Another week, another letter.

Another week, another letter.

February 2, 2025 Dear Senator Shelley Moore Capito: After another week of the Trump administration I find myself writing to you again. Please explain why we have to endure four years of women and minorities being blamed for all the  bad things happening in this country. Wildfires? Women leading firefighters and cities are to blame. Airplane crashes? Women and minorities who work at the FAA. Helicopter crashes? Women and minority pilots. Fabricated increased crime rate? Illegal aliens with brown skin. It seems that if we had white men in charge of fighting fires, being mayors of large cities, working as…

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Thoughts on the week of January 20, 2025

Thoughts on the week of January 20, 2025

A letter to Senator Shelley Moore Capito: I am a constituent in Charleston, West Virginia who is very concerned about the direction the country is headed. The Senate’s approval of Pete Hegseth for Defense Secretary combined with pardons of all the January 6th insurrectionists are alarming developments that have inspired me to write to you. As a woman, I am surprised that you would support Hegseth after the many complaints, including the most recent affidavit, and his admission in writing to Senator Elizabeth Warren that he had paid a woman to keep quiet. What constitutes a credible sexual harassment complaint…

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Re-membering in the age of climate crisis.

Re-membering in the age of climate crisis.

I read with great interest Jonathan Franzen’s recent article in the New Yorker titled “What If We Stopped Pretending? The climate apocalypse is coming. To prepare for it, we need to admit that we can’t prevent it.” I came away with different conclusions than other environmentalists. When I moved back home to West Virginia in 2007, I already had ten years of green building experience under my belt, yet it felt like every time I offered a “green” recommendation on a project, an idea to solve a community problem, or suggested a shift in perspective, I was met with the…

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State’s future requires triple bottom line thinking (WV Sunday Gazette-Mail, Feb. 10, 2019)

State’s future requires triple bottom line thinking (WV Sunday Gazette-Mail, Feb. 10, 2019)

Recently, I attended two different economic forecast meetings in the Kanawha Valley and would like to share some thoughts as a small business owner and environmentalist regarding the future of our state. I am sole owner of a professional services company and while the new federal tax law is helping me financially in the short term, tax law in general does not influence my business decisions when it comes to hiring and expanding. Long-term economic growth would be the driving factor, and what I’ve seen forecasted is more of the same level of thinking and keeping of the status quo.…

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Ingenuity Can Help West Virginia Change

Senator Joe Manchin’s passionate plea to save what’s left of the coal industry is extremely discouraging for West Virginia.  Rather than show leadership during this time of energy transition, Sen. Manchin (as well as Senator Shelley Moore Capito, our Representatives in Congress, and most other statewide leaders) chooses to take the well-worn path of the status quo, and lacks the vision to see a real future for our state, one based on new technologies, services, and renewable energy. Sen. Manchin says that carbon capture and storage (CCS) “has not been demonstrated at any commercial scale power plant anywhere in the…

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USGBC Strives to Improve Quality of Life

As a commercial interior designer who’s been working in the building industry for over 20 years, I couldn’t agree more with Brooks McCabe’s assessment that the built environment is “more than just bricks and mortar.”  And as Chair of the U.S. Green Building Council’s West Virginia Chapter, this definitely holds true for me and our members.  The purpose of the organization is to improve the quality of life for West Virginians by transforming the way the built environment is designed, constructed, and maintained, resulting in buildings and communities that are environmentally, socially, and economically prosperous.  That is a big purpose,…

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Nature As A Model For Success

(from The State Journal 4/4/14) Green building and issues of sustainability appear to be at a crossroads in West Virginia.  Several factors contribute to this.  One, the state legislature adopted the ASHRAE Standard 90.1-2007 for energy use in commercial buildings last fall.  Now, West Virginia energy standards are finally in line with the majority of the country, including our neighboring states, yet still not at the forefront of current code adoption.  (Maryland adopted the most recent energy code, ASHRAE Standard 90.1-2010.) Two, the so-called “war on coal” and the collateral damage of climate change from burning fossil fuels has heightened…

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Triple Bottom Line

Whether we realize it or not, right now we’re seeing what happens when one leg of the Triple Bottom Line is broken.  We all understand a company’s “bottom line.”  Indeed, Freedom Industries must be well aware of this common business phrase.  But when we only consider the financial bottom line in decision-making (Economy), we leave the other two legs of Equity and Environment potentially damaged. Economy, Equity and Environment – the “three E’s” making up the Triple Bottom Line.  Also think of it in terms of the “three P’s”: Profit, People, Planet. We’re sold different stories regarding what our priorities…

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