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Fight DTE | Support DTE Vote Solar is fighting against dirty energy plans in a number of states. In Michigan VS is opposing DTE's plans to open new polluting gas energy plants. See their web page about Michigan and other states. You could support their efforts. Vote Solar
At the end of February the state of Michigan rejected DTE's energy plan asking them to draw up a plan that relies more on renewable energy and less on fossil fuel. The next plan version is due on April 1. Read the full article from Utility Dive
DTE does have a Green Energy program. As a residential or business customer you can go green to whatever percentage you wish. If enough did they would certainly invest more in wind and solar sooner. Don't just think about it. Do it. It is one of the right things yo do. Visit their MI Green Power page
Join the Michigan Sierra Club. And Participate. For nearly five decades, the Sierra Club Michigan Chapter has organized the bold action of citizens working together to protect and restore our Great Lakes state’s health and heritage. they work got solutions the climate crisis. They work for clean air, safe water, land protection and a vibrant natural world. The fight for environmental and social justice. They believe in the great outdoors.
Protect the Great Lakes from Factory Farm Pollution. The Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy must enact a strong 2020 Factory Farm Water Permit! Read More See the Sierra Club's list of other actions you can take right now by visiting their web page.
Before you throw away food scraps ,.. Here are things to do with them
Savethefood.com gives many creative recipes for using what you may ordinarily discard. Even potato peels and beet greens. And whoever thought you could do this with carrot tops? Visit their page of possibilities to see which ones you can try. Savethefood.com
Theraputic power of gardening
Photo by CDC on Unsplash
I was among the Londoners who thought to counter potential disruptions in the food-supply chain by growing edible plants. I spent countless hours searching online for seeds, which, I imagined, I could cultivate in the three planters that the previous occupant of my home had left on a roof terrace; they had become unkempt and weedy since my husband, son, and I moved in, last year. Eventually, I found an online nursery that still had seedlings ... This article is in the New Yorker