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Jgroves4ward2 |
Latest page update: made by Jgroves4ward2
, Jul 16 2009, 5:12 PM EDT
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About This Update
34 words deleted 3 widgets added 3 widgets deleted view changes - complete history) |
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Keyword tags:
CFL
cool cities
earth
environment
george bush sucks
global warming
green
trees
More Info: links to this page
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| Started By | Thread Subject | Replies | Last Post | ||
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| spb90@yahoo.com | Green Landscaping Speaker wanted | 1 | Feb 12 2009, 8:59 PM EST by Jgroves4ward2 | ||
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Thread started: Jan 23 2009, 9:57 AM EST
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Hi,
Can anybody be or know someone who can be a speaker about green landscaping for me and my neighbors. I want to host a get together at my house to help educate myself and neighbors who all share a backyard. I am looking for someone who can come over and lead the topic. Topics such as water runoff minimization, fertilizers, tree management and topics we don't even know that are smart ways to landscape. |
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| merlinbeast | "Tax" credit HVille deep friers for fuel, lower your taxes? | 3 | Dec 12 2007, 7:37 PM EST by Anonymous | ||
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Thread started: Dec 11 2007, 7:24 PM EST
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During our most recent H4X PodCast, we briefly touched on the lack of green vehicles in the pending 16 vehicle line-up. Greg Tindale asked, between sessions, if Bio-Diesel <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biodiesel> were an option for our region. I noted that I thought this had possibilities but that I'm not sure that anyone was looking at it as an option (please tell me I'm wrong).
Today I had the bizarre thought that it might be interesting, as a city, to offer the local current (and pending) deep-fried food establishments some sort of tax credit in exchange for their used frier oil. Now the following is loaded with many "if" statements, but bear with me for a moment... If we, as a community, were to centralize collection of used frier oil, we might have a sufficient input quantity to convert it to a reasonable supply of bio-diesel for use in some of our public-works / code enforcement vehicles. This, in-turn, could reduce the city's fuel bill and perhaps even lower our taxes. If some of the pending 16 vehicle acquisition were bio-diesel compatible, off-the-floor, we could immediately start reaping the rewards of a somewhat closed-loop system (the people's consumption feeds the fleet). Now converting vegetable oil to bio-diesel is not for novices, but it's not rocket-science either. We have a talented crew of mechanics and engineers in our public-works department who manage to keep our fleet of vehicles road-worthy thru-out the year. I would image that with the right training, and equipment, we could safely render the necessary conversion equipment somewhere on existing city property (perhaps the public works yard). What do you think? Does this idea have merit? If you think so, please contact your local council person and suggest they explore the idea. (Stepping down off the soap-box) Peace-out Hyattsville!
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Keyword tags:
bio-diesel
CFL
cool cities
earth
environment
george bush really sucks
global warming
green
trees
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| csuspect | That's a very funny video | 0 | Feb 6 2007, 12:13 PM EST by csuspect | ||
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Thread started: Feb 6 2007, 12:13 PM EST
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Thanks for adding it.
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Clean Currents Solar.pdf (Adobe Portable Document Format - 693k)
posted by Jgroves4ward2 Jul 16 2009, 5:13 PM EDT
Clean Currents Solar Power Costs
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