goodthings.com  
Have you told a friend about GoodThings?

Spread the word!
The Goodletter
The good life: live it, be it, do it.


Thursday, June 28, 2001
www.goodthings.com


A few favorite goodthings from Candace McFadden of Prince George, British Columbia, Canada:
The fresh smell of the air after it's rained. My cat running to greet me after a long day. Eating chocolate with my best friend while watching a "girl movie." My mom babying me when I'm sick. Climbing under my goose-down duvet with a good book and reading until I fall asleep. Knowing more about hockey than most guys. A listening ear when I feel like I need to rant and rave a little.
What are YOUR favorite goodthings? Read more favorite goodthings.


In this week's issue:
[GoodLetter] Hot in the City
[Readers Respond] "The people's money"
[Good Gravy] A guitar, a fiddle, and voices of gold -- radio makes a literature star --
Calle 54 -- plus a new Good Photo
[The Upshot] Let your computer FightAids@Home (or work)
[Housekeeping] Subscribe/unsubscribe and other tools for your back pocket


Hot in the City
Take a diverse urban neighborhood in one of America's largest cities. Combine it with a sweltering summer, a community-based organization with a great idea, a local utility with heart, and a few thousand air conditioners, and what do you get? Maybe a graceful, human solution to an energy crisis.


Dear GoodLetter readers,

The Pilsen district is Chicago's largest Mexican-American neighborhood and the heart and soul of a growing artists' community. Rich in history and full of spirited people, radiant murals, and abundant garden patches, its residents are finding themselves at the scalding center of this summer's hotly debated American energy crisis.

Literally, the scalding center. Chicago, infamous for the bone-chilling bluster of its winters, also has unbearably hot summers, so much so that energy demand doubles between June and August. Blackouts are commonplace. And it's the older central neighborhoods like Pilsen -- with its creaking utility infrastructure and rattling, obsolete air-conditioners of its lower-income residents -- that bear the brunt. The city's slow-moving approach to blackouts, especially in poorer neighborhoods with less political power, has long left Pilsen residents in the dark.

But thanks to an unlikely convergence of interests, Pilsen may be moving away from melt-down and on its way toward cool-down. Three years ago, Commonwealth Edison (or ComEd), under new leadership, promised -- with the support the city's Department of Environment and the mayor, an avid bicyclist and a champion of the roof gardens adorning City Hall -- to provide portable generators to help sustain Pilsen residents' electricity needs during outtages. Admittedly, the generators provided only a short-term solution.

The Center for Neighborhood Technology entered the picture, having worked on improving quality of life in Chicago's neighborhoods for two decades. The organization, which has its roots in the city but now with offices nationwide, had a plan that made sense for ComEd and for the neighborhood. If ComEd would support the CNT's Community Energy Cooperative program, CNT said the utility would not only save the hundreds of thousands of dollars it was spending on generators for temporary fixes, but it would also begin the process of reducing long-term demand on the power system. And how would the Co-Op do this? By trading out low-efficiency window-unit air conditioners for state-of-the-art models, everybody would win. Pilsen's low-income residents would save money on their electric bills, ComEd would reduce demand on its energy resources (and scores big in public opinion), and the environment would get a break. Sure enough, the Cooperative received a CoEd grant and launched the program last July.

Nearly a year later, the program is a huge success that's spread to three other neighborhoods -- Chicago's northwest side (near O'Hare Airport), Elgin on the far west side, and Park Forest far to the south. Last summer, the Community Energy Cooperative became a major presence at community festivals and fairs to spread awareness of the program, soliciting interested individuals and families to become invested in the program's success by buying into it. The Co-Op has been able to offer its 3,200 members (1,500 of them Pilsen residents) as much as 80% savings on the cost of Amana's top-of-the-line Energy Star air-conditioners. Last summer, the Co-Op actually delivered and installed the units. This year, folks from the neighborhood are doing it themselves. When something good is happening, says Ramiro Borja, the Co-Op's senior community development specialist, "Word of mouth just takes over."

From ComEd's perspective, the Center for Neighborhood Technology has shown results, delivering an approximately four megawatt demand savings to the utility system (enough to power 4,000 homes). From Pilsen residents' perspective, there's excitement around an issue where once there wasn't even awareness. This winter, the CNT began another version of the program, offering Co-Op members an opportunity to trade in old refrigerators for newer high-efficiency ones. They're also working with ComEd and BP Solar to begin installing photovoltaic panels on the roofs of Pilsen's public schools and to tie it into the curriculum. As Borja acknowledges: "It's the kids who have gotten their families into recycling. Now, we're trying to do the same thing with lights and energy."

GOODTHINGS (e-mail us)

[what did you think of this goodletter?]


TALK ABOUT IT
Are you doing anything to beat the heat? Did you "roll your own blackout" on the solstice? Know of any innovative programs that are confronting the energy crisis? Share your stories.

LEARN MORE ABOUT IT
For all the details you need to know about the air-conditioning take-back program in the Pilsen neighborhood, the Community Energy Cooperative, or the Center for Neighborhood Technology, please visit these helpful Web sites:
Community Energy Cooperative
Center for Neighborhood Technology
Airhead.org

DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT
Are you in the market to improve your energy efficiency? Find out how you can upgrade your own household appliances to save some money AND make a difference. Visit these Web sites:
EnergyIdeas.org
EPA's Energy Star
EarthEasy.com

For more ideas, get your copy of David Morris' Seeing the Light: Regaining Control of Our Electricity System.

back to the top



Be sure to check out the GoodThings feature in Grist Magazine this week.



Readers Respond
Ann McBurney of Ingleside, Illinois, didn't write to recommend a goodthing she heard about. She wrote to plant a seed -- she wants to start a goodthing of her own:

"Why not take that tax refund check (you know, the one we're getting because 'it's not the government's money, it's the people's money') and put it directly toward a goodthing. I for one believe we all have a responsibility to provide a measure of support to our communities (or our environment, or our schools, or any multitude of social programs). But YOU PICK IT: give your check (or some of it) to someone or something that needs it. Cut out the middleman - donate your check directly to your charity of choice. Or even more directly - especially given the time of year - find teachers in one of your urban elementary schools who would otherwise be spending money from their own pockets to buy supplies for their classrooms next fall. 300 bucks (or even half of that) can go a long way."

What organizations, programs, and ideas are inspiring you?

back to the top



We know! The GoodLetter is a lot to digest in one sitting. Ever thought of printing it out and taking it home with you? Don't be afraid to take GoodThings off-line!



The Upshot
The historic United Nations General Assembly Special Session on HIV and AIDS was held this week. But with the crisis being addressed at such a high level, does it seem too big for you to do something about? You may be able to help more than you think.

FightAids@Home, a simple software program by Entropia, can enable you to help find a cure for AIDS or cancer by letting your home computer do all the work. Much of the ongoing research to combat AIDS involves complex -- and extremely expensive -- supercomputer modeling, requiring more technological power than is available, given present funding levels. While your computer runs all day, it wastes processing cycles. In other words, most of the time you have more computer power than you need. The FightAids@Home software connects your computer to a vast Web of computers and enables your computer's wasted processing cycles to be used by AIDS researchers at the Scripps Research Institute near San Diego without affecting the operation of your computer even slightly. But don't take our word for it -- learn more on the FightAids@Home and Entropia Web sites and get involved.

THE UPSHOT. Power at your fingertips.


back to the top



Good Gravy
Are you a Good Gravy addict? This week, there's even more of a reason to click through to our Web site to read the new-look reviews of this week's music, book, and film recommendations. It's a secret, but we promise you'll like it. And as always, you'll love these entertainment ideas.

Music
New Music! Drum Hat Buddha Dave Carter and Tracy Grammer (2001). A guitar, a fiddle, and voices of gold - Dave Carter and Tracey Grammer make music to listen to in special places. Read the review.

Movies
In Theaters This Summer! Calle 54 (2001). Think you can lose yourself in a new movie about the energy and passion of Latin jazz? One GoodLetter reader says there's absolutely no doubt about it. Read the review.

Books
Good New Book! Running After Antelope Scott Carrier (2001). Scott Carrier masterfully shifts his storytelling from radio's "This American Life" to the printed page in a new collection of essays. Read the review.

Good Photo
By popular demand, we're featuring more pictures from non-profit WorldWise this week. WorldWise is aboard the tall ship Picton Castle, delivering school supplies to ecstatic children in ports around the world. Come see the brand-new photo of the Picton Castle and be sure to click it to get the rest of the story.

GoodThings on Public Radio
Have you been checking out the summaries of our favorite public radio stories? Here's a sample from this week's Morning Edition on National Public Radio:

What Can Your Employer Do for You?
Childcare has increasingly become a serious issue for the American workforce, with 40% of working women raising children under the age of 18. Companies are beginning to provide thoughtful solutions because it makes economic sense. When Pittsburgh's PNC Bank relocated its offices, it looked for ways to maximize employee benefits. One such benefit is its back-up daycare program. Up to twenty times a year, employees are allowed to make use of a full-service daycare center. It doesn't replace regular childcare arrangements, but it's a major help in an emergency. And best of all for PNC, it keeps employees at work.
Visit our site to listen to this story and to see what else has been on the radio this week.

Want to share some Good Gravy of your own? Tell us what you're reading, watching, or listening to and why you think it's good.

Housekeeping
To SUBSCRIBE to this HTML version, send a blank e-mail to join-goodletter-html@list.goodthings.com.

OR SUBSCRIBE online.

To UNSUBSCRIBE to this HTML version, send a blank e-mail from the e-mail address of your subscription to leave-goodletter-html@list.goodthings.com.

CONTACT us at information@goodthings.com.



Copyright 2001 goodthings.com, inc. All rights reserved, but we love it when you forward the GoodLetter with abandon.

WHERE DO YOU GET YOUR GOODTHINGS? www.goodthings.com.