About Sue Inches

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So far Sue Inches has created 50 blog entries.

New Year’s: Joy Into Action

Imagine how the world would look and feel if we made a healthy, joyous, safe and equitable planet a reality. Now imagine it would only take 25% of us to bring this about*. Research has shown this can happen. (See post below on critical mass to learn more.) But in order for it to happen, we have to imagine it, we have to feel it, we have to believe it, and we have to take action.

The above is the beginning paragraph of my book, Advocating for the Environment. It’s also a terrific way to begin the New Year. Humanity [… continue reading]

By |2023-01-08T16:30:53+00:00January 8th, 2023|

Creating Critical Mass for a Healthy Future

I was walking with my niece Emily when she piped up about a recent conversation she’d had: “My friend denies climate change and there was nothing I could say to change her mind, she said. She sounded worried.

In my response to her I explained that all you need to effect change is critical mass. You see, when it comes to social change, not everyone has to agree. We don’t need 100% consensus. We don’t even need a majority. We just need a critical mass of people in support of a clean and healthy planet.

So what exactly is critical [… continue reading]

By |2023-01-08T16:27:46+00:00January 8th, 2023|

Why Cancer Alley?

In my college classes and in my book I attempt to explain why places like Cancer Alley exist. I figure if we can understand why, then we will know where and how to make effective change.
It’s easy to see that the lives and health of the people in St. Joseph’s Parish aren’t valued by the shareholders of Formosa Plastics. Shareholders invest for profit. That’s the only thing they measure and the only thing management is accountable for.

Formosa is a $38 billion company headquartered in Kaohsiung City, Taiwan. It’s highly unlikely that any of the investors or senior managers have ever [… continue reading]

By |2022-12-15T06:42:22+00:00December 15th, 2022|

Victory in Cancer Alley

I’ve never enjoyed reading legal opinions. But the recent judgement for “RISE St. James et al vs. Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality” changed that. I whooped with joy as I read the entire 30 page document!

RISE St. James is one of several community groups located in what’s commonly called “Cancer Alley”, an eighty five mile stretch of oil refineries and chemical plants along the Mississippi between Baton Rouge and New Orleans. More than 140 toxic facilities operate there. People living in the area are 50 times more likely to get cancer and five times more likely to die from [… continue reading]

By |2022-12-15T06:39:54+00:00December 15th, 2022|

A Miraculous Journey: What We can Learn from Sierra Leone

Imagine healing from the atrocities of war without punishment, prisons, or revenge. Imagine demonstrating a new way of being, based on the strength and wholeness of individuals and communities. Imagine working with villages devastated by war and disease, where those remaining are not seen as victims, but are seen as creative leaders with the power to rebuild.

A twenty year project in Sierra Leone has demonstrated that communities can heal themselves. The project sought to heal the damage from a terrible civil war, followed by a devastating Ebola outbreak. It was led by Sierra Leonean John Caulker, and funded by [… continue reading]

By |2022-11-15T12:45:05+00:00November 15th, 2022|

Who Should Pay for Climate Damage?

Climate reparations were the hot topic at the COP 27 climate negotiations in Egypt over the last several weeks. Poorer countries want high emitting rich countries to pay for “loss and damage” due to the effects of a warming climate. Sea level rise, storms, wildfires and flooding are creating enormous costs and in some cases wiping out entire communities. As the atmosphere warms, this situation will only get worse.

But who should pay for this? Traditionally climate events are considered “Acts of God” and are cleaned up by governments, with taxpayer funds. But saying the warming climate is an “Act [… continue reading]

By |2022-11-15T12:42:23+00:00November 15th, 2022|

Maine’s Public Lands Get a Facelift

My husband and I took an early fall trip to the Nahmakanta Public Lands, just south of Baxter State Park. We’d visited this 11,000 acre wilderness many times since it was established in 1985. But this year we saw something unexpected: improvements!

In many years of backcountry camping in Maine, I’d assumed that the facilities would always be old and run down. No significant investment has been made in Maine Parks and Lands in fifteen years, and some areas have seen no improvements in over thirty. It wondered where all this new stuff was coming from.

So I checked it out. Turns [… continue reading]

By |2022-10-24T15:27:39+00:00October 24th, 2022|

Kigali: The Big Win No One Noticed

My husband is a news nerd. He’s well informed on just about every news issue. But I got him on the Kigali Amendment—he’d never heard of it!  Kigali is an amendment to a groundbreaking global treaty. It was ratified by Congress in late September. The media missed it, and my husband missed it and it has major significance for global warming. So naturally, I had to cover it here!

Toxic HFCs are everywhere.  Every refrigerator, supermarket case, auto AC, and building air conditioning system contains them. According to the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, 700 million air conditioning units will be online [… continue reading]

By |2022-10-24T15:15:30+00:00October 24th, 2022|

SEC Climate Rules Are Encouraging

Back in 2011 I read a book called “One Report”. The thesis of the book was that by requiring corporations to report environmental impacts alongside financial results, more sustainable operations would result. No longer would sustainability be a separate program, a secondary consideration, or simply greenwashing. Through required reporting, sustainable operations would become mainstream.

That vision could become a reality this year. The SEC (Securities and Exchange Commission) has proposed rules that would require climate related information to be included in corporate registrations and reports. According to the Harvard Law School, the proposed rules are “the most significant new public company [… continue reading]

By |2022-08-19T16:18:49+00:00August 19th, 2022|

The Power of Community

I’ve just finished a four day stint as coordinator of the used book sale at the Yarmouth Clam Festival. The festival raised over $200k to support community charities. But to me, the connection with others and reminder of the strength of local communities was worth far more than the money we raised.

Communities consistently accomplish amazing things. We’ve all heard stories of communities coming together to help families who’ve lost their homes to fire or floods. It’s heartening when a serious illness strikes, and friends and neighbors raise money to support the needed medical expenses.

But the power of communities goes much [… continue reading]

By |2022-08-19T16:17:12+00:00August 19th, 2022|
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