One Year of the 10% Challenge

10% Challenge Celebration       Sunday, October 16, 1-4 p.m., Warwick Community Center

October marks the one year anniversary of the 10% Challenge in Warwick. The 10% Challenge Celebration on Sunday, October 16, will be a day of music, dance, magic, and fun for everyone. Sustainable Warwick wants to thank our original supporters who took the challenge (the Town of Warwick; villages of Warwick, Greenwood Lake, and Florida; the Warwick, Florida, and Greenwood Lake school districts, and the Florida and Albert Wisner libraries). We want to acknowledge their strategies for saving energy. But we also want to hear your stories–how did you save energy this year?

Most of all, we want to celebrate what a community can achieve together. These are tough economic times, and we are facing decisions on energy that will affect us far into the future. The more energy we use, the more pressure there is to use tar sands oil, to hydrofrack for gas, to loosen air quality standards. These practices can threaten our health and wellbeing. So saving energy isn’t just for our pocketbooks, it’s for our lives, and those of our children and grandchildren. We can inspire each other, share ideas, offer encouragement, as we learn to reduce our energy consumption. And we can dance.

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Take the 10% Challenge: Reduce Your Annual Energy Consumption

Take the 10% ChcallengeOne of Sustainable Warwick’s major projects this year is the 10% Challenge, a campaign to encourage a 10% reduction in some form of energy in one year. The Town of Warwick, villages of Warwick, Florida, and Greenwood Lake, and local libraries and school districts are participating in this challenge.
You can help reach more people by bringing the idea to a group you belong to that might be interested (book club, bridge club, sports group, social club, service organization, knitting or quilting group, etc.) Would you be willing to invite members of your group to reduce energy consumption?
You might even want to tie the campaign into one of your activities. For example, a book group might read a novel or non-fiction book related to the energy issue, or the quilters might do a “solar” quilt–or better yet, come up with your own creative idea.
If you’d like to help or have ideas about this, contact Mary Makofske at makofske@warwick.net. | Read More>>

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Energy Diagram from Sustainable Tompkins (Finger Lakes Region)

Submitted by Sara Culotta

Attached is a concept for programs in Ithaca, to create new social norms around doing one’s “energy chores” and increasing energy efficiency of residences.
Like local food is developing rapidly as a social norm, the 3-pronged program we’ve imagined seeks to generate the same level of shared community values, friends/neighbors/family conversation, and action around energy efficiency. I hope this “concept diagram” might be of use to Sustainable Warwick.  From Sustainable Tompkins Executive Director, Gay Nicholson and Sara Culotta.

Note: To view diagram attachment requires Microsoft PowerPoint

EngagedonEnergyDiagram

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Seymour Gordon: A Man for All Seasons and Communities

Like our dear friend, Seymour Gordon, Lewis Mumford (1895-1990) was an articulate and insightful planner.  Here is an excerpt from YourDictionary.com about him.

The English utopian planner and advocate of garden cities, Ebenezer Howard, inspired Lewis Mumford toward an active role in city and regional planning. He helped organize the Regional Planning Association of America (1923) and served as special investigator for the New York Housing and Regional Planning Commission, beginning in 1924. He edited the pioneering regional planning issue of Survey Graphic (1925) and helped edit five volumes of The American Caravan (1927-1936). In city planning, he advocated the conservation of “green belts,” with self-contained cities supporting residence, work, markets, education, and recreation. The new cities were to be constructed on a pedestrian’s scale with organic coherence among the urban functions. As a city planning consultant, he forcefully urged such ideas throughout the world.

From Times Herald-Record:
Seymour Gordon, age 87, a longtime resident of Warwick, died on Wednesday, July 28, 2010 while doing one of the things he loved the most, peacefully fishing at a local pond. He was a lifelong avid fisherman and gardener, a potato latke maker par excellence, he also continually perfected the art of homemade gefilte fish, and he smoked a mean turkey!

The youngest son of the seven children of Bertha and Samuel Gordon, he was born on February 7, 1923 in Woodridge, NY. He graduated from Monticello High School in 1940, and during World War II served in the Pacific Theater and then was assigned to the army of occupation of Korea. He attended Hobart College under the GI Bill of Rights. There, he met and married his wife Shirley, a student at William Smith College, in 1948.

The young couple moved first to Chester and then to Warwick, where Seymour joined the family hardware business. In 1951, Seymour opened Gor-Dun’s, a farm equipment dealership in Goshen.

Passionate about many causes, particularly land preservation and the Jewish concept of Tikkun Olam, which literally means “healing the world,” Seymour was Chairman of Warwick Purchase of Development Rights Alliance (PDR); Chair of the Agricultural and Open Space Preservation Board; Vice President of the Warwick Conservancy; a member of the Orange County Planning Board, the Orange County Land Trust, the Orange County Open Space Alliance; Chairman of the Advisory Board of the Agricultural Program of the Warwick Valley Central School District; Treasurer of Future Farmers of America Foundation; and past President of New York Farm Equipment Dealers’ Association. He was the first president of Jewish Family Service in Orange County, Past President of Temple Beth Shalom, Florida, NY, Past Board Member of Jewish Federation of Greater Orange County, and a current member of Temple Sinai in Middletown.

In 2004, the Warwick Town Board acknowledged and honored Seymour Gordon’s extraordinary and selfless contributions to the Town of Warwick where he worked to permanently protect thousands of acres of productive farmland and open space. A plaque dedicated to him hangs in the Warwick Town Hall. In 2010, he was recognized as Orange County Outstanding Senior Citizen.

After retirement, Seymour began a second, part-time career in windshield repair, which kept him active and busy fixing windshields throughout the county in a bright red truck with “Windshield Repair” on the doors. Seymour proudly expressed his convictions on the rear bumper of that truck, which he drove until the day of his death. A selection of those convictions follows: “No farms, no food.” “It’s easier to build strong children than to repair broken men.” “Premier leadership, personal growth, career success. FFA.”

Seymour was the devoted and loving husband for almost 62 years of Shirley Gordon, father of Joy Markel and Leah Gomberg, both of Maplewood, NJ, who survive him, and also the father of David Gordon who died in 1977. He is also survived by a brother, Arnold Gordon of Los Angeles.

He was the beloved father-in-law of Jeffrey Markel and David Gomberg and of Pascale Michel – widow of David Gordon. His son-in-law, Shimon Gadish, died in 1978. He was the loving grandfather of Nadav Markel, Anne Coyle, Sara Markel-Gonzalez, José Gonzalez, David Markel, and Sam, Eli and Noah Gomberg, and the great-grandfather of Sylvie Markel. As the last surviving East Coast Gordon of his generation, he was considered the patriarch of a close-knit group of nieces, nephews and cousins. He leaves behind loving family and many, many friends who will miss him greatly. But the fish can breathe a bubble of relief now.

Funeral services were held on Thursday, July 29, at Temple Sinai. Burial was at Temple Beth Shalom Cemetery in Florida, NY. Shiva will be observed at the Gordon home in Warwick, with a Shiva minyan on Thursday, Sunday and Monday evenings at 8 p.m. On Tuesday, Shiva will be observed at the home of Joy and Jeffrey Markel in Maplewood, NJ, with Shiva minyan at 7:30 p.m., and condolence calls are welcome after 3 p.m. on Tuesday. Condolence calls are welcome at the Gordon home from 1 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.

In lieu of flowers, donations in Seymour Gordon’s memory may be made to Jewish Family Service of Orange County, Inc., 720 Route 17M, Middletown, NY 10940; Warwick Conservancy, Inc., PO Box 1277, Warwick, NY 10990; Orange County Land Trust, PO Box 2442, 10 Mulberry St., Middletown, NY 10940.

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