And we need to start right now
We need to build a better future And we need to start right now _________________________________________
“Do it Now” is the anthem of the Sing for the Climate Project.
On the 22nd and 23rd of September 2012, 80,000 Belgians sang from 180 town squares for the climate. A month later 725 schools organized a Sing@school, and 300,000 children sang “Do it Now” at the playground. This is how 380,000 people voiced their support for the climate.
In December of 2012 the video was shown at the opening of the last plenary session of the COP18 Climate Talks in Doha, Qatar. While the results of the international talks were disappointing, this song has become an anthem sung across the planet calling for meaningful action on the issue of climate change.
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OPENINGNative Flute
William Buchholtz
Welcome Paul Matthews
Assistant Vice President of Campus Planning and Operations
Pam and Lan Richart
Eco-Justice Collaborative
William Buchholtz, Playing from Spirit. Bill educates people about the history, spiritual significance, culture, and traditions of the Native flute and is widely known and respected in the inter-faith community in Chicago.Paul Matthews, Assistant Vice President of Campus Planning and Operations is a key driver and leader in Environmental Sustainability at Roosevelt University. Recently serving on the Board of Directors for the Illinois Chapter of the U.S. Green Building Council (through 2011). He currently is co-chair of the USGBC-IL Green Schools Higher Education subcommittee.Pam and Lan Richart, Eco-Justice Collaborative (EJC). EJC works through education, advocacy and collaboration to address issues of eco-justice and environmental sustainability, bringing people together to work for a healthy planet. EJC is lead organizer for this year’s conference.
9:00 to9:15 amCongress Lounge
PROGRAM INFO – SUNDAY
Program Info – SundayBREAKFAST
with Albert Bates and John Michael Greer
This is a unique opportunity to converse with two nationally-renowned experts about important issues of our time. See “Event Information” on pages 6 and 7 of this Program Guide.
7:30 to8:45 amSpertus Lounge
CULTURAL PERFORMANCECapoeira Angola
International Capoeria Angola Foundation, Chicago
Capoeira Angola is an African-Brazilian art form with its roots in Bantu traditions, that were carried to Brazil by enslaved Africans. The development of Capoeira into a “dance-fight” burgeoned in Brazil, out of the struggle for liberation by Africans, indigenous Brazilians and other marginalized peoples during the Portuguese colonization. Today, Capoeira Angola continues to be a social tool for resistance and empowerment, through the teaching of community building, social equality, and diaspora studies.
9:15 to9:30 amCongress Lounge
KEYNOTE ADDRESSThe Road Ahead
Gunther Hauk
Gunther will challenge the notion that already there is cause for celebration, since we have gone far astray from what is healthy and sustainable. Seeds for a better future are evident; however, an immense number of obstacles inherent in “our way of life” need to be overcome before we can celebrate. What are the far-reaching changes needed to achieve a healthy, resilient community?
10:30 to11:30 amCongress Lounge
WORKSHOPHow to Design a
Food ForestMichelle Hickey
Jodi Trendler
Community resilience is dependent upon the creation of local, reliable food systems. Food forests fill this critical need. Once these perennial systems are established, minimal resource inputs are required to maintain highly productive, self-sustaining community food sources. In this skill share you will take away the foundational knowledge to begin the food forest or forest garden implementation process for your home, neighborhood or community.
1:00 to2:30 pmWB 1016
KEYNOTE ADDRESSThe First Step Toward
a Resilient City? Cure Its ViolenceAmeena Matthews
Many of Chicago’s neighborhoods are plagued by a persistent cycle of shootings and homicides. Exposure to violence, and its norms, can lead to further community violence. But Cure Violence has been successful in reducing violent altercations, with Ameena Matthews serving as an influential face of the organization. What does Ameena do as a violence interrupter? Hear what it takes each day to make a difference, and learn what we can do to support her work.
9:30 to10:30 amCongress Lounge
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PROGRAM INFO – SUNDAY
Program Info – Sunday
Change the WorldGen Kelsang Dorje
Gain new insight and perspective of how to actualize the changes you want to see in the world by changing your mind through meditation.
1:00 to1:45 pmWB 611
FILM SCREENINGBioneers National PlenariesOctober 18 through 20, 2013
The Biomimicry Network Effect: What Will We Solve Together? Janine Benyus illuminates how the Biomimicry community might collaborate, with nature’s help, on a short list of challenges that just can’t wait, translating the latest findings on biomimicry into an action plan.Choosing Life Joanna Macy, Buddhist scholar and eco-philosopher, says the greatest gift we can give our world is our full presence. As we draw that gift forth from ourselves and each other, we find our courage and clarity.
1:00 to2:30 amWB 911
WORKSHOPInterface: A Business Model for the Future
Steve Arbaugh
Learn how founder Ray Anderson challenged his 21 year-old company to adopt a bold vision for sustainable business, manufacturing and products – one that required new thinking and a new model, globally. There was no roadmap, but Ray’s vision was a compass for his firm’s journey that has influenced others. Learn about the “seven fronts” that have made this company a model for sustainability, including its zero waste, benign emissions, renewable energy, and closed loop initiatives.
2:45 to4:15 pmWB 611
SKILL SHAREHealthy Cooking Demo –
Quick, Easy and On the Go!Elena Marre
Learn how to make a variety of vegetarian and gluten-free dishes that can be made in advance, travel well, hit all the nutritional bases and are sure to please the taste buds! Menu will include Squash Rice & Bean Salad and Quinoa Kale Salad.
1:45 to2:30 pmWB 611
WORKSHOPKeystone Is the Tip of the
Iceberg: Voices from the Tar Sands Movement
Debra Michaud; Earl Hatley and Macdonald Stainsby
While the national environmental movement has spotlighted the Keystone XL pipeline, larger tar sands pipeline projects in the Midwest are moving forward without much notice. With tar sands resisters from around the continent, we will offer an introduction to tar sands from the global to the local. We’ll learn about efforts in Oklahoma to halt tar sands expansion and discuss the upcoming Flanagan South tar sands pipeline slated to begin 200 miles south of Chicago.
1:00 to2:30 pmWB 1111
WORKSHOPRenewable Energy for Resilient Communities
Lisa AlbrechtNathan Kipnis
We need to get off the road trip that keeps rooted to depleting fossil fuels no matter what the cost to our health and environment. It’s time to rethink the way we use energy, what our real needs are, and how we generate it.Explore reduced consumption; efficiency; distribution; and generation of renewable energy in order to reduce carbon emissions; stop environmental damage from extraction; and lessen our dependence on sources of energy outside our region.
1:00 to2:30 pmWB 612
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PROGRAM INFO – SUNDAY
Program Info – Sunday
CLOSINGTribute to Bob Russell, Great Lakes Bioneers,
Traverse CityDave Barrons
Musical CelebrationBossa Tres
Bob Russell was instrumental in helping launch Great Lakes Bioneers Chicago by supporting the Core Group and providing expertise and planning documents. Sadly, he passed away this past summer. Dave Barons, host of Investigating Resilience, a weekly Cable TV show, will give a short tribute to the life of this incredible man. Investigating Resilience was started by Bob to illustrate one or more characteristics of resilience in the Grand Traverse Bay region.Bossa Tres is a Chicago based Brazilian group that can play a wide repertory ranging from traditional Brazilian music styles like samba, frevo, samba-reggae and baião, and Brazilian “Popular music”(MPB), to sounds of jazz and bossa nova.Bossa Tres member Dill Costa also is an amazing dancer. Together they will bring upbeat Brazilian grooves and high energy to the conclusion of the second Great Lakes Chicago Bioneers gathering!
4:30 to5:15 pmCongress Lounge
WORKSHOPCommunity Resilience
Inspired by NatureAmy Coffman Phillips
What would it mean to embed resilience into your community? What changes would you need to make so that you are able to collectively survive and thrive through disturbances, both large and small? Using biomimicry methodology, this seminar will provide an opportunity for you to learn from Nature’s deep principles of resilience, draw parallels between Nature’s systems and human designs, and begin to translate them to the context of restorative, resilient communities.
2:45 to4:15 pmWB 1016
WORKSHOPTime to Get Off the Illinois Coal Train
Traci BarkleyAmanda Kass
From the coal mines to the power plants, coal is the dirtiest way to meet our electricity needs and is largely responsible for global climate change. Explore the impacts that coal has on water, land and communities in Illinois. Learn about the industry’s drain on the state budget, how communities are standing up to protect their health and well-being from coal’s devastating impacts, and how you can support the just transition to a cleaner, renewable-energy future.
2:45 to4:15 pmWB 1111
SKILL SHARESo You Want to be a
Beekeeper: What You Need to Know
Gunter Hauk
Keynote speaker Gunther Hauk will present the most detrimental currently accepted beekeeping practices that undermine the bees’ health and weaken their ability to withstand the onslaught of viruses, bacteria, fungi and parasites. Once you know what NOT to do, you’ll find yourself on track for practices that nurture healthy bee colonies.
2:45 to4:15 pmWB 612
STRATEGY SESSIONBuilding a Movement to Stop the Refining and
Distribution of Tar Sands in the Midwest
Debra Michaud; Earl Hatley and Macdonald Stainsby
Join local activists and our panelists to continue the dialogue on tar sands. Learn more about grassroots and legal strategies currently being used, and join us in brainstorming ways to develop local resistance and a multi-state strategy against the Flanagan South pipeline.
2:45 to4:15 pmWB 911
Visit www.bioneerschicago.org for more details
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PLENARY SPEAKER BIOGRAPHIES AMEENA MATTHEWS’ work as an “interrupter” for Cure Violence was documented in the acclaimed documentary The Interrupters. In this role, she aggressively mediates conflicts, arbitrating between individuals and even physically stepping into the middle of them in
order to prevent their escalation to physical violence. Cure Violence has been extremely successful in reducing violent altercations in some of Chicago’s most dangerous neighborhoods, with Matthews serving as an influential face of the organization nationally and internationally.
ALBERT BATES authored The Biochar Solution, The Post Petroleum Survival Guide, and ten books on energy, environment and history. He co-founded the Global Village Institute for Appropriate Technology and the Global Ecovillage Network, and teaches permaculture and climate
farming at The Farm in Summertown, TN. Other work includes a Palestine peace-through-permaculture project and the Sail Transport Network, moving fair trade goods along coastal routes. In 1980 Albert shared the Right Livelihood Award (considered an “Alternative Nobel”) for his work in preserving indigenous culture.
GUNTHER HAUK has been a teacher, lecturer, author, biodynamic gardener and beekeeper for nearly 40 years. He co-founded the Pfeiffer Center in Chestnut Ridge, NY, where he developed a successful biodynamic part-time training program and taught at Sunbridge College.
Since then, Gunther has given organic beekeeping workshops across the U.S.In 2006 he co-founded Spikenard Farm Honeybee Sanctuary with his wife, Vivian. Working to help save the honeybee is dear to his heart. His book Toward Saving the Honeybee calls for a radical change from current approaches to beekeeping.
JOHN MICHAEL GREER is a scholar of ecological history and an internationally renowned Peak Oil theorist whose blog, “The Archdruid Report,” has become one of the most widely cited online resources dealing with the future of industrial society.
Greer is the author of more than 30 books, including The Wealth of Nature and The Long Descent; is a certified Master Conserver and devoted organic gardener; and has been active in the contemporary nature spirituality movement for more than 25 years.
Tai Chi Chuan has its historic origins based in part on ancient Taoist philosophy and longevity practices. Taoism maintains that there is no separation between celestial beings (all that is above), earth (all that is below) and humanity, known collectively as The Three Treasures.
Join us Saturday Nov. 2, at a Great Lakes Bioneers Chicago skill share, and explore how to see yourself as a modern-day steward, returning to a
sustainable lifestyle that values and takes into account all strands to the web of life.
taichicenter-chicago.com 4043 N. Ravenswood Ave. Suite 228 • 773.396.2653
TAI CHI CHUAN • TAIJIFIT • QIGONG MEDITATION • YOGA • AERIAL YOGA
TA I C H IC E N T E RCHICAGO
SUSTAINABLE RETURNThe return to a natural, sustainable lifestyle
JOIN OUR SKILL SHARE
SAT. OCT 2, 3:45 PM
WABASH BLDG 418
Resilience Inspired by Nature
Learn from Nature to embed resilience into your business or organization with our “BEND, Don’t Break” Workshop. Contact us to learn more!
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PLENARY SPEAKER BIOGRAPHIESSANDRA STEINGRABER, Ph.D. is a cancer survivor and an internationally-recognized authority on the environmental links to cancer and human health.Her highly acclaimed book, Living Downstream: An Ecologist’s Personal
Investigation of Cancer and the Environment, presents cancer prevention as a human rights issue. It was the first to bring together data on toxic releases with data from U.S. cancer registries, and won praise from international media. Her new book, Raising Elijah, demonstrates how the ongoing environmental crisis is, fundamentally, a crisis of family life.
DAVID W. ORR Ph.D. is an award-winning scholar and leader in the sustainability movement. He is renowned for his pioneering work on environmental literacy and ecological design.David is the creator of The Oberlin
Project, a joint effort of the City of Oberlin, Oberlin College, and private and institutional partners. The Project’s purpose is to revitalize the local economy; eliminate carbon emissions; restore local agriculture, food supply and forestry; and create a new, sustainable base for economic and community development.
REVEREND BILLY TALEN, author, actor / director and activist moved to New York to 1994 to begin his performance career in as “Reverend”, joining sidewalk preachers on Times Square. Specializing in exorcisms of sweatshop companies and
opposing the Disneyfication of the neighborhood, the Reverend’s developing theology became the “Church of Stop Shopping,” founded on a resistance to consumerism and a defense of independent shops and local economies. William Talen has won the OBIE Award, The Dramalogue Award and has been jailed more than 50 times.
“At the Bioneers gathering, “social and scientific innovators focus on beakthrough solutions inspired by nature and human ingenuity.”
–Kenny Ausubel, Bioneers Co-Founder
SPEAKER BIOGRAPHIES
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STEVE ARBAUGH is Vice President Creative Strategy & Planning, Interface Americas. He regularly speaks about Interface’s ‘Business Case for Sustainability’ as well as ‘Our Culture’, explaining how the company engages employees to deliver real results.
BRIAN DOLAN, LEED AP BD+C is an integral part of multidisciplinary project teams at Forum Studio, and also coordinates The Living Building Challenge Cooperative, Chicago. His designs ensure maximum building performance and reduced resource consumption.
MARTHA BOYD works for Angelic Organics Learning Center and has experience in urban farming and community building in the U.S. and Guatemala. She is passionate about grounding self-reliant communities in and around their ecological infrastructure.
BLAKE DAVIS teaches about sustainability and facilitates undergraduate research projects at IIT. He recently co-founded Liminal Energy and Architectural Services, providing consulting services designed to bring about self-reliance.
JAMI BECKA is co-coordinator of the Chicago Time Exchange, helping it grow, change, and develop since 2008. Her work is rooted in the belief that we have everything that we need if we use everything we have.
TRACI BARKLEY, Prairie Rivers Network, protects Illinois waters from coal-related pollution. She holds the coal industry accountable to mining and coal ash disposal, so that it is held to the same water pollution control standards as other industries.
LISA ALBRECHT works for Solar Service, a solar installer with over 2,000 PV and thermal systems. She chairs the Policy Committee of the Illinois Solar Energy Association and joins Mike Nowak Sunday mornings on the WCPT Mike Nowak Show.
JOSEPH F. CLAIR, P.E. leads the Center for Ecology in Economic Development, bringing business leaders and environmental advocates together to make communities more resilient. He is a co-founder of Prairie Lab and a founding board member of USGBC-Illinois.
BILL BUCHHOLTZ, Playing from Spirit, educates people about the history, spiritual significance, culture, and traditions of the Native flute. He is widely known and respected in Chicago’s inter-faith community, including the Anawim Center.
KATHLEEN DUFFY founded the Dill Pickle Food Co-op in Logan Square and served on its board of directors. Now a board member for the Center for Workplace Democracy, she works as a cooperative developer with nascent food co-op groups in Chicagoland.
SAVITRI D directs the concerts and nonviolent direct actions of the “Reverend Billy and the Stop Shopping Choir”, which preaches a message of economic justice, environmental protection, anti-consumerism and anti-militarism.
NAOMI DAVIS is president and founder of Blacks in Green. She is an urban theorist, attorney, activist, and author of the 8 Principles of Green-Village-BuildingTM and teaches at the University of Chicago Center for the Study of Race, Politics, and Culture.
GEN KELSANG DORJE is a Buddhist Monk and Resident Teacher of Vajrayana Kadampa Buddhist Center. He is admired for his warmth and humor in making Buddha’s teachings relevant to the modern world.
EMILY CARROLL, Food and Water Watch, organizes consumers to support commonsense policies that ensure a safe and sustainable food supply. She also works to protect Illinois’ water resources from water privatization and hydraulic fracturing.
Speaker Biographies
SPEAKER BIOGRAPHIES
SPEAKER BIOGRAPHIES
Speaker Biographies
MICHELLE HICKEY discovered permaculture 8 years ago, and recently co-founded The Resiliency Institute, an educational non-profit that aims to transform the suburbs through permaculture design. Previously, she was Program Director for Illinois Solar Energy Association.
KELVIN HO is an organizer with Chicagoland Against Fracking and the Chicago Youth Climate Coalition. Previously, he organized with other groups and movements including 350.org, Occupy Chicago, and Southsiders Organized for Unity and Liberation.
KATY HOGAN is a political activist and former co-owner of Heartland Cafe in Rogers Park. She co-hosts WLUW’s weekly “Live from the Heartland” broadcasts that showcase Chicago’s change makers and keep the progressive spirit of the cafe alive in the community.
KAREN KABBES, P.E., D.WRE, CFM is president of Kabbes Engineering, Inc. an award winning watershed and waterway restoration, and sustainability planning and design firm. She is president-elect of the 23,000 member Environmental and Water Resources Institute.
JOEL FREEHLING is responsible for developing and implementing energy finance and sustainability at Shaw Environmental and Infrastructure. He manages and directs projects related to energy finance, sustainable development, and hard to reach customers.
EARL HATLEY M.A., Riverkeeper, works with Tribes and other grassroots organizations to protect water quality and wildlife ecology. This includes working to stop The Enbridge pipeline project (Flanagan South project) that runs from Flanagan Illinois to Cushing Oklahoma.
JANE BLEW HEALY’S three kids get to school each day by bike, scooter or skateboard. She shops for a family of 5 and “carpools” by bike. Jane also founded and runs a year-round, weekly, kids’ bike club that has fostered independence and self-mobility.
TERRY EVANS is a Guggenheim Fellow and recipient of an Anonymous Was a Woman award. Her work explores relationships between land and people through photographs of virgin prairie; working steel mills; Greenland ice sheets; and the oil boom in North Dakota.
WILLIAM FAITH, a long-standing activist in the fight for the rights of animals, care of the earth and social justice, received his permaculture certification from the Ecovillage Training Center at The Farm in TN. He is co-founder of the Chicagoland Permaculture Guild.
DOUG FARR, AIA, LEED AP is founder and president of one of the most sustainable practices in the country and the founding chair of the USBGC’s LEED for Neighborhood Development Core Committee that created this first-ever rating system for sustainable land development.
ROBERT HOEL began a second “career” in bike advocacy. Bob chairs the Elmhurst Bike Task Force; is a director of the Active Transportation Alliance and the League of Illinois Bicyclists; and recently joined the PACE Citizen’s Advisory Board.
MIKE JOHNSON brings ten years of energy-related experience and environmental management to his role as Senior Analyst at Greenpeace. This includes energy reliability and renewable energy planning; and sustainability plan development for state and local governments.
MONICA ENG is a producer at WBEZ Chicago Public Media focusing on food, health and consumer issues. Before joining WBEZ she worked for 17 years as a reporter at the Chicago Tribune covering ethnic culture, entertainment, food and food policy.
JOHN EDEL, Executive Director, The Plant, combined adaptive industrial reuse and aquaponics to create the nation’s first vertical farm. Located in a former meatpacking facility in Chicago’s historic Stockyards, The Plant will be powered by the waste from neighboring businesses.
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SPEAKER BIOGRAPHIES
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DEBRA MICHAUD is founder of Tar Sands Free Midwest, which works in coalition with affected communities along the Flanagan South tar sands pipeline expansion project, and raises awareness about the dumping of tar sands into Lake Michigan by BP in Whiting, Indiana.
RANDY NEUFELD SRAM Cycling Fund, started his career at the Active Transportation Alliance (Chicagoland Bicycle Federation). He has 20+ years of experience in cycling promotion, including planning; mapping; safety; marketing; design; policy; lobbying; and funding.
Speaker BiographiesELENA MARRE founded The Kids’ Table to teach and empower folks of all ages to cook, eat and love wholesome foods. Her goal? To make the world a healthier place, one delicious dish at a time. Elena is a recovering tax attorney and lives in Chicago with her sons.
PETE LEKI leads Riverbank Neighbors, is restoration steward at Sauganash, directs the ecology program and manages the vast gardens at Waters School. Pete, author of How to Disappear, and his partner Deb, and family live in the NorthCenter community in Chicago.
NANCE KLEHM has designed, taught and built ecological landscapes and regenerative soil and water systems in the U.S. and abroad for over two decades. She founded Social Ecologies, which encourages holistic, systematic thinking through project participation by communities.
NATHAN KIPNIS, AIA, LEED BD+C is Founder/Principal of Kipnis Architecture + Planning, recognized as one of Chicago’s premier sustainable architectural practices. Mr. Kipnis lectures on green architectural design, historically-based climatic architectural design, and renewable energy.
KELLY MITCHELL works with citizen activists and organizations to confront corporate polluters and transform U.S. energy policy. She leads Greenpeace’s campaigns to stop export terminals in the Pacific Northwest and to shut down Edison International’s aging Midwestern coal fleet.
MIKE NOWAK has been sharing green and gardening wisdom on the radio for 15 years–first at WGN and now as host of “The Mike Nowak Show” on WCPT’s Progressive Radio. He is an award-winning columnist and president of the Chicago Recycling Coalition.
LARA OPPENHEIMER is an artist that uses her talents as co-coordinator for the Chicago Time Exchange to develop a creative economy. She believes that when we voice our needs and share our gifts, we inspire growth in each other and manifest resilient community.
JAMES PATCHETT, President of Conservation Design Forum, leads the nation in natural resource-based solutions that integrate state-of-the-art green building and site infrastructure measures to restore historical ecosystem functions in both built and natural environments.
DENNIS KELLEHER, co-founder, Center for Workplace Democracy, is working on developing a Worker Cooperative Institute in Chicago that will provide training on general business skills and cooperative skills to groups of people interested in forming worker cooperatives.
WES KING focuses on developing and monitoring sustainable agriculture and local food-related legislation with the Illinois Stewardship Alliance, and is co-chair for the National Sustainable Agriculture Coalition’s Marketing, Food Systems, and Rural Development Committee.
KATHY KELLY, Voices for Creative Non-Violence, is a Nobel Peace Prize nominee and American peace activist. She traveled to Iraq during both US-Iraq wars, remaining in combat zones; and shares her experiences about the impacts of U.S. military bombardment on civilian populations.
AMANDA KASS heads the Center for Tax and Budget Accountability’s Illinois Retirement Security Initiative. She also is co-author of a new report that shows that state subsidies to the Illinois coal industry are hurting the state budget and Illinois taxpayers.
SPEAKER BIOGRAPHIES
Speaker Biographies
MACDONALD STAINSBY has worked in opposition to tar sands developments for nearly eight years. Emphasizing a community-first perspective, Stainsby prioritizes human rights as the key to possibly solving the climate crisis, placing tar sands at the center of any such attempts.
NAOMI WALKER has been with ITVS Community Cinema since 2006. She formerly served as outreach director for Cinema/Chicago; created the Teachers Institute for Media Studies; served as director of the Future Filmmakers Festival; and taught at Columbia College’s Doc Center.
JODI TRENDLER, co-founder of The Resiliency Institute, also manages the Naperville Area Sustainability and the Suburban Chicago Permaculture Guild MeetUp groups; founded and organizes Naperville Green Drinks, and served as VP of Naperville for Clean Energy and Conservation.
RACHEL SWENIE created the mushroom farm at The Plant, where she works to produce healthy and fresh food using locally available resources. Rachel is passionate about eliminating mycophobia and invoking the power of fungi in an urban setting.
ANGIE VIANDS organizes with Rising Tide Chicago, using education and direct action to address the root causes of climate change. She works as an Urban Conservation Educator at The Field Museum, helping develop service-learning projects that address local environmental issues.
DEBBIE SOUTHORN works on peace and social justice initiatives with the Wage Peace program of the American Friends Service Committee in Chicago. She uses creative tactics to pressure elected officials to invest resources into human needs, not militarism and corporate welfare.
DEBRA SHORE was first elected to the Board of Commissioners of the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago in 2006 and re-elected in 2012. Previously, she was founding editor of Chicago Wilderness Magazine and helped found Friends of the Forest Preserves.
TABITHA TRIPP, SAFE, became engaged in the fracking debate after learning about risks to water supplies and the devastation the industry causes to rural communities. She lives on a fourth-generation family farm with her family where their only source of water is a deep well.
AMY COFFMAN PHILLIPS is founder of The B-Collaborative and co-founder of Biomimicry Chicago. As a mother, biomimic, and architect, MBA, and facilitator, Amy bridges love of nature and the creative process to develop and facilitate nature-based projects.
BILL RAU, Professor Emeritus, ISU, understands the interconnections between climate change and fossil fuel addiction. He campaigned for municipal aggregation in the two towns (now 100% renewable energy) and is active with Illinois People’s Action’s anti-fracking work.
JAMIE PONCE, C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group, works with the Office of the Mayor to drive environmental and economic benefits in Chicago and across a network of global megacities via energy efficiency; sustainable infrastructure finance; and market-driven resource stewardship.
MICHAEL REPKIN, Executive Director, Urban Habitat Chicago, specializes in biological resource recovery and sustainable food production. He also is President of Repkin Biosystems, dedicated to supporting human life through biological processes compatible with living systems.
COLIN ROLFHING has worked with local, regional and firm-wide teams over the past nine years to facilitate sustainable design integration on projects. In addition to being a Sustainable Director for HOK, Colin is the co-facilitator for Biomimicry Chicago.
LAN RICHART, Co-Director of Eco-Justice Collaborative, focuses on education and advocacy around issues of environmental sustainability. His appreciation for non-violent direct action as a tool for change grew from work on social justice movements in Latin America.
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SPEAKER BIOGRAPHIES
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Speaker Biographies
Bringing people together to work for a healthy planet is what we do. Our leadership in education, advocacy and collaboration has been instrumental in reducing power plant pollution, fighting subsidies to dirty coal and creating public forums that explore pathways to a just and environmentally sustainable future.
Contact us at 773.556.3417 or www.ecojusticecollaborative.org and let great things begin.
Together, we can do great things.
Living Responsibly for the Earth and All People
ELIZABETH WENSCOTT is owner and chief instructor at the Tai Chi Center of Chicago. Elizabeth brings to her students a lifelong study of traditional Chinese arts and tai chi’s historic link to the environment, helping them to achieve maximum health and enjoyment in their lives.
KIM WASSERMAN won the 2013 Goldman Environmental Prize for her efforts in closing Chicago’s two aging coal plants as coordinator of Little Village Environmental Justice Organization and as part of a strategic alliance comprised of faith, health, labor, and environmental groups.
ELISE ZELECHOWSKI is founder and executive director of the Rebuilding Exchange, a social enterprise with a mission to transform the waste paradigm; turning would-be liabilities into assets, creating new markets and forging a sustainable regional economy.
DON WASHINGTON, Principal, Koan Enterprises, was a stand-up/improvisational comedian and playwright before becoming an activist and change agent for social and economic justice. He is the Front Man for Mayoraltutorial.com where you can Get Dangerously Informed.
KAREN WEIGERT is Chief Sustainability Officer for the City of Chicago. She guides the City’s sustainability strategies, bringing innovative, practical solutions to Chicago. Karen was a producer and writer for the film Carbon Nation, which focuses on solutions to climate change.
ORRIN WILLIAMS co-founded CUT, a nonprofit informed by the principles of environmental justice; economic justice; social justice; and human rights. Orrin works to mitigate climate change by creating healthy, local food systems on Chicago’s south side.
H E A L T H Y L I V I N G H E A L T H Y P L A N E T
Natural Awakenings Chicago 847.858.3697 www.NAChicagoNorth.com
Your Healthy Lifestyle Multimedia Resource in Print, Online and Mobile
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“I’m talking ‘bout resilience and community and tofu.”
Bob giving keynote address at 2011 Bioneers Conference, Traverse City, MI.
In deep appreciation for the leadership and activism of our favorite Bioneer,
Bob Russell, 1950-2013.
Photo: Gary Howe