Can dancing help save the planet?

Research conducted by a Dutch company concludes that an average-size dance club, open three nights a week, consumes 150 times the energy a four-person family does in a year. So an eco-minded couple, Stef van Dongen and Alijd van Doorn, have set out to develop designs that would change that. As reported in The Independent, they’re working on a dance floor that will convert the movement of clubbers on it into electricity. Their prototype uses simple electro-mechanical system in which dancers’ stomping feet squeeze a surface membrane in the floor which works a flywheel to generate voltage. The charge is then fed back into the system to light the dance floor up. Tweaking the floor system, they hope to generate excess electricity to contribute to powering the sound system, lighting or air conditioning. Another innovation involves capturing rising hot air from sweating dancers, passing it through a cooling chamber, and using the condensate to flush the lavatories. Hey, are you guys down at The Stone Pony listening to this?

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In Paramus: Pesticides, Politics and bad PR

The Bergen Record had a journalistic field day last week, reporting on how Paramus (NJ) school officials had failed to tell parents about pesticides found in soil on the grounds of a middle school. Parents went nuts when they heard that the school district was aware of the problem for five months before disclosing the news.

At this point, any public relations practitioner would have advised school officials to quickly issue an apology, announce that swift steps would be taken to remedy the problem, and promise never again to withhold such information.

But no. Instead, a defensive school official protested that the district had no legal obligation to tell the parents about the potential health problem. Isn’t that just what any concerned parent needed to hear?

The resulting uproar became such a hot political issue that the mayor stepped in and ordered the school shut. Governor Jon Corzine followed suit, ordering the DEP to remove the soils ASAP.

Here’s the point in the story where calm should return to Paramus, right? Wrong! On Saturday, the reporter who broke the story showed up at the school site with a lab technician to gather soil samples for independent tests. How did the town handle it? They arrested both men for trespassing, confiscated the soil samples and both men’s shoes and socks.

We’re not making this up. Read it for yourself.

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NJ’s Public Advocate on eminent domain abuses

“I don’t want their money, I want my house.” – Louis Anzalone, Long Branch, NJ property owner

“To move heaven and earth and the New Jersey Legislature, it will take more than Public Advocate Ronald K. Chen and a few good citizens. But the report issued yesterday by the Office of the Public Advocate may well be the tipping point, ” writes attorney William J. Ward in his blog, New Jersey Eminent Domain Law.

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Is the Exxon Valdez litigation finlly over?

In September 1994, an Alaska jury awarded $5 billion to fishermen and residenets affected by the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill in Prince William Sound. Since then, Exxon has tied up the award in appeals. In December 2006, a three-judge panel reduced the original jury award to $2.5 billion and denied Exxon’s petition for a panel rehearing. As Stephanie Lovett reports in The Legal Intelligencer, that could be the end of the case. But at least one plaintiff attorney cautions that Exxon may try one final appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, now 18 years after the spill.

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So, why are we blogging?

Many of you already are subscribers to the daily, electronic newsletter, EnviroPolitics. If you’re not, let us explain that it is a paid-subscription publication covering the top environmental and political news in New Jersey, Pennsylvania and New York. Our readers say it’s comprehensive, but also a focused, time-saving (and sometimes fun) way, to stay on top of the most important environmental issues–and the politics that drives them!

EnviroPolitics also provides access to all new environmental rules and regulations from all three states and offers introduction-to-enactment tracking of all environmental legislation in New Jersey and Pennsylvania. In addition, our subscribers learn about who is coming and going in environmentally related professions, businesses and industries in our EnviroBusiness News section, and they capitalize on valuable education and networking opportunities via our Enviro-Events Calendar.

So, if we already publish a newsletter, why add a blog?

We view it as an opportunity to go beyond the headlines and stories and present background information of value to our readers and non-subscribers alike. We also hope it can become a platform that a variety of environmental experts, advocates and others can use to offer their views and insights. We’re starting out slow and see where it leads.

To add your views, click on the “comment” link at the bottom of any blog post. You can provide your name or respond anonymously. If you have comments that you do not want to appear on the blog, suggestions for future messages or questions, drop us an email to us at: editor@enviropolitics.com

We appreciate your time and welcome your participation.

Frank Brill
Editor
EnviroPolitics
215-295-9339

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Enviros set to rip EPA’s ocean monitoring shift

Clean Ocean Action will hold a seaside news conference Monday morning to blast EPA’s recent decision to discontinue helicopter monitoring for dissolved oxygen (DO) and bacteria off New Jersey’s coast. Participants at the media event will include representatives of the state DEP, the Recreational Fishing Alliance, Jersey Coast Anglers Association, Surfers’ Environmental Alliance, and other environmental, fishing, diving, and surfing groups.

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