New York City is all abuzz with the latest giant public art installation, “The New York City Waterfalls.” These cost a whopping $15 million to create. From what I can tell in the comments at the NYT, the local peanut gallery is not very impressed. Having just spent a few weekends exploring some of New [...]
CNY ecoBlog catches up with the state of the Great Lakes Water Compact, the nondiversion agreement that’s close to being “ratified” by eight states and Canada, and points out that there could be a stumbling block in Washington for U.S. assent to this pact, since the Great Lakes states are losing political power (along with [...]
CNY ecoBlog takes a quick look at today’s bombshell that Syracuse is somehow the city with the worst “carbon footprint” in New York. Is Syracuse’s sprawl and highway addiction really worse than Buffalo’s or Rochester’s? C’mon. Despite sprawl without growth being a significant problem in Central New York, I can’t get my mind around why [...]
It rained on Saturday evening, and then again all day on Monday. Was anyone upset? I wonder if mainstream American society will ever get to the point where, no matter what we have planned outdoors for the day, a rainy day is first and foremost seen as something to be grateful for. Thoughts of adding [...]
New York signs on, and not a moment too soon.
Water will conform to any vessel that future politicians want to put it in.
It’s not just Choppergate.
Because we can live for up to three weeks without food.
If Upstate New Yorkers ever became water-masters on a parched continent, what kind of stewards would we be?
Tomorrow (Thursday, Oct. 11) is an important day for the Onondaga Nation and their land rights action, which was filed on March 11, 2005. The Onondagas are the last of the original five Haudenosaunee nations to approach the courts to ask for acknowledgement of title to lands affirmed as theirs in post-Revolutionary War treaties such [...]