"I'm doing something about it" was featured in the Earth Day Sunday edition of the Santa Barbara Newspress. Thanks to journalist Karna Hughes for the awesome article!
-Kristian
From top: Santa Barbarans Logan Green, Ed France and Kristian Beadle represent the next generation of environmentalists. The three recent UCSB grads are close friends, and each is tackling a new venture that promotes sustainable living from a different angle.
COURTESY PHOTOSChanging the world, one mouse-click at a timeKARNA HUGHES, NEWS-PRESS STAFF WRITERApril 22, 2007 12:53 PM
They did their time in the trenches as campus activists, and now Santa Barbarans Logan Green, Ed France and Kristian Beadle are hoping to change the world at large, one mouse-click at a time.
The three recent UCSB grads are close friends in their mid-twenties, all veterans of the school's Environmental Affairs Board. Each is tackling a new venture that promotes sustainable living from a different angle.
Last weekend, over lemon mojitos made from neighborhood trees, they toasted the launch of two new Web sites during a party that reflected their Earth-conscious attitudes. Carpooling to the house up San Marcos Pass was mandatory. Recyclable cups were used only after biodegradables couldn't be found. And the mojitos were served in the lemons? husks. "The lemon itself is the perfect biodegradable cup," said Mr. Beadle, only half-jokingly.
Mr. Beadle's brainchild is the Web site ?I'm Doing Something About It,? www.imdoingit.org, which he's working on in collaboration with Mr. France. The roughest of the bunch, the site is still in beta testing. "We're just putting out some creativity and seeing what bounces back," said Mr. Beadle. But he hopes it will encourage people, particularly those who don't consider themselves activists, to begin thinking of creative, fun ways to green their lifestyle.
Its centerpiece is a "climate neutral bragboard," where people can post ideas about what they and others in their community are doing to help the environment. It also has a "Cali-calendar" for listing local sustainability events.
Mr. Beadle and Mr. France are also working peripherally with Lightning in a Bottle, the three-day green music fest that will be held at Live Oak Campground in May. They'll be coordinating the event's "greenest campsite" contest. And the pair is pitching in at this year's retreat for the Institute for Reverential Ecology at Joshua Tree, which is where they first met each other and mentor Phil Grant, five years ago.
For his part, Logan Green has designed www.zimride.com, a free Web site that helps people coordinate carpools and rideshares online. (For years, UCSB's Associated Students ran a ride board to help students hitch rides out of town, but it was discontinued a few years ago.)
Because it uses Facebook and other user profiles, people can learn more about their prospective rides. "So it's not such a gamble," said Mr. Green, a board member of MTD and longtime bus rider who doesn't own a car. "You have a little bit of reassurance and (a sense of) safety and connectedness to them."
Users are encouraged to upload their preferences, including smoking/non-smoking, music and driving speed, and a photograph of themselves. So far the site has 500 users. Most are based in Santa Barbara, but people from five other states across the country have logged on for rides in their areas.
And, finally, Ed France is one of about ten volunteers spearheading Bici Centro, a new Santa Barbara collective to help people learn how to repair their own bikes for free.
"It's really fun because it's actually part of a movement all throughout the state. Bike kitchens are sprouting up everywhere," said Mr. France, who runs the group's Web site, www.bicicentro.blogspot.com. Bici Centro supplies the tools, "mentor mechanics" and some used parts, while participants supply the bikes and the elbow grease.
So far, they've held two events at La Casa de la Raza, attracting between 30 to 50 bikers each time. Core members include Eddie Gonzalez, Erika Lindemann, Rafael Orozco, Joanna Kaufman and Josh Thompson, and they dream of one day securing a permanent facility.
(A separate effort, Bikestation Santa Barbara at the Granada Garage, will have its grand opening on May 1. The parking station, located at 1219 Anacapa St., will offer members basic tools to perform minor bike repairs, in addition to a shower and lockers, but no onsite mechanics.)
At least a hundred people commute to work on their bicycles in Santa Barbara every day, according to Mr. France, and "it's not the people wearing spandex: it's the folks who are laboring in the fields or biking out to the nurseries between Goleta and downtown," he said. "We really target the Latino community and the people who don't have the money to pay for a $70 or $80 repair at a shop."
A former chairman of UCSB's Environmental Affairs Board and former recycling coordinator for the city of Santa Barbara, Mr. France is aware of the project's environmental impact. The bike "is the sustainable means of transportation. . . It's completely non-polluting," he said.
Bici Centro's next event will be held May 13 from noon to 5 p.m. at La Casa de la Raza, 601 E. Montecito St.
At the Earth Day celebration in the Santa Barbara County Courthouse Sunken Garden today, Mr. Beadle and Mr. Green will both have tables with information about their Web sites, while Mr. France will be manning the table as outreach and development coordinator for the Citizen's Planning Foundation.
e-mail: khughes@newspress.com