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AutoShare vs. Zipcar: Solutions for Going Carless in the City

09 Jun

Over the weekend I had the pleasure of visiting with a friend who lives in the city.  She made it out to the suburbs for a visit with another friend.  She didn’t take the GO-train.  She didn’t have to take a bus.  She didn’t show some leg and hitch a ride.  And…she doesn’t own a car.

How did she get here, then?

My friend is a member of a car co-op!

I had no idea such a thing ever existed, but apparently, this system is so much more desirable for city dwellers who need to drive for personal reasons.  I’m guessing that shopping excursions to purchase Swedish furniture are high on that list of reasons.

Car co-ops are terrific because they allow responsible adults who need only occasional use of a vehicle, to drive every once in awhile, without worrying about paying for a parking space at their residence, or ongoing car maintenance or monthly payments.

In Toronto, Zipcar is one of the major auto co-ops in operation.  Their rates vary, depending on which plan you join.  All thing considered, joining the co-op seems like one heck of a deal.  There are no extra, hidden fees for parking, insurance or—get this—gasoline.  Yep, the cost of gas is included.  And, unlike renting a car from a traditional car rental franchise, you can rent a vehicle from Zipcar by the hour.

Another option for renting cars in Toronto is AutoShare.  AutoShare imposes a membership fee upon joining.  Members can pay-as-they-drive or choose to receive a monthly invoice.  Like Zipcar, you save the cost of insurance, parking and fuel when you rent one of their vehicles.

Both of these options sound pretty good, but what are the disadvantages hidden in the fine print?

The only major drawback I could find was for younger drivers.  If you’re between the ages of 21 and 23, AutoShare doesn’t want much to do with you.  You must be 23 years old and have had a valid driver’s license for at least three years, and that license must be a full “G” license.  At Zipcar, however, drivers must be 21 years old, and submit to a check of their driver’s abstract before being permitted to rent.

Also, AutoShare seems a little bit more stringent about the history of drivers renting with them than Zipcar does.  Zipcar offers a family plan, accomodating multiple drivers in one household, but I didn’t find one offered by AutoShare.

The other thing to consider is that while vehicle sharing services are great for residents of metropolitan areas, there really isn’t a comparable option for those of us who live out in the ‘burbs.

Have any of you used either of these rental services?  We’d love to hear from you!  Leave a comment detailing your experience with a car co-op and you’ll be entered to win a draw later this month.

Until then, keep up the good work reducing your auto footprint!

 
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Posted in Auto

 

Ontario Pesticide Ban for ‘09

22 Apr

Happy Earth Day!

Last summer I was disappointed to find that our next-door neighbour had hired a non-organic company to take care of their lawn. Graham and I would sit out back, drinking our coffee in the morning, and then suddenly the powerful, sickening smell of the pesticide/herbicide cocktail (good enough for pest control) would waft into our yard. Annoyed, disgusted, we’d head back indoors to finish our coffee.

I put a little sign in our garden in the hopes it would start a dialogue between us and our neighbour, but it didn’t seem to phase them at all, which I just can’t understand because he grows FOOD in their yard.

 
 

Februarys Challenge: Eliminate Plastic Bags

04 Feb

“If you don’t mind, I’ll just take that by itself, without a bag.”

I don’t want to take a plastic bag home with me…another plastic bag to shove in the front hall closet, so I tell mostly teenage cashiers that if they don’t mind, I’d prefer not to take one of their bags home with me.  I know that it’s ridiculous to put it this way, and eventually I’ll get better at telling them, “I don’t want a plastic bag, thank you.” I’ll state it, just like that, instead of saying it in an apologetic tone.

Does this sound familiar to you at all?

I’m working on it…

Someday I won’t feel like I’m imposing on a store just because I
want to break the grand shopping tradition of toting arm loads of
plastic bags home.  I really do want to get more assertive when it
comes to dealing with retailers.  After all, it’s their job to please
their customers, not the other way around.

According to Greenloop,
“Each year over 1 million birds and sea mammals die from plastic
ingestion or entanglement.  Fifteen million trees are cut down every
year to make paper bags in this country.  Less than 1% of plastic
shopping bags get recycled.  12 Million barrels of oil are used
annually to produce plastic bags in the US.”

Over the last couple of years, it’s been getting easier and easier
to be a consumer who shops without the use of plastic bags.  In our
front hall closet we have a big pile of cotton and canvas shopping
bags, and on a good day, I remember to bring them with me.  (The trick
seems to be leaving some cloth bags or a basket in the trunk of the
car.)  I even bought reusable mesh shopping bags, which I love because
it means I don’t even have to use those thin, clear plastic bags when I
buy produce.

No more plastic bags!

February’s Challenge

This month, BlogHers ACT Canada’s mission is to eliminate the use of
plastic shopping bags.  We don’t just want to cut back on using them,
we want to get rid of them completely. If China can do it, so can you!  Getting rid of the bags you have lying around in your home is the first step.

We’ve got prizes!

We realize that this is an uphill battle.  Maybe your family has a
mountain of plastic bags stashed somewhere at home.  If this is the
case, how creative can you get with them?  Can you find an alternative
use for those evil plastic bags? Gather all of the plastic bags from
around your home and do something with them.  Make a tote bag.  Make a hat.
Anything.  Then, take a photo of your creation and blog about it. Or,
take a photo that shows how you deal with those plastic shopping bags
in another way, like recycling them.  Don’t forget to comment back here
by February 15th, when a random draw of participants will determine the

five winners of these EcoMomsAct prizes: three winners will receive a Greenloop reusable shopping bag, one winner a Skeeda reusable bag, and another winner will receive a set of reusable mesh produce BYO Bags.  Prizes are all courtesy of the lovely ladies at Green Mom Finds.  Good luck!

 
 

Ban Toxics, Baby!

11 Nov

We blogged it on Blog Action day. We signed the petition. We closed our eyes really tightly and tapped our shoes together three times.

But it hasn’t gone away yet.

Bisphenol A is still all around us … including in baby bottles.

The battle continues to be waged and we can be part of the front lines. If you are a BlogHers Act Canada blogger or reader living in the Toronto area, then we’d love to invite you to special event. We are excited to support Toxic Nation’s “Ban Toxics, Baby!” rally on November 20th. Here are the deets:

Family Rally to End Toxic Chemicals in Baby Bottles

We want the McGuinty government to get cracking and pass a law to get toxic chemicals out of baby bottles and other consumer products.

FAMILY FUN RALLY!

Join us with your babies and your old baby bottles for music, fun, hot apple cider and cheering at Queen’s Park.

WHERE: Queen’s Park front lawn

WHEN: Tuesday, November 20, 2007

10AM-11:30AM

Rain or Shine, we’ll be out for a party!

EVERYONE IS WELCOME!

RSVP to Cassandra Polyzou at Environmental Defence

(416)323-9521 x222

cpolyzou@environmentaldefence.ca

visit www.toxicnation.ca for more info

N517924267_142822_4549

Not in Toronto to attend the rally? Still want to do something tangible and up close and personal?

Toxic Nation is also embarking on a huge campaign to urge daycare centres to ban Bisphenol A.

You can ask your child’s day care centre to become Bisphenol A free and to implore their suppliers to do the same. All the info plus sample letters can be found here.

So let’s do it, baby. Let’s ban toxics!!!

If you go to the event and take photos … be sure to blog them and let us know so we can post links and spread the word about the rally. Thanks!

 
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Posted in Toxic

 

September Challenge: Back to School/Work/Daycare With Less Packaging

04 Sep

It’s not too late to write your take on how to reduce packaging in our lives! We’ve extended our deadline for posts to Sunday, September 16th. And don’t forget to send us your link to be entered to win one of our groovy prizes …..

It’s been far too many years since my calendar has started in September. Yet somehow, programming from all those days as a student, makes this time of year feel as ripe for resolutions as New Year’s Eve.

Today is the first day after the last long weekend of the summer and all the kiddies are heading back into the classroom. Whether you are going back to school, work or daycare, today is about new beginnings and getting into a routine.

But routines don’t always have to be boring. In fact, what better time to start BlogHers Act Canada’s 12-months of personal eco-challenges. Each month we’ll embrace a different eco-issue we can make changes in our own lives to help the environment. And for September, on this first day of back to school/work/daycare, we are challenging ourselves to do it with less packaging.

About 10% of every one of your shopping dollars is used to pay for packaging of the products you buy. And it’s reported that approximately 30% of municipal waste comes from packaging. Thirty percent. I cringe every time I look in my shopping cart that is filled with more packaging than the goods they encase. Packaging that ends up in my recycling bin as soon as I get home.

So what can we do about it?

Firstly, in the spirit of the BlogHers Act Canada initiative, we can spread the word. Blog it. Blog it. Blog. It.

We invite all Canadian bloggers and FOC-ers (Friends of Canadians) to participate in writing a post about how you plan to reduce packaging. Write whatever part of this issue is most important to you. Share your own tips and clever ideas. Rant about how hard it is to use less disposable items. Review a great product. Do an expose on companies with particularly excessive packaging. Write a Haiku.

With enough of us blogging it and engaging our readership, we can get more people thinking and acting on tangibly reducing the amount of packaging that ends up in our landfill.

Write your post by Wednesday, September 12th and leave us a link and we’ll share a round up of all the blog coverage on this issue.

AND if saving the world from the evil perils of excess packaging weren’t incentive enough, there will be prizes! All bloggers who write about this issue will be entered in a draw for one of two awesome-tastic, packaging-conscious prizes:

Kleankanteen18oz_2

You could win an 18oz Klean Kanteen Stainless Steel Reusable bottle. It fits in most lunch boxes and bags and is toxin free.

Orrrr…

Mlb1_2

One lucky blogger’s prize will be a Basura insulated, 100% lead-free, reusable lunch bag. Each bag is one-of a kind and is made from recycled juice packs by a women’s co-op in the Philippines.

But this challenge isn’t just about blogging.

We are also gonna walk the talk and all really commit to do something.

Bottles

To get the ball rolling, we’ve compiled an initial list of eco-licious ideas on how you can reduce your packaging:

~ Stop drinking water from plastic water bottles and fill up reusable containers instead. We use billions of plastic water bottles each day and most still end up in landfills.

~ Stop buying other single-serve, disposable beverages too like canned pop or juice boxes. Buy the larger containers and pour into reusable bottles to bring along for lunch.

~ Save the world one Java at time. Instead of disposable coffee cups from your local barista, bring your own coffee mug or thermos and fill ‘er up.

~ Buy groceries in bulk. Consider “family sized” items that use less packaging or go to the bulk food bins – you’ll save money too!

~ Order less Take-out. Pack your lunch or eat in to reduce the amount of take-out disposable packaging. Or, if you do have to eat out – skip the drink lid and straw.

Our eating habits aren’t the only place we can make a difference. Here are some other shopping tips for the back-to-school time of year:

~ Look for refillable pens.

~ Use rechargeable batteries.

~ Buy school/office supplies in bulk.

~ Hit thrift stores and yard sales to reuse and repurpose items like funky retro fashions and decor for your college dorm room.

What other ways can we each reduce our consumption of unnecessary packaging? Share your thoughts and ideas between now and September 12th.

And here’s the best part of the September challenge … let’s keep count.

We’ll start with the disposable drink containers and ask that we all keep track/estimate the impact of our personal changes this month…

~ How many disposable plastic water bottles would you and your family have used?

~ How many disposable coffee cups do you save by bringing your own?

~ How many cans of pop do you save buy buying larger sizes or switching beverage choices?

We want to know. Keep track and share your progress. Every single one counts. At the end of the month, we’ll share a grand tally of how many bottles and cups and cans we saved together. This should be fun!

Just one person drinking from a few less plastic bottles of water might not save the world on their own. But if we all do it … now that’s starting something!

And if a mantra to use less packaging gives you another reason to go for the jumbo size bottle of vino the next time you are at the liquor store, well then we say … cheers to going green!

 
 

What You’ll Get Nekkid For

13 Aug

This weekend hundreds of volunteers were photographed in the buff by famed photographer, Spencer Tunick. They wore nothing but a smile to raise awareness about global warming atop a shrinking Swiss glacier (I am willing to bet that wasn’t the only, ahem, shrinkage that day).

Switzerland_greenpeace_spencer_tuni
(AP Photo/Keystone, Laurent Gillieron)

So what would you get nekkid for?

Well, with this past week of voting you told us. The polls officially closed at midnight for our final green vote to narrow BlogHers Act Canada’s environmental action focus. And when all the layers are stripped away (enough of the burlesque blogging already), here’s how your votes shook out …

3.1% of you voted to protect our natural resources.

4.7% wanted us to focus on reducing chemical lawn pesticides.

9.4% chose to either ban plastic bags, teach our kids to live green or embrace green power.

12.4% of voters wanted to see a reduction in consumer packaging.

18.8% were keen to channel our efforts into lobbying for Bill C-30.

And the issue you most wanted to get nekkid for ….

… a resounding 32.8% of you voted to spend the next 12 months working to ELIMINATE/REDUCE HARMFUL CHEMICALS IN FOOD/RETAIL PRODUCTS. Given all the recent toy recalls and food scares, our energies will be verrrrrrrrrrry well spent.

And now? We roll up our sleeves and dive in!

During the next week or two we’ll be in talks with some key national NGOs and charities. We’ll do our research, form partnerships and gather advice on how best to tackle the issue. We also really look forward to your suggestions and ideas about how our plan should unfold. Leave your thoughts here, on your blog (and send us a link) or in our Facebook group. Then, together, we’ll begin taking action!

At the beginning of September we’ll also launch the second layer to BlogHers Act Canada’s environmental efforts. Every month we’ll concentrate on an issue that we can each personally make a difference on in our own lives. There will be fun challenges, blog bursts, and ideas on change. And best of all, we’ll quantify and keep track of our fantabulous progress.

Our calendar of personal eco-action:

September - Back to School/Work/Daycare with less packaging.

October - Recycle!

November - Reducing home energy use.

DecemberGreening up the holiday season.

JanuaryOne meatless meal a week challenge.

FebruaryBuh-bye plastic shopping bags.

March - Eco-Fashion.

April - Teaching our kids to go green.

MayGreener gardening.

JuneReducing the auto footprint.

JulyEating locally.

Augusttba

What do you think? Ready to get nekkid? Okay, so nakedness is not actually a requirement to participate in our incredible year-long initiative. After all, it gets mighty cold in Canada pretty soon. But we can embrace the spirit of taking a stand and baring it all to make a difference.

A real, tangible difference.

 
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Posted in Opinion

 

The Next Steps

31 Jul

“We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our children.”

On Friday, we formally announced that the BlogHers Act Canada issue is … the ENVIRONMENT. There were much applause and email flurries and great enthusiasm for our chosen direction. Our energy, creativity and collective voice are sure to make a significant difference in the 12 months ahead.

So where do we begin?

The most important thing now is focus. F-O-C-U-S. Without a clearly defined issue and set of objectives, we could run the risk of making loads of noise but not really seeing any concrete results from our efforts. Rock stars, celebrities and media are certainly talking a lot about green issues but we want to do more than talk. We want to affect change and take action.

Environmentfocus

We all need to hear your thoughts on what that actionable direction should be…

Is it getting Canada to commit to Kyoto?

Is it seeing legislation passed to eliminate plastic shopping bags?

Is it pesticides?

Is it educating children about living green?

Is it protecting our vast natural resources?

Is it pollution?

Is it packaging?

Is it over consumption?

Is it eating locally?

Is it green power?

Is it any one of the thousands of other possible areas that need our attention?

Over the next week and a half we are asking everyone to participate in choosing our direction. Which area do you feel we can make the biggest difference? Which area is the most pressing priority for Canada? Is there some poignant research you want to share or a non-profit you want to tell everyone about? Do you have any initial ideas on how we can rock this?

Please blog about your perspective (sending us the link). And discuss it here and at our Facebook group.

Then on August 10th, we’ll have another short survey to collect consensus on our direction.

With our focused agenda we’ll partner with NGOs across the country to gather their insight and work together for tangible change. We’ll also have a monthly calendar of actions for the next twelve months.

Right now it is about brainstorming and refining and harnessing all the passion for this rally cry.

Green is where it’s at people. Let’s make sure Canada leads the way.

 
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Posted in Steps