Silent Auction!

Bobby Collins, a Fall River Personal Trainer has donated a month worth of personal training sessions! All money raised will be going to Citizens for Citizens. The top five bids will win the sessions. This is a $240 Value!!!
To Place your bid go to
masspirg.bcc@gmail.com
To Check out on what the highest bids are go to
masspirg.blogspot.com

BIDS CLOSE APRIL 26th!!!







BIO

Name:Bobby Collins

Hometown: Taunton,MA

Education: National Personal Training Institute

Experience: 3 years as a personal trainer

Gym: He trains at Pro fitness and MMA Gym under his company's name One More Rep Fitness.

Specialties: Weight loss management and interval training

Follow Him on Facebook at: Onemorerepbootcamp


Quote from a client

“My husband and I have been training with Bobby for over a year now. We have never looked or felt younger and stronger. We were able to overcome hypertension, being overweight, and empty nest syndrome with Bobby. We have won the trainer / coach lottery!”
Denise and Bill Drexel
Fall River, ma

MASSPIRG Student's Speech at Senate Rally

Samantha O’Leary, a volunteer for MASSPIRG at UMass Lowell, was asked to speak at a press event with Chairman Harkin just hours before the Senate voted to approve SAFRA (an increase of 36 billion for Pell Grant funding). Below, you’ll see that Senator Chris Dodd kindly adjusted the mike for her seconds before she spoke, while Chairman Harkin and Senator Stabenow from Michigan looked on. Sam may be small, but her speech was big.
----------

My name is Samantha O’Leary and I am a member of the Massachusetts Student Public Interest Research Group and a sophomore at the University of Massachusetts at Lowell. Since my mother lost her job last year, we’ve been living paycheck to paycheck. I’ve had to take on more loan debt to pay for college, too. In addition, I have a work study position at 40 hours a week at the college gym. And most importantly, I receive the maximum in Pell grant aid.

I hope to make a difference with my career when I graduate. But the prospect of teaching or working in a non-profit while paying back loans is daunting. Students like me are relying too much on loans to pay for college. We don’t have enough grant aid which doesn’t need to be repaid. The weak job market is only making the problem worse. Borrowers who can’t get jobs after they graduate are defaulting on their loans more and more. This is not how our education system should work.

That’s why this historic investment in Pell grant aid is a big piece of the solution. Millions of college students will see their Pell grants stabilize and increase because of this reform. In addition, banks have profited from their involvement in student lending for years, but as a result of this reform, subsidies that were going to banks will support students instead. And that’s how it should work.

I thank the Senate for its willingness to tackle this problem. I thank Chairman Harkin for his leadership. Let’s keep college within reach for all students across the country.

350: The Most Important Number

On October 28, 2009, your campus chapter of MASSPIRG gathered with a large group of students to kick off the Global 350 Initiative, showing solidarity and a genuine concern for the environmental crisis facing the planet.

We are living in a new age, a world ruled by numbers. Passkeys, security pins and access codes of all kinds. They all are individual and are meant to keep us secure and give us peace of mind. Soon these numbers that are so important in our lives will be overshadowed as a new number is pushed into the forefront of our collective consciousness. 350 is a number which we, as a global community will have to become aware. This number means the difference between healing the planet and losing our world as we know it.

The scientific community and the policy makers in power rarely agree on many issues, but recently, all the voices have reached a consensus. Climate change is the most critical battle facing humankind and the planet. This amazing planet we live on is a truly wondrous place in its natural state all its systems work together there is a balance. The balance is now leaning towards the demise of our world.

Carbon dioxide is a building block of life and necessary for the process of photosynthesis to be successful. The downside of this life-giving gas is that when it’s concentrated in the environment it becomes one of the major factors that contribute to the greenhouse effect that is plaguing the earth. The burning of coal and the combustion of fossil fuels, coupled with loss of 38.1 million acres of forest every year have us stuck in a negative feedback loop; this assault of our environment has already caused many disastrous repercussions. Many mammals, birds, insects and other organisms are on the brink of extinction. The polar ice caps are melting, the seas are rising and the weather is getting more extreme; these are just a few of the symptoms of this global crisis.

There is a reachable attainable goal, a decrease in the carbon dioxide in the environment. This gas measured in parts per million (ppm), we are currently at 387ppm. With that number rising at 2 ppm per year if we don’t do anything we will be at 660ppm by 2050. By then it will be too late and the real goal of 350 ppm will be gone forever.

MASSPIRG and a great majority of the student body and the world are using the number 350 as a call for action. This is a call to join the fight; the fight to reduce your carbon footprint. This current class of college students will be the driving force in the upcoming years of the climate change initiative. We can no longer sit by and take small steps towards going green. Simple conservation and recycling is not enough, we need to increase awareness and fight for the survival of our planet.

So, let’s stand together to heal the earth and reduce the level of this necessary but dangerous greenhouse gas. Keep your eyes on the goal. You hold the power! If we all work together that will be the deciding factor on if we save this planet. Remember 350 and remember the future of our planet depends on you.

Ben Perez

Maldive's Underwater Cabinet Meeting


Three days ago, a country known as Maldives (a low lying atoll nation off the coast of India) held a cabinet meeting in an effort to draw global attention to climate change and the crisis that it'll bring if left uncontrolled.

According to predictions, Maldives will be completely submerged and uninhabitable if global warming continues to cause slight rises in sea level. In lieu to that projection, they donned skuba gear and held a meeting underwater to sign a resolution printed on a whiteboard and signed in water-proof marker to urge controlling global emissions.

They said that "Maldives is a front-line nation, what happens to us today may happen to others tomorrow". But we shouldn't have to wait to see a whole country submerged and then take action to save our sorry keisters.

These guys in my opinion have the right idea. People need to pay attention to everyone else and stop being so considerate of only their own endeavors. I passed by this article while surfing the internet and felt the need to share. It's witty and has impact, I couldn't pass up blogging it.

Click here for the original article!

Climate Change, What's That?

So guess what!? There's a new bill in town -- you guessed it, it's a climate bill, and it's now introduced into Congress! It might take a bit of time for it to go through, what with all this healthcare business flying around (did you hear they pretty much killed public option? SHAME ON YOU SEN. BAUCUS!), but we at MASSPIRG are pushing for the Clean Energy Jobs And American Power Act.

You may say to yourself, "oh boy, that's flippin sweet... but what's in the bill?" Well we're here to direct your attention to some of the important compenents of the bill!

Coal
The bill will invest $10 Billion over a period of 10 years into not-so-clean coal. It will provide incentives to those first switching over to not-so-clean coal and improves standards for current coal powerplants, up to date with modern technology. The bill relies heavily on coal, which is hilarious, because coal is part of the problem! The power elite in Washington is pretty firm on their support for coal technology, and this bill appears like a great transition for Big Coal, so that their profits won't be harmed at all! I cannot stress enough how terrible of an idea this is! Clean coal has been proven not to work... it's an absurd idea, and we have better technology that has no ill environmental effects (solar, wind, hydroelectric, etc).

Natural Gas
Provide incentives for moving to this more-efficient fossil fuel. Not much else is said about it in the bill. As you may have read in an earlier blog, natural gas isn't winning! This isn't terrible, I'm not crying over it, but the sad part is that not-so-clean coal is being embraced!! Oh no!

Nuclear
Our politicians love this stuff. It's clean and efficient. It creates almost no waste... except for a small amount of poisionous waste that will kill you with minimal exposure. Oh, and that green glowing stuff doesn't go away for like, 10,000 years at least? Actually they don't know the exact date, but estimates are in the 100,000's of years! If we could figure out what to do with this stuff, nuclear would be a great option. But it has me worried, that's for sure. Also consider things like 3 Mile Island and Chernobyl. Wind turbines don't do that.

Renewables
Probably the biggest part of the bill, on par with coal, is this! That is excellent! Funding into new technologies, funding into using existing technologies. If you're reading this, you probably get the gist of it!

This bill will create millions of Green Jobs. It has a section for helping workers achieve more training for these high demand, high pay jobs! It includes ways to protect consumers from predatory energy companies seeking to exlpoit us as we move to a new, clean energy economy, as well.

Pollution reduction is part of the bill, also. It targets a reduction
of 20 percent by 2020 and 80 percent by 2050 from 2005 levels, the minimum scientists judge
necessary to avert a climate disaster. This is good, and I am hoping that as this goes into commitee, the Republicans do not completely destroy this section. It is probably the most vital of all to avoid disaster.

I encourage you all to be involved in this, write to your Senators and Reps, tell them you want this and the nation needs. And if you're a BCC, you ought to make sure to do our photo petition that we are sending to the bills champion, Sen. John Kerry!

Find out more about this here: http://kerry.senate.gov/cleanenergyjobsandamericanpower/intro.cfm

- Cam Mancini

Expanding the Bottle Bill

Odds are if you're visiting this blog, you know about recycling (and should be active in the act, and if not, shame on you) and how you can redeem your little tin soda/drink-filled cans for five cents at various locations. Well, the bottle bill in good ol' Massachusetts allows redemption on a limited amount of glass, tin and plastic containers.

If you were to put in a nestea container in one of the machines that crush the cans, the machine would spit it back out at you. Or if you were to put a Powerade container in one of the plastic redemption machines, it'd do the same thing. Water bottles, sports drinks, tea, all are not redeemable in the state of Massachusetts. As such, there's about $37 million dollars in recyclable goods are going unrenewed because there isn't an incentive to recycle them.

That's a ridiculous amount of recyclables going uncollected on. There needs to be an updating of the bottle bill, as with all that money extra the state could garner from the recyclables, the state could help encourage even more environmentally friendly options for recycling instead of tossing everything into an incinerator. Plus, it'd reduce roadside and litter in general. Why throw away that can on the beach when you can turn it in for money, after all?

Original Article: http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/editorial_opinion/editorials/articles/2009/09/28/expand_the_bottle_bill/

- Kevin Almeida

Natural Gas: It Isn't Winning.


So I was perusing my Facebook and I happened to see a news article about natural gas. You see, when I'm not playing Farmville (which is genius, by the way) or updating my status with lyrics from Black Flag, I check out the news articles that NPR posts. NPR is awesome, and if you don't agree, you are a fool. But I digress...

This article was the last in a three part series about natural gas and why it isn't catching on. What with this whole debate over Global Warming and environmentalism that has been raging, especially in the past few years, the lobbyist for natural gas have been working their asses off, but to no avail! But why not? After all, if we compare it to other fossil fuels, it's a lot better. Half the emissions of coal, more abundant (especially in this country) than oil, blah blah blah. What the lobbyist for natural gas are, or were, trying to do was convince Congress that natural gas would be ideal for the transition between other fossil fuels and zero waste technology (and ideal for their profit margins, no doubt).

They've tried, tried, tried to get this to pass, but to no avail. The biggest reason is politics. They targetted the Republicans. Republicans like them. But Republicans are not in power in this country right now (although, judging from what they're doing to the Healthcare bill, it can sure seem like it!). The Democrats have favoured more "radical" (read: smart) steps to dealing the emissions. Namely through wind and solar power (oh, and I forgot not-so-clean coal... not very smart). Another problem is that the natural gas industry lead by a number of vocal Global Warming deniers! Now, how silly is that? And last, but not least, these companies aren't very large and cannot compete, lobby-wise, with the sheer size of Big Oil, nor with the political favouritism that the clean energy lobby.

I'm not too saddened that nautral gas isn't catching on. To be fair, I like it better than not-so-clean coal, which is being pushed heavily. But the real solution is a nice blend of hyrdoelectric, wind, and solar power. As our technology gets better -- and it is every day -- the costs of these is reduced more and more. The payback will eventually be cheap, clean, environmentally fiendly, and efficient energy. Hooray! Well, that's where MASSPIRG comes in, and it's up to student involvement that we push our government towards these simple solutions for very real problems.

To Read The Full Article, Go Here: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=113138252&sc=fb&cc=fp

- Cam Mancini