Morris County's One & Only Ecocentric Blog

Morris County's One & Only Ecocentric Blog



Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Organic Lawn Care

by Marc A. Reynolds
Garden State Green

A few years ago I noticed a sign that was on my friend's lawn.  It read "Organic Lawn Care".  It's not like I hadn't thought about it before, I just never knew anyone who used that kind of service.  I spoke to my friend and she said she was very happy with it.  I don't think you'll ever achieve a golf course, deep green lawn without using man-made chemicals, but at least you'll be able to sleep at night.   Conventional lawncare products are far too toxic to consider safe. 

Come to think of it, I was actually using an organic lawn service when I noticed my friend's sign.  I just wasn't happy with them.  The name of the company I would personally not recommend is The Organic Dutchman.  I even saw the owner interviewed by a NYC news source, but they were more talk then they were results. 

The second service I went with was called Organic Turf & Insect Busters. This company is a smaller outfit located in Chester, NJ.  The owner is very bland and did not try to sell me his service or his philosophy.  The results were mediocre and the cost was high.  The owner would sit in his Subaru Outback while two Latino men would put down the all natural ingredients by hand.  The cost was too high and I gave up and no longer put any kind of chemicals on my lawn.  Is a greener weed free lawn really worth the risks?  I don't think so. 

I recently did a search for organic lawn care in Morris County and what a shock, the market now seems to be flooded with choices.  Did everyone wake up one night feeling worried and guilty about poisoning our families and neighbors?  No, green became a buzzword back in 2008 and the rest as they say is history.  If I were to pursue this type of service again, I would ask for referrals and I would go with my gut.  Everyone can't be in it for the love of the planet I know, but they should at least try to fake it just a little bit.  

A Great Local Group to Meet other "Green-minded" People

Community Green is an all volunteer organization.

Community Green is an interconnected coalition of people and organizations promoting eco-conscious lifestyles.

Our Vision: We believe in transforming ourselves, our communities, our world by nurturing creative solutions for local and global issues. Caring for our environment is joyful and rewarding for ourselves and future generations.

Our Mission: Our network provides simple, healthful, community based activities. We bring people together to take positive action and rebuild local resilience.

Together, we make a world of difference!


Designer Ariane Delafosse launched Community Green in April of 2007. Living in New Jersey her entire adult life, she is a graduate of Rutgers University with a degree in Landscape Architecture. Ariane’s mission is to connect the people with local and global environmental issues, starting with our own backyards. Ariane is an avid gardener, beekeeper, photographer and environmentalist, and served 2 years on the Bernards Green Team.

Paul Saccone has been involved in environmental and social causes for many years. Paul brings great passion and experience to Community Green, fully understanding its impact on peoples lives and perceptions. He shares our longing for a world where we can all live green and sustainable lifestyles. Paul is a huge patron of art and music, and is a member of the Bernards Green Team.

Jonathan Cloud is a lifelong environmentalist, community organizer, and entrepreneur. His career has spanned journalism, politics, invention, housing design and construction, internet development, networking, non-profits, and sustainable business development. Jonathan knows that our challenge is understanding our current situation, and the changes that are needed in our attitudes and actions. He also sees the possibilities and opportunities to nurture trends that will enable us not merely to survive but to thrive.

Paul Nick, CG Mentor has been a rock climber since 1990 and authored three guidebooks to rock climbing include Rock Climbing New Jersey. Paul spent several years as co-coordinator of the NYC Metropolitan Area Awakening the Dreamer Symposium Local Community Group. Paul is on the Board of Directors of the non-profit Amazon Dental/Medical Project and has made four volunteer trips to the Amazon. He has also been an Introduction Leader for Landmark Education for five years, but today prefers to use that training to be one of many people who are transforming ecological crisis into possibility.

Jennifer McDonnell Makini, CG Mentor worked for Whole Foods Market as their Environmental Specialist for six years. She is a NJ Certified Recycling Professional, an active member of the NJ WasteWise Business Network Advisory Council, the Buy Recycled Alliance of New York (BRANY) Planning Committee, the Association of NJ Recyclers, and the NJ Food Council Environment Committee. She also hosts the media outlet "Planet Diaries", where she works to advance the use of innovative technologies.

Marnie Vyff is an information designer who discovered we have to break from the world that’s marketed to us and follow our inner voice. She is an avid environmentalist and promotes how affordable and rewarding it is to be green. Living in Mountain Lakes most of her life, Marnie is a partner in a graphic design firm, runs a local organic co-operative, is on her Shade Tree Commission, and works with local environmental groups.

Suzie Blodgett is an avid environmentalist who believes that individuals, communities and businesses each have a responsibility to do their part to make conscious decisions that minimize their impact on the planet while leaving the resources necessary for future generations to sustain themselves. Educated in interior design with a focus on green design, she opened the first green design showroom in NJ, with the goal of making it easier to go green and create a healthy home. Today, she continues to offer green products and eco-jewelry and crafts. Suzie serves on the Board of Directors for Sustainable West Milford and is actively involved in sharing information and creating events that spark change.

Elyssa Serrilli has been an environmental educator in New Jersey for the past 8 years teaching in urban, suburban, and rural communities to audiences from children to adults. She has a passion for sustainable living, outdoor experiential education, and community service. Through her experiences with AmeriCorps and NJ Youth Corps, she has seen the power of ‘service learning’ to empower individuals to change their lives and rebuild their communities. Elyssa is co-founder of Green Collar Futures, a residential service-learning program in green collar job training, sustainable living, and leadership development.

Richard Luna is an entrepreneur who has been a business owner and a real estate investor. He's also a certified chimney sweep and is interested in alternative energy. He's passionate about the environment and people's well being. As a former introduction leader for Landmark Education he has a desire to find other leaders who are also committed to making a difference with the environment in their communities and in the world.

Sharon Simpson is committed to having people reconnect with nature. She believes that by connecting with nature, people will have a greater appreciation for the planet and therefore will take the necessary actions to do their part in making the world a greener place to live. She has a love for travel which has taken her to many places around the world. Being in the customer service industry her entire working life, she is dedicated to making a difference for others.

Meet Community Green at local NJ events because to make a difference in the world we all need to be actively involved with our own communities! Interested in becoming a Volunteer Organizer for Community Green? All are welcome to apply, just download our Organizer Guidelines & Application here and let us know your interested via email.

Risky Decisions

Published: Sunday, August 22, 2010, 2:00 PM     Star Ledger
Susan K. Livio/Statehouse Bureau

pediatriciton-immunize.JPGPediatrician M. Calhoun Thomas immunizes Julian Booker, age 2, in her Orange office. Julian's dad Aree Booker holds the toddler, but Julian's sister Aaliyah, age 8, cannot bear to watch. 
 
TRENTON — Call it one of New Jersey’s medical mysteries.
One of the most affluent states in the country, home to more than a few giants of the pharmaceutical industry, New Jersey also has one of the lowest immunization rates in the nation for babies and toddlers.
The state ranked 42nd last year — and 45th in 2008 — in a telephone survey of parents and pediatricians by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
New Jersey’s 64 percent rate for giving infants and toddlers recommended shots for polio, hepatitis B, mumps, measles and rubella and other diseases last year was well below the national average of nearly 71 percent, and the lowest in the Northeast. In Pennsylvania, 72 percent of infants and toddlers got their shots. Nearly 71 percent got them in New York City.
Nobody knows for sure why New Jersey’s vaccination rate has slipped so low, but public health professionals and pediatricians say they’ve seen it building for several years.
In low-income and immigrant communities, many lack health insurance, transportation to the doctor’s office, or struggle to understand the complex schedule of up to 28 shots recommended by the time a child is two-and-a-half years old.
And there’s also a growing resistance to vaccines among middle-class and wealthy people for whom money and insurance aren’t an issue. Some reject the schedule of shots urged by the American Academy of Pediatricians and the CDC.
"There is a lot of angst over vaccines," said David Bendich, a pediatrician and president of the Essex Metro Immunization Coalition, which promotes vaccination among city children. "There is so much anti-vaccine feeling in the population. Nurses don’t want to see kids cry. Even some doctors don’t want to give four vaccines in one visit."
To improve vaccine rates, physicians and public health officials formed the New Jersey Immunization Network late last year. They fear what the anti-immunization trend might bring: a comeback for serious diseases like whooping cough and measles, all but wiped out generations ago. They note 1,500 cases of whooping cough erupted this year in California, where doctors say children were unprotected.
shots-chart.jpgView full size
"So far we are pretty lucky," said Ruth Gubernick, a public health consultant who specializes in child immunizations. "But we could be a plane ride away" from an outbreak.
Some of the more vocal parents who question vaccines said they were surprised, but not alarmed, by the state’s ranking.
"It’s encouraging to me that parents are saying: wait," said Sue Collins, co-founder of the New Jersey Alliance for Informed Choice in Vaccination.
The law allows parents to delay vaccinating babies and toddlers, unless they go to day care. Mandates don’t kick in until they reach school age. Some parents request pediatricians administer one shot at a given time instead multiple vaccinations because they don’t trust vaccine manufacturers and the government to investigate and reveal side effects.
"Parents are realizing the onus is on them to do their own research," Collins said. "They are not getting the answers they want from health officials and doctors."
Deputy Health Commissioner Susan Walsh said parents shouldn’t alter the schedule of shots. "People who are vaccinated help form a circle of protection around babies and individuals with health conditions who can’t be fully immunized," she said.
Vaccine opponents are meeting regularly with lawmakers to build momentum for a bill that would allow parents of school-aged children to claim a "philosophical exemption" to shots, said Collins, a Long Hill resident.
A small but growing number of parents already use the state’s religious exemption to allow their children to skip the shots required for school. It does not require parents to reveal their religion or present a letter from a member of the clergy.
In the 2005-06 school year, schools gave 452 students a pass because their parents cited religious reasons, state health spokeswoman Donna Leusner said. In the school year that just ended, 3,865 were allowed to skip shots on religious grounds.
christopher-burnett-newark.JPGPediatrician M. Calhoun Thomas (left) gives Christopher Burnett, age 12, of Newark, a hug after he got immunized in her Orange office.
Stacy Allan of Summit said she got religious exemptions for her boys, now 5 and 8, after having them vaccinated through their fourth birthdays and watching them suffer with life-threatening food allergies and severe asthma. She hasn’t allowed her 2-year-old daughter to get any shots.
Allan resents doctors who look askance at parents who reject the schedule of shots for their kids. "They make them sound fearful or stupid. They are not," Allan said. "People who are not vaccinating are the most educated. You stop vaccines because you researched it, after weighing the pros and cons."
Many say the early catalyst to the questioning of vaccines was a study by a British doctor 12 years ago linking the measles, mumps and rubella shots to autism. That study was debunked this year by the medical journal that published it.
New Jersey’s immunization rate plummeted from 76 to 62 percent in 2007, the same year the CDC announced the state has the nation’s highest autism rate. That was also the year New Jersey became the first to mandate a flu shot for children from 6 months to 59 months who attend a child care center or preschool.
"When that mandate passed, a whole lot of parents who had no interest in vaccines felt like this was too many and too much," said Barbara Flynn of Summit, an Alliance for Informed Choice member.
Robert Tolan, chief of allergy immunization and infectious diseases at Children’s Hospital of St. Peter’s Medical Center in New Brunswick, admits frustration.
"There are a small percentage of people who are very vocal and very invested in making their viewpoint known," he said. "When I have tried to share scientific information, they don’t seem to respond to that approach. What will happen is that when preventable illness starts striking down our children, the pendulum will swing back."
Families willing to vaccinate who have trouble remembering the complicated schedule or getting to a doctor can get help from the Immunization Network, said Jane Sarwin, a founding member.
The network will help spread the word about free vaccines many clinics and doctors’ offices have because of federal stimulus grants. "By raising awareness about who is providing the vaccines, it will help increase immunization rates," she said.
Within 16 months, pediatricians will have to enter immunization information into a statewide confidential registry, so doctors can contact families when the next shot is due. "This will be a powerful tool for bringing kids up to date," Sarwin said.

Where to donate in Morris County

bicycles books cars cell phones computers clothing & furniture educational supplies
educational supplies eyeglasses food frequent flyer miles hair packing peanuts pet supplies toys


How to find local organizations needing donations


Determining the Value of Donated Property, IRS Publication 561

bicycles

Pedals for Progress accepts used bicycles and distributes to developing countries. Local contact: (908) 838-4860, Box 312 High Bridge NJ 08829-0312

cars
Thinking about donating your car to a charity? The IRS publishes
A Donor's Guide to used-car donations. Make sure you know where your car is going before you sign over the title and hand the keys to a stranger. Charities that are recognized by the Internal Revenue Service are listed in The Cumulative List of Organizations (Publication 78). Some organizations sponsor their own auto donation programs, others use national networks such as the Vehicle Donation Center. Every organization has its own guidelines regarding acceptable cars (age, running/non-operational) and title transfer.
IRS Publication 561 does not specify which car guides must be used to determine the fair market value of your vehicle. The New Jersey Administrative Code 11:3-10.4 specifies two approved guides for the use of insurance company vehicle appraisals: National Automobile Dealer Association and the The Automobile Red book:A Primedia Price Digest [formerly the National Market Reports Auto Blue Book].This Automobile Red Book is not available for free on the Internet. The Morris County Library subscribes to the Red Book and can provide you with prices from this source. The popular Kelley Blue Book is also available online for free.
The following organizations pick up cars in the Morris County area (no, this is not a comphensive list!):

cell phones
Morris County Division on Aging, Disabilities and Veterans, (973) 285-6848 The Wireless Foundation's national Donate a Phone campaign collects cell phones to benefit victims of domestic violence. FAQs about donation (Must the phone be operational? How to obtain tax receipts, etc.), where to mail/drop off phones and instructions for organizing a community cellphone drive are included. Morris County NJ patrons can drop off their phones at the Wireless Zone, 11 Park Ave. Madison, (973) 593-9199
Verizon Wireless Hopeline also collects for victims of domestic violence.

clothing, furniture, & white goods
Clothing and furniture must be clean and in good condition; white goods must be operational. These organizations pick up donations in the Morris County area:
Clothing donation bins from various organizations (DARE, etc.) are sometimes found in your town's recycling center. Northern NJ Goodwill donation centers.

computers
(See county Utilities Authority for disposal of computers and monitors.) Locally, contact Employment Horizons, who can use desktop and laptop computers, laser printers and DVD players. Several national computer recycling programs accept both large-quantity donations and individual pieces of new and used computer equipment. Peripherals such as desks, surge protectors, headphones and software are also welcome. Units specially adapted for the disabled (speech synthesizers, magnification software, joysticks) are in the highest demand. Equipment must be in good working condition. Donors are asked to arrange and pay for shipping. This is also a tax deductible expense. Be sure to erase your harddrive before you donate your computer.The major clearinghouses are:
Computers 4 Kids
(434-817-1121) Committed to giving our nation's children the equipment they need to advance their education. Computers are distributed to designated technologically-poor areas.
Gifts In Kind International
(703-836-2121) "Recycle Technology" program accepts large quantity donations of new and used equipment from businesses for international distribution. Does not accept donations from individuals.
National Cristina Foundation
(800-CRISTINA) Matches your donations with organizations in your area. Donors arrange to deliver equipment directly to the organization in need.

educational supplies

  • Neighborhood House (973) 538-1229
    White boards, glue, pencils/pens, paper, art supplies, plastic plates and cups.

eyeglasses


food
Local schools and municipal governments often conduct food drives around the holidays.


frequent flyer miles & hotel loyalty points
Do you have miles you can't use? Other people can. Please consider


  • Red Cross uses these miles to send volunteers to places in need



  • Make-A-Wish keeps families caring for very ill children together with your airline miles & hotel points.



    hair
    Locks of Love is a non-profit organization that provides hairpieces to financially disadvantaged children. Many of these children have cancer. Hair of all kinds, 10" or longer, is needed to create a hairpiece. Ask your salon if it participates. If not, donors are asked to pay cost of the cut and mailing their hair to the organization. hair to the organization. Call (888) 896-1588 if you have questions.



    pet supplies
    Food, blankets, towels, cleaning supplies, pet toys




    toys
    Lightly used toys are sometimes welcome by shelters (serving families with children) and local churches (for distribution or in-house use). In Morris County try
    Homeless Solutions & Neighborhood House . Some organizations sponsor toy drives during the December holidays; many of these welcome lightly used toys. Example: Toys for Tots/US Marines.



    It's easy to identify non-profit organizations in our area:


    Think about who can use your items. Successful connections depend upon the specs of the equipment, the current needs of the organization, and logistics (delivery is crucial). Day care centers & nursery schools: Many primary educational programs work just fine on older computer models. Printers are nice, but not necessary.
    Senior centers & nursing homes: Computers and typewriters are often appreciated by seniors who have a hard time writing by hand.
    Shelters & group homes: Adults can use older computers for job hunting (resumes & cover letters), practice typing and upgrade their office computer skills. Children can use them to expand their education or complete homework assignments. Books and games in good condition may also be welcome.
    Organizations: Special Olympians may appreciate sports equipment (in good, working condition); a community garden may be interested in your old wheelbarrow. Retiring to Florida? Maybe Habitat for Humanity can find a new home for your old snowblower. Animal shelters welcome used blankets and towels.

    Thanks to the Morris County Library for providing this list. 



  • Clean energy laws, utility costs make New Jersey a solar hotbed

    Published: Sunday, August 22, 2010, 6:00 AM
    solar.jpgEdward Fischer of Pompton Lakes waited nine years to have solar panels installed in his 1950s Cape Cod. A California company's financing method made the project affordable.

    Edward Fischer of Pompton Lakes finally got solar panels this week on his tidy, 1950s Cape Cod with sky blue shutters.
    He had been trying for nine years to figure out how to afford them. But two years ago he gave up when he was quoted an out-of-pocket price — with rebates — of $30,000.
    Then, he read a newspaper article in January about a California company that had a better method for financing solar power.
    "I called them in a flash, and when they said it was going to cost me $600 I said, ‘Hallelujah, my dream of having the power meter go backward was finally going to be granted,’ " Fischer said.
    New Jersey is the hottest place in the United States for solar energy these days, and it is not because it is so sunny. The Garden State’s progressive clean energy laws and high electricity costs make it the best place to install solar power because systems can pay for themselves in less than five years — faster than any state in the nation.
    Mercury Solar Systems, one of the larger solar installers in New Jersey, built the array on Fischers’ steep roof. But the financing, insurance and maintenance was handled by SunRun, the California-based company that caught Fischer’s eye.
    The state’s burgeoning solar industry is attracting the attention of companies from around the country, especially from California, which has long been the nation’s largest solar market. Its 66,000 solar installations dwarf New Jersey’s 6,500 projects.
    In the past year, established San Francisco-area solar companies like SunRun, Tioga Energy and One Block off the Grid have been partnering with local installers and bringing new methods for financing solar to New Jersey.
    "SunRun and One Block off the Grid are pursuing alternative business models," said Justin Barnes, a solar policy analyst at the N.C. Solar Center in Raleigh, N.C. "They figured out all the details in California, and now they are looking into new markets to make money."
    Since January, when SunRun started operating in New Jersey, the company has had a 60 percent growth rate each month, completing nearly 500 deals, said Lynn Jurich, co-founder and president. The 3-year-old firm owns the solar panels, and sells the power back to the homeowners.
    solar2.jpgA worker from Mercury Solar Systems carries a solar panel into Fischer's home. Fischer estimates the installation will cost him $600.
    In December, San Mateo-based Tioga Energy won a $22.3 million contract with its partner, SunDurance Energy of South Plainfield, to build a solar project at 19 municipal and school buildings in Morris County. Tioga will own and maintain the equipment and sell the energy back to the county. The county will buy the power for less from Tioga than it would pay the local utility.
    The financing arrangement is complex, as it combines power purchase agreements from Tioga and low-interest bonds issued by the Morris County Improvement Authority. That allows the county to benefit from federal tax incentives and save $3.5 million in electricity costs over the next 15 years.
    "Being in the solar industry, I talk about policy a lot and I regularly point to New Jersey for having the very best policies for renewables," said Marc Roper, vice president of sales and marketing for Tioga, who formerly lived in Hunterdon County. "The market creates competition so consumers are not paying more than they need to, and it lets us plan for the long term."
    New Jersey is a leader among states from Arizona to Massachusetts, which are using a solar renewable energy credit systems to encourage property owners to invest in solar. New Jersey’s solar renewable energy credits are the most generous in the nation, giving homeowners $655 for every megawatt of sun power they generate. That’s more than twice the amount for any other state.
    "The California gold rush is a solar credit story," said Gary Lakritz, president of Knollwood Energy in Chester Township, an energy credit financial advisor. "I have a lot of customers investing in solar wondering whether to go to Pennsylvania or New Jersey, and I always recommend New Jersey because of the price of the credits."
    New Jersey’s solar credits can be traded on an exchange. One of the largest online marketplaces for New Jersey’s solar credits, SRECTrade, is based in San Francisco.
    It was formed three years ago by Stanford University business school graduates who saw the opportunity in trading SRECs — solar renewable energy credits. SRECs from 15 states are sold through the auction site, but New Jersey’s make up the bulk of their business.
    While New Jersey is the second-largest solar market in the U.S. for installations after California, it lags behind the West Coast state considerably in solar product manufacturing. Petra Solar of South Plainfield is the only producer of solar panels here.
    Petra Solar is best known for providing solar panels for utility poles to PSE&G for a large program that will generate 40 megawatts of energy, enough to power 40,000 homes a year. The 4-year-old firm has grown from 14 employees last year to 140 this year, and has raised $54 million in the past three years, all from sources outside of New Jersey.
    "We are the only manufacturer in New Jersey, and we need a lot more," said Shihab Kuran, president of Petra Solar. "We need a supply chain."
    Recently Kuran, who has made a number of deals this year for sales outside of New Jersey, has been able to turn the tables on the California invasion into the Garden State.
    "We opened an office in California earlier this year, in Santa Monica," said Kuran. "We are exporting a unique product invented here to California."

    Morris County solar energy project will save about 35 percent on energy bills

    Published: Thursday, February 11, 2010, 6:09 PM     Updated: Thursday, February 11, 2010, 6:51 PM
    solar-panel-morris.JPGMike Sheets, an employee of The Solar Center, installs the first of over 1600 solar electric panels on a roof in Wharton in Morris County. Officials announced today that those involved in the renewable energy project will save an average of 35 percent on energy bills next year.
    MORRIS COUNTY -- Schools and agencies that signed up for Morris County’s solar/renewable energy project will average 35 percent savings on energy bills next year and more than 40 percent by the end of the initial 15-year program, officials announced today.
    It will cost them 10.6 cents per kilowatt hour for solar-produced power versus a current average of more than 15 cents for traditional energy sources, said Stephen Pearlman, attorney for the Morris County Improvement Authority, which is jointly spearheading the project with the county board of freeholders.
    It is estimated participants will save a total of $2.3 million over 15 years, officials said.
    "This is a tremendous moment,’’ Pearlman said at a joint meeting today of the authority and freeholders in Morristown. "We have seen a concept, an idea turned into an important reality.’’
    California-based Tioga Energy, Inc. and SunDurance Energy of South Plainfield, which won a $22.3 million contract in December to lead the solar initiative, will start work by June to prepare buildings for solar panels, including roof upgrades, said officials.
    Solar panels will be installed on 14 public schools and some county government buildings. Participants include county government, the Morris County Park Commission and the Boonton, Parsippany, Mountain Lakes, Morris Hills Regional and West Morris Regional school districts.
    Boonton School Superintendent Christine Johnson anticipates a first-year saving of $16,000 and cut in energy consumption by 36 percent for her district. Savings should reach $25,000 a year by the 15th year, she said.
    Solar panels will be installed on Boonton High School and John Hill and School Street elementary schools. Included is a $100,000 upgrade of the high school roof, to be financed by the county.
    "Anything we can do to show the community we are trying to save money and reduce energy is worthwhile,’’ said Johnson, who expects to incorporate the energy project into the district’s educational curriculum.
    Participants can also receive state energy rebates, federal investment tax credits, solar energy certificates and could even make money by selling excess power during summer months to the energy grid for a power/energy credit, he said.
    County Administrator John Bonanni said he expects the county to initiate a second round of solar connections and hopes to entice more schools and towns to participate.

    An Alternative to Starbucks & Dunkin Donuts

    by Marc A. Reynolds
    Garden State Green 

    If you follow this blog, you've most likely wondered where you could go locally for a fair trade, organic cup of coffee.  Luckily, I found a great place a few years ago.  They actually have three locations.  The name of the establishment is Smart World Coffee

    They have stores in Morristown, Denville and the newest location is in New Milford.  The newest location even offers a drive thru.  With free Wi-Fi and mostly organic offerings, I can't imagine you would be disappointed.  I frequent the one in Morristown, friendly staff and kind of tight seating.  The Denville location is a very nice looking space, usually not crowded at all, but a little less fun for people watching since foot traffic is a lot less than Morristown.  I have never been the Bergen County location, but hear it's quite nice.  Make sure to hang onto your customer loyalty card and get it punched with each coffee purchase and your 11th coffee will be free.

    The prices are no more than you would find at a Starbucks or Seattle Coffee Works.  The only ingredient in Cafe Mocha that isn't organic is the mocha itself.  Everything else is.  Please don't forget to bring your BPA free reusable plastic cup.  I picked up this exact set at Costco for $18.  Not only does it prevent more waste from being generated, but it keeps your iced coffee cool.

    I don't know of any other "Mom & Pop" coffee shops that offer so much in organic coffees in Morris County.  Make sure to hang onto your customer loyalty card and get it punched and your 11th coffee will be free.  If you know of any, please reach out to us and fill us in.

    Is the Early Onset of Puberty in Young Girls Linked to Meat?

    Christina Pirello

    Christina Pirello

    Posted: August 13, 2010 02:54 PM
    The Huffington Post

    American girls are hitting puberty earlier than ever before. A new study released by the medical journal, Pediatrics, reveals a surprisingly big bump in the numbers of girls going through puberty between the ages of seven and eight. In a study of 1,200 seven-year-old girls, 10 percent of Caucasians had some breast development as compared to 5 percent in a study published back in 1997. Worse, a whopping 23 percent of African American girls had started puberty as compared to 15 percent back in the 1997 study. And our eight-year-olds? The numbers are staggering. Eighteen percent of Caucasian girls and 43 percent of African American girls had reached early puberty, up from 11 percent for both groups in the 1997 study.
    With all the studies and all the experts doing research, they say they aren't really sure what is driving this declining age of puberty. The study's lead author, Dr. Frank Biro, director of adolescent medicine at Cincinnati's Children's Hospital, says that the rise in childhood obesity could be partly to blame. Experts say that body fat is linked to the production of sex hormones and so the early onset of puberty results. Stay with me. The link is coming. Wait for it.
    Dr. Luigi Garibladi, professor of pediatrics and clinical director of pediatric endocrinology at Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center says this makes sense. Back in the 1700s girls did not begin to menstruate until they were 17 or 18, which he believes had a lot to do with malnutrition. He says the assumption can be made that the steady decline in the age in which girls reach puberty can be linked to having more access to abundant food. I saw no mention of quality of food at this point.
    Dr. Stanley Korneman, an endocrinologist at the University of California, Los Angeles says that environmental exposure to estrogens in plastics, chemicals and foods has been going up and that estrogens stimulate breast development. And he says that could be the link to early onset of puberty. Makes sense.
    What is really going on here? I can just imagine that the smoky back rooms in Washington where meat, dairy and poultry lobbyists make their dirty little deals and hide the real facts about what is in our food are in hyper-drive. The information in this study, if people connect the dots, could blow up in their faces, and who could afford that? Not the politicians on both sides of the aisle and certainly not their clients, those pirates who peddle hormone, antibiotic and steroid-laced food to our children. And we wonder why little girls look like very big girls far before their time.
    The solution to this problem is easy and obvious. Our children are being destroyed in the name of profit by big industry and factory farms who feed their animals steroids, growth hormones and antibiotics to make them fatter, faster. More and more yield of meat from an animal means more and more profit, and if we need to sacrifice a generation of children along the way, so be it. And these are not just the rantings of some liberal, tree-hugging vegan. According to Cornell University, hormones "reduce the waiting time and the amount of feed eaten by an animal before slaughter in meat industries." And that means bigger profit... faster.
    While the childhood obesity problem is linked to the overconsumption of processed food, drive-through, dinner in a bucket and the sheer volume of sugar and other junk our kids are eating, we must also look at the role growth hormones play in the size of our kids and the age they reach puberty.
    Wake up, people. If hormones can make an animal fat, what do you think will happen to us? We have always had access to junk food, but never in human history have we been the subjects of such an intense ingestion of chemicals and hormones. Dr. Andrew Weil states that more than two-thirds of the cattle raised in the U.S. are given hormones, usually testosterone and estrogen to boost growth. According to Cornell, there are actually six hormones commonly used in meat and dairy production: estradiol and progesterone (natural female sex hormones); testosterone (natural male sex hormone); zeranol, trenbolone acetate and melengesterol (synthetic growth promoters that make animals grow faster). Not used on poultry or pigs, (but only because they don't promote meaningful growth in these animals), the FDA also allows the use of rbGH, another growth hormone, to promote more milk production in dairy cows.
    And here's where it gets really creepy. There is no monitoring of the female and male hormones, according to Cornell, because they are naturally produced by the animals so in theory, they can't really tell what hormones were produced and which were administered, so why have limits? But they set tolerance levels for the synthetic hormones. I feel safer; how about you?
    And finally, according to Cornell, the declining age in puberty's link to hormones in meat and dairy has been of concern to experts for some time now because of the possible links to breast cancer.
    What is it going to take for us to demand accountability from the people who produce our food and those government agencies that supposedly protect the health of the public? When will we pull our heads out of the sand and see the reality we face?
    Cheap, commercially produced meat may be affordable, but the cost is far too high. Now hang on. I am not going all vegan on you. But this study is a reality check for us, to be sure. Early onset of puberty is no joke. Our girls are at greater risk of breast cancer, obesity and other life-threatening conditions. And while the environment and plastics may contribute to this problem, as may the overall abundance of food, the reality is that the growth hormones, steroids and antibiotics in our meat and dairy are the major players in this tragedy.
    Dr. Biro suggests that families eat more produce (ya' think?) and more family meals together as a way to begin to solve this very real crisis, along with regular physical activity. There is also the option of choosing certified, grass-fed organic meat and dairy as a way to avoid the ingestion of hormones, which also supports a sustainable way to produce healthy animal products for us to consume. And you get to support small family ranches that, along with family farms, are the backbone of this country's food supply.
    Good ideas all, but we also have to look at other options and invest in the health of our children before we lose an entire generation because we just want cheap, fast food. There are alternatives to meat and dairy that can nourish our families and children healthfully and affordably ... and leave a lighter footprint on the planet in the process. A well-balanced, plant-based diet can provide all the nutrients our children need to thrive and to live in healthy, normal bodies. Yes, it's more work and maybe even a bit more money, but these are our children -- our future.
    This kind of blog gets people's noses out of joint. From cattle farmers to burger lovers who say they prefer a juicy steak to tofu, all the rationalizations come out. Ranchers need to make money to survive. People want what they want ... and they want meat! But in the end, the truth cannot be denied.
    We live in a culture of profit-seeking leeches that are only too happy to sell us compromised foods and line their pockets with the profits gained from pillaging our health. When are we going to stop them? All we need to do is say no. Vote with your dollar; demand better quality. Remember that they want your money. They do not care about the health of our young girls. It's up to us. A collective voice demanding accountability and better food is the only way to reverse the trends that threaten to swallow and entire generation.

    Ben & Jerry's "All Natural" concept is half-baked

    Originally Published on August 12th, 2010

    Our two ol' pals, Ben and Jerry, might be fudging the truth - our Chubby Hubby has had a little work done.
    The Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI), a nonprofit watchdog group, says Ben & Jerry’s falsely labels some of its ice creams and frozen yogurts as “All Natural" - when in reality, at least 48 out of 53 flavors of the purported “All Natural” product line contain dextrose, alkalized cocoa, corn syrup, hydrogenated oils or other artificial flavors and chemically modified ingredients.
    Today, the CSPI announced it will take these concerns to the dairy kings of the Food and Drug Administration and state attorneys general unless the Vermont-based scoop shop, now part of Unilever's brand portfolio, drops the au naturel claim.

    Posted by:
    Filed under: Food Politics • News

    Recycling Facts You May Not Have Known

    Aluminum Recycling Facts

    Bullet A used aluminum can is recycled and back on the grocery shelf as a new can, in as little as 60 days. That's closed loop recycling at its finest!
    Bullet Used aluminum beverage cans are the most recycled item in the U.S., but other types of aluminum, such as siding, gutters, car components, storm window frames, and lawn furniture can also be recycled.
    Bullet Recycling one aluminum can saves enough energy to run a TV for three hours -- or the equivalent of a half a gallon of gasoline.
    Bullet More aluminum goes into beverage cans than any other product.
    Bullet Because so many of them are recycled, aluminum cans account for less than 1% of the total U.S. waste stream, according to EPA estimates.
    Bullet An aluminum can that is thrown away will still be a can 500 years from now!
    Bullet There is no limit to the amount of times an aluminum can be recycled.
    Bullet We use over 80,000,000,000 aluminum soda cans every year.
    Bullet At one time, aluminum was more valuable than gold!
    Bullet A 60-watt light bulb can be run for over a day on the amount of energy saved by recycling 1 pound of steel. In one year in the United States, the recycling of steel saves enough energy to heat and light 18,000,000 homes!

    Bundled Newspaper

    Paper Recycling Facts

    Bullet To produce each week's Sunday newspapers, 500,000 trees must be cut down.
    Bullet Recycling a single run of the Sunday New York Times would save 75,000 trees.
    Bullet If all our newspaper was recycled, we could save about 250,000,000 trees each year!
    Bullet If every American recycled just one-tenth of their newspapers, we would save about 25,000,000 trees a year.
    Bullet If you had a 15-year-old tree and made it into paper grocery bags, you'd get about 700 of them. A busy supermarket could use all of them in under an hour! This means in one year, one supermarket can go through over 6 million paper bags! Imagine how many supermarkets there are just in the United States!!!
    Bullet The average American uses seven trees a year in paper, wood, and other products made from trees. This amounts to about 2,000,000,000 trees per year!
    Bullet The amount of wood and paper we throw away each year is enough to heat 50,000,000 homes for 20 years.
    Bullet Approximately 1 billion trees worth of paper are thrown away every year in the U.S.
    Bullet Americans use 85,000,000 tons of paper a year; about 680 pounds per person.
    Bullet The average household throws away 13,000 separate pieces of paper each year. Most is packaging and junk mail.
    Bullet In 1993, U.S. paper recovery saved more than 90,000,000 cubic yards of landfill space.
    Bullet Each ton (2000 pounds) of recycled paper can save 17 trees, 380 gallons of oil, three cubic yards of landfill space, 4000 kilowatts of energy, and 7000 gallons of water. This represents a 64% energy savings, a 58% water savings, and 60 pounds less of air pollution!
    Bullet The 17 trees saved (above) can absorb a total of 250 pounds of carbon dioxide from the air each year. Burning that same ton of paper would create 1500 pounds of carbon dioxide.
    Bullet The construction costs of a paper mill designed to use waste paper is 50 to 80% less than the cost of a mill using new pulp.
    Recycle Plastic

    Plastic Recycling Facts

    Bullet Americans use 2,500,000 plastic bottles every hour! Most of them are thrown away!
    Bullet Plastic bags and other plastic garbage thrown into the ocean kill as many as 1,000,000 sea creatures every year!
    Bullet Recycling plastic saves twice as much energy as burning it in an incinerator.
    Bullet Americans throw away 25,000,000,000 Styrofoam coffee cups every year.
    Recycle Bottles

    Glass Recycling Facts

    Bullet Every month, we throw out enough glass bottles and jars to fill up a giant skyscraper. All of these jars are recyclable!
    Bullet The energy saved from recycling one glass bottle can run a 100-watt light bulb for four hours or a compact fluorescent bulb for 20 hours. It also causes 20% less air pollution and 50% less water pollution than when a new bottle is made from raw materials.
    Bullet A modern glass bottle would take 4000 years or more to decompose -- and even longer if it's in the landfill.
    Bullet Mining and transporting raw materials for glass produces about 385 pounds of waste for every ton of glass that is made. If recycled glass is substituted for half of the raw materials, the waste is cut by more than 80%.
    Landfill

    Solid Waste and Landfills

    Bullet About one-third of an average dump is made up of packaging material!
    Bullet Every year, each American throws out about 1,200 pounds of organic garbage that can be composted.
    Bullet The U.S. is the #1 trash-producing country in the world at 1,609 pounds per person per year. This means that 5% of the world's people generate 40% of the world's waste.
    Bullet The highest point in Hamilton County, Ohio (near Cincinnati) is "Mount Rumpke." It is actually a mountain of trash at the Rumpke sanitary landfill towering 1045 ft. above sea level.
    Bullet The US population discards each year 16,000,000,000 diapers, 1,600,000,000 pens, 2,000,000,000 razor blades, 220,000,000 car tires, and enough aluminum to rebuild the US commercial air fleet four times over.
    Bullet Out of every $10 spent buying things, $1 (10%) goes for packaging that is thrown away. Packaging represents about 65% of household trash.
    Bullet On average, it costs $30 per ton to recycle trash, $50 to send it to the landfill, and $65 to $75 to incinerate it.
    Recycling Symbol

    Miscellaneous Recycling Facts

    Bullet An estimated 80,000,000 Hershey's Kisses are wrapped each day, using enough aluminum foil to cover over 50 acres of space -- that's almost 40 football fields. All that foil is recyclable, but not many people realize it.
    Bullet Rainforests are being cut down at the rate of 100 acres per minute!
    Bullet A single quart of motor oil, if disposed of improperly, can contaminate up to 2,000,000 gallons of fresh water.
    Bullet Motor oil never wears out, it just gets dirty. Oil can be recycled, re-refined and used again, reducing our reliance on imported oil.
    Bullet On average, each one of us produces 4.4 pounds of solid waste each day. This adds up to almost a ton of trash per person, per year.
    Bullet A typical family consumes 182 gallons of soda, 29 gallons of juice, 104 gallons of milk, and 26 gallons of bottled water a year. That's a lot of containers -- make sure they're recycled!
    These recycling facts have been compiled from various sources including the National Recycling Coalition, the Environmental Protection Agency, and Earth911.org. While I make every effort to provide accurate information, I make no warranty or guarantee that the facts presented here are exact. We welcome all polite corrections to our information.

    Please also feel free to contact us if you have additional recycling facts to share.

    Links to our web site are always welcome. Feel free to use any information listed on our site for your own not for profit educational purposes. A link to our site as your source is appreciated.

    For even more information and additional recycling facts, please visit
    The National Recycling Coalition