Tag Archives: Tom Cotton

UCS … Demand no more global warming victims


It’s pretty common these days to hear my friends and family members complaining about global warming—but it’s not just the weather they’re complaining about any more. One friend had to evacuate her town with her small boys in tow to flea this season’s wildfires. Another had to abandon a coastal cottage that had been in his family for generations because of rising sea levels. A grandparent stranded in a heat wave. Global warming is affecting all of us every day. And unless we take immediate action, both to help communities prepare for the consequences but also to reduce climate emissions, these stories will become more frequent, and more dire. —Karla

UCS reports highlight global warming consequences for American West.
Two new reports from UCS experts demonstrate just how serious the climate risks are for the great American West and the people who live there. Hotter, drier conditions brought on by global warming are contributing to more large wildfires and longer wildfire seasons. And in the Rocky Mountains—home to Yellowstone, Grand Teton, and Glacier National Parks—these conditions are having severe impacts on the region’s forests—as drought, wildfires, and tree-killing insects that thrive in hotter temperatures are producing potentially irreversible effects. READ MORE

Ask a Scientist

“My husband and I live in the American Southwest and are very concerned about its habitability in the future due to worsening drought and rising temperatures. We are especially concerned about where our children and grandchildren will be able to live and prosper. Are there any regions of the country that might emerge unscathed from the effects of climate change?”—J. Winkeller, Gilbert, AZ.

I empathize. Climate change is now part of everyday reality, and no place in the United States—or the rest of the world, for that matter—is unaffected. Even if we were able to completely switch from fossil fuels to renewable energy sources right now, the climate will continue to warm in the coming decades. The National Climate Assessment recently examined the current and projected impacts of climate change on different regions of the country. READ MORE

 

Science in Action
protect western forests Protect Rocky Mountain forests before it’s too late!If we do not act now, the forests of the Rocky Mountains will continue to die as they face the severe consequences of climate change. Urge your elected officials to allocate the resources necessary for forest managers to address the current effects of global warming and implement steps that can make our forests more resilient.

This Saturday, Sept. 13: HRC Seattle Dinner


The HRC Seattle Gala Dinner

Joe Manganiello  True Blood Ally for Equality AwardJoe Manganiello – True Blood
Ally for Equality Award
Saturday, September 13
5:30 p.m. – Registration & Silent Auction
6:45 p.m. – Dinner ProgramThe Sheraton Seattle Hotel
1400 Sixth Avenue
Seattle, WA


Purchase Tickets

Jeff Zarrillo and Paul Katami
Special Guests

Plaintiffs, Supreme Court Case Proposition 8

Fred Sainz
HRC VP of Communications & Marketing

Featured Speaker

Absurd …


Check out this pep talk for Speaker Boehner!Check out our video message for John Boehner — and add your name to demand better from the Speaker of the House.

Midyear


A Better Balance
2014 Midyear Newsletter
Dear Friend,
The first half of 2014 has been a very exciting time at A Better Balance. Over the past several months wehave been working hard:

And we are just getting started!
A Better Balance is now on the front lines making a difference, but we need your support to keep the momentum going!
Thank you, as always, for your support.
The A Better Balance Team
Sherry, Dina, Phoebe, Jared, Liz, Elizabeth, Risha, Morenike, Rachel, & Meredith

Carbon polluters


NextGen Climate America   by Dan Lashof
Take Action

For far too long, the power sector, and especially coal-fired power plants, have had free reign to dump billions of tons of carbon pollution into the atmosphere — at enormous cost to our communities’ health and prosperity.

Thankfully, earlier this year the Environmental Protection Agency proposed a thoughtful, flexible, and comprehensive action called the Clean Power Plan, which proposes carbon pollution standards for states and their existing power plants.

While two-thirds of Americans support the EPA’s Clean Power Plan, the EPA faces misinformation campaigns and heavy pressure from the fossil fuel industry and their special interests in Washington, DC. That’s why we need you to show your support for the EPA’s Clean Power Plan, right now.

Tell the EPA that you support their efforts to reduce power plant pollution — it takes less than 30 seconds.

If we allow this country’s worst polluters to continue to dump unlimited amounts of carbon pollution into our atmosphere, we will see catastrophic repercussions — particularly among the nation’s most vulnerable communities. The EPA’s Clean Power Plan helps establish a level playing field for cleaner, affordable and more secure energy and will protect the health and safety of our communities for the next generation.

Speak out today to hold the most pervasive polluters in the country — coal-fired power plants — accountable for their actions.

http://action.nextgenclimate.org/clean-power
Thank you for tackling this problem,
Dan Lashof
Chief Operating Officer
NextGen Climate America