Monday, December 8, 2008

MassRIDES Improves "Ridematching" Service

MassRIDES has upgraded its Ridematching service to feature instant ridematching! You can find others who share your commute! This ridematching service will scan a 15,000-member database for a match! Just create a profile and check if you have a match!

A free service of the Exective Office of Transportation, MassRIDES is the comprehensive transportation resource for people traveling in and around the Commonwealth.
MassRIDES can help you accomplish all of these things and more:
- Reduce your commuting costs
- Travel together in a carpool or vanpool
- Receive current transportation information
- Reduce traffic congestion within your community or at your worksite
Our database of thousands of commuters connects those who share similar commutes and are interested in carpooling or vanpooling. Whether you live or work in Massachusetts, sign up now.

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Beware of Invasive Plants

The Landscaping Subcommittee hosted Kate Pawlin (right) of the New England Wild Flower Society. It was a very informative meeting!

One of the handouts that Kate provided was on “Invasive Plants.”

What are invasive plants? According to the New England Wild Flower Society “these non-native plant species are “overachievers.” Once established in natural areas, they outcompete native species. Invasive plants cause profound environmental and economic damage and are a major threat to native habitats worldwide. Some invasive plants have escaped from our home gardens and public plantings into natural areas. Each state has different problematic plants. Listed below are the top two dozen offenders.”

Although experts have determined that these plants are invasive in most of New England, and harmful to the region’s native plant communities, the plants listed in bold are still widely available through nurseries, in catalogs and on the Internet.

Norway maple
Bishop’s weed

Garlic mustard
Japanese barberry
Oriental bittersweet
Swallow-warts
Autumn Olive
Burning Bush
Glossy buckthorn
Himalayan jewelweed
Yellow flag iris
Blunt-leaved privet
Shrub-like honeysuckles
Japanese honeysuckle
Purple loosestrife

Japanese stiltgrass
Water-milfoils
Common reed
Japanese knotweed
Mile-a-minute vine
Common buckthorn
Multiflora rose
Water chestnut

For a list of recommended alternatives and information about removing invasive plants, visit www.newenglandWILD.org

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

New Sub-committee hosts meeting

The Brockton Sustainability Task Force Committee is pleased to announce that its new subcommittee, the Landscaping Subcommittee, Melanie Trecek-King, Chair, will be hosting the next Brockton Sustainability Task Force Committee meeting on Monday, December 1st from 12:00 – 1:00PM in the Science Building, Room S538. 

The meeting will feature Kate Pawling from the New England Wildflower Society. Ms. Pawling will be talking about Sustainable Landscaping featuring native plants and flowers.
 
This meeting is open to the college community. Please feel free to bring your brown bag lunch to the meeting.
 

Brockton Brightfields

The City of Brockton, MA has redeveloped a former manufactured gas plant site, or "brownfield", into a "brightfield" — a solar energy generating station that converts sunlight to electricity.

About the Brightfield:
The Brockton Brightfield consists of 1,395 SCHOTT Solar modules
manufactured in Billerica, MA. At 425 kW, it’s the largest solar array in New England and the largest brightfield nationwide. The brightfield will generate over 535 Megawatt hours of electricity per year — enough to power over 70 homes. The solar modules are south-facing and installed at a 42 degree angle to maximize electricity generation.

About the Site:
The Brockton Brightfield is owned by the city of Brockton. It is installed on a 3.7-acre parcel of land leased from Bay State Gas Company. The site is the former home of Brockton Gas Light Company’s gas works, a manufactured gas plant that operated from 1898-1963. Bay State Gas Company completed remediation of the property in August 2004. The site had limited redevelopment opportunities due to contaminants capped below the surface. The brightfield is an ideal, low impact development for the property.

Learn More...

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Emerald E.A.R.T.H. Green Initiative

Karyll McKechnie, Manager of Cafeteria Services at the College is pleased to announce that as of December 1st, the Brockton and Canton Cafeterias will be selling coffee at a reduced cost to students, faculty, staff and administrators who use reusable travel mugs. If you bring your reusable travel mugs to either of the cafeterias, you will receive your coffee at a cost of $1.00.  The current prices for coffee at the cafeterias are Large Coffee $1.50 and Small Coffee $1.25.
 
Please note that the Cafeteria will only be accepting reusable plastic or stainless steel travel mugs; no glass or porcelain travel mugs will be accepted.  Also, no non-travel coffee mugs will be accepted.
 
This green initiative was proposed by the Emerald E.A.R.T.H. Club (Student Sustainability) on campus. By implementing this green initiative, the Cafeteria is rewarding those individuals who are trying to live more eco-friendly lives and reducing the number of paper cups being used at the College.

Stop the Deluge!

They’re not only mailbox stuffers. The 19 billion catalogs mailed to Americans every year consume 3.6 million tons of paper and 53 million trees. If you want to stop the deluge at your house, check out Catalog Choice, a new online service that will tell merchants “thanks but no thanks” on your behalf. The service is free, and it’s simple. Just register at www.catalogchoice.org to search and decline. You can also add an entry. The site, endorsed by the Ecology Center in Berkeley, Calif., the National Wildlife Federation and the Natural Resources Defense Council, launched October 9th. As of April 1st, 694,478 people had opted out of 9,181,316 catalogs.

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Massasoit's "Green" Convocation Held

Massasoit Community College's Fall Convocation, September 12, 2008. The theme of the Fall Convocation was "Sustainability." Pictured are: (L-R) Betty Ann Learned, Vice President of Administration/CFO, Eric Friedman, Director of the Leading By Example Program of the Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs and Dr. Charles Wall, President.