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Seven Kentucky colleges and universities, along with 13 state
and community organizations throughout the region have organized
a conference that speaks to the severe and imminent threats to
sustainability that face our nation.
The Campus--Community Partnerships for Sustainability Conference,
which will take place April 21-23 at Berea College, is unique in
that it is the first one in this area to recognize the extensive
resources available within our communities and campuses and to
encourage people to work together to find local solutions to broad-scale
problems.
“In the face of climate change, farmland loss, depletion
of our resources, degradation of our water, land, and air, increasing
budget and trade deficits, we must build up the infrastructure
of our communities and become better informed about what we need
to do,” said Richard Olson, associate professor and director
of the Sustainability and Environmental Studies Program at Berea. “The
solution to the problems we face is not going to come from a national
or global level. It must come from within our communities.”
The conference includes two nationally known speakers who are
leaders in sustainable community development - Pat Murphy of The
Community Solution of Yellow Springs, Ohio, and economist and attorney
Michael Shuman of Baltimore, Md., author of “Going Local:
Creating Self-Reliant Communities in a Global Age” and the
forthcoming “The Small-Mart Revolution: How Your Community
Can Beat the Global Competition.”
In addition to the two keynoters, conference participants will
be able to select from 18 presentations and a series of hands-on
workshops designed to help people share ideas, brainstorm new projects,
and develop lasting partnerships. Topics will include solar energy,
energy conservation, alternative fuels, community gardens, ecovillages,
green building, transportation alternatives to cars, fostering
local businesses, developing a local food system, partnering with
local government and native landscaping.
“We want to learn from people on college campuses and in
communities throughout the region what people are doing, what is
working and what projects people would like to work on,” said
Jason Fults, a recent Berea College graduate and coordinator of
the conference. “We want colleges and communities to pool
their resources and work together for the good of the community
and region.”
Co-sponsors of the conference with Berea College are Bluegrass
Community and Technical College, Centre College, Eastern Kentucky
University, Hazard Community and Technical College, Southeast Kentucky
Community and Technical College, University of Kentucky College
of Agriculture, Kentucky Department of Agriculture, Kentucky Office
of Energy Policy, Appalachia-Science in the Public Interest, Berea
Outpost, Community Farm Alliance, Envision Franklin County, Kentuckians
for the Commonwealth, Kentucky Heartwood, Kentucky Jobs with Justice,
Kentucky Sierra Club, Kentucky Solar Partnership, Louisville Peak
Oil Group, Mountain Association for Community Economic Development
(MACED), and Partners for Family Farms.
Early registration is encouraged as space is limited. For information
about the conference, including registration form, accommodation
options and program details, call
859-985-3593, or e-mail
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