Sunday, October 12, 2014

ReTree The District


 
MISSION STATEMENT

As conversations of weather occurrences and suggested anomalies become more frequent and mainstream in the scientific community, as well as at the grass-roots-level, the need to embrace and index substantive information into an authoritative conduit to encourage more research and development~~~IS IMPERATIVE.

Pertinent themes as Global Warming, Climate Change, and Melting Ice Caps has stimulated discussions, seeded forums, and spawned additional research, all to foster consensus, and recommend courses-of-action. 

The intent of CLIMATE; THE CONVERSATION, is to be The Bulletin Board, The Platform, The Podium,  and The Credible Source & Bibliography for such astute, sincere, and scholarly considerations. 

Sincerely;

Administrators:

Andrew M. Marconi

Lou Marconi

ReTree The District~~~Two-Years---1,000 Trees---500  Volunteers---15+ Community Groups---One District.

A group of University District community stakeholders are coming together around ReTree the District, a project aiming to plant 1,000 trees across the University District over the next two years. ReTree the District is using an interactive community mapping component that has enabled students and residents to collaboratively map the district’s existing tree canopy. In addition to beautification, the project will help foster collaboration and cooperation across the many neighborhoods that make up the University District.

 Given the time, the effort, and the place to implement actions and practices----even on the smallest of ratio & proportion scales,  such directives will have a cause-and-effect relationship, and inherently aspire to impact a community in a positive way.  This  will have a domino-effect influence on implementations in other areas.  Such an evolution to a grander-scale; a mainstream mind-set will not only retard further deterioration of our environment and our climate, but will usher in patterns and practices which will obverse a reclamation and revitalization of our ecological niches and our environment.  On the broader scale, reversing the trends of deterioration should always be----the ultimate objective.  

Its impact on the economy, pollution, and the focus on Climate; The Conversation---makes this worthy of continued enthusiasm and consideration

Lou Marconi (SuiteLou0819)


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