5G ACTION ALERT _DEADLINE_FEB. 20, 2019

Families For Safe Meters

5G ACTION ALERT _DEADLINE_ FEB. 20, 2019-get info to staff

Sent by Catherine Kleiber (www.electricalpollution.com
<notice her Brief Solutions page for dirty electricity et al – http://www.electricalpollution.com/solutions.html >)

Send information to Senate Committee about health hazards of 5G

** Ask for public hearings with independent researchers, medical providers included. **

“I want to start by thanking those of you who contacted the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation and members of the Sub-Committee on Communication, Technology and the Internet to ask that they place a moratorium on implementation of 5G and hold a hearing to receive testimony from scientists about the very real health and environmental hazard 5G and the IoT pose. If you have not already contacted them, please take the time to do so.

Please submit references and information about 5G to:

REED_COOK@COMMERCE.SENATE.GOV

Deadline is TUESDAY, February 20, 2019 (Please do not contact Sen. Blumenthal’s office separately unless you are a constituent.)

There is no deadline for contacting the committee to request that they hold a hearing on the health and environmental consequences of 5G.

The more people they hear from until they hold hearings the better, so please ask others to call also.

In addition to the committee phone numbers below:

At Senate Commerce Hearing, Blumenthal Raises Concerns on 5G Wireless Technology’s Potential Health Risks 2.7.19

https://www.blumenthal.senate.gov/…/at-senate-commerce-hear…

Sen. Blumenthal needs our support, so be sure to call the Committee to ask for the hearings.

Others on the committee need to feel pressure to act. The calls will help provide that.

Recommend that the Committee contact Environmental Health Trust (www.EHTrust.org) for a list of scientists who should testify.

Phone information is below for the Senate Committee.

If your own lawmaker is on the committee, also contact them directly and ask that they push for hearings on health and environmental effects of 5G.

Talking points for when you make the call to the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation:

1) Experts are calling for wireless (radiofrequency/microwave) radiation to be classified as carcinogenic, a designation supported by epidemiological and double-blind studies.

2) Congress should not support universal exposure to a carcinogen that also causes adverse biological effects that are detrimental to human health and the environment.

3) 5G technology will dramatically increase exposure to wireless radiation due to the dramatic increase in connectivity and the need for numerous so called “small” cell towers.

4) 5G technology incorporates the addition of wireless radiation in a frequency range that the military uses as a weapon due to its detrimental effects.

5) 5G will vastly increase energy consumption.

Refer them to www.EHTrust.org and www.Whatis5G.info for more information.

Ask that they contact the Environmental Health Trust to connect them to experts they should ask to testify on this issue.

Protecting our health and the environment by using a hardwired computer in a low RF environment. For more information, see:

Contact Us

Before contacting the Committee, please check our list of frequently asked questions FAQ for answer to your question.�

Contact Information for the Committee �Full Committee Office �Majority: 202-224-1251

Majority Address: 512 Dirksen Senate Building; Washington DC, 20510�Minority: 202-224-0411

Press Office �Majority: 202-224-1251�Minority: 202-224-7824

https://www.commerce.senate.gov/…/communicationstechnologya…

Subcommittee Members

Sen. John Thune, R-S.D. – Chairman�Sen. Brian Schatz D-HI – Ranking Member

Majority:

Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn.�Sen. Roy Blunt, R-Mo.�Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va.�Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas�Sen. Deb Fischer, R-Neb.�Sen. Cory Gardner, R-Colo.�Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis.�Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah�Sen. Jerry Moran, R-Kan.�Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla.�Sen. Dan Sullivan, R-Alaska�Sen. Todd Young, R-Ind.

Minority:

Sen. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wis.�Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn.�Sen. Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill.�Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn.�Sen. Edward Markey, D-Mass.�Sen. Gary Peters, D-Mich.�Sen. Jacky Rosen, D-Nev.�Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz.�Sen. John Tester, D-Mont.�Sen. Tom Udall, D-N.M.

Information about the hearing, including written testimony can be found at Permalink:

https://www.commerce.senate.gov/…/winning-the-race-to-5g-an…

electricalpollution.com
Basic information about reducing exposure to radiofrequency radiation…

Non Toxic Grants Pass Open House Meeting

Hey community members,

For everyone who loves and uses public spaces in Grants Pass, join us for this event! You don’t have to live in town, you just have to love these parks!

We’re in conversation with the city to transition away from using synthetic pesticides in the parks where our kids and pets come into contact with them.

Come to our Open House, February 25th, 6-7:30PM at Interplay Community Space to learn more! The address is on the flyer below.

Thanks for saying Yes to a Non Toxic Grants Pass! Together we can make a difference.

Spread the word to your friends!

For all our health,
Bianca, Murphy resident & organizer for Beyond Toxics

NTGP Meeting flyer

 

Awakening the Dreamer Symposium

chris-charles-hummingbird

Mark your calendar~

Awakening the Dreamer Symposium

A transformative journey and a profound inquiry

Saturday, April 13, 2019  1:00 – 4:30 pm

at the UUGP Fellowship, 129 NW E Street, Grants Pass, OR


Suggested donation $5-10
Reserve your spot by emailing: larkswain@jeffnet.org


The Awakening the Dreamer Symposium is an interactive transformational workshop that inspires participants to play a role in creating a new future: an environmentally sustainable, spiritually fulfilling, and socially just human presence on this planet.

The half-day workshops have been delivered by skilled Facilitators to hundreds of thousands of participants in over 80 countries since 2005.


Co-sponsored by Sustainable Rogue Valley and Southern Oregon Pachamama Alliance

Reserve a space…

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Awakening The Dreamer Planning Session

AwakeningTheDreamer

All are welcome to help bring the internationally acclaimed “Awakening the Dreamer” symposium of the Pachamama Alliance to Josephine County in a few months.

Join the co-creative planning at the Sustainable Rogue Valley monthly meeting on

Sunday January 13, 12:30 to 2pm

at the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship

129 NE “E” Street, Grants Pass

(across the street from Mamosa’s).

sustainableroguevalley.org

or call/text Michelle 707-508-5052

Awakening the Dreamer

You’ll look squarely at the state of the world – where we are and how we got here – and explore what role you can play in bringing forth an environmentally sustainable, spiritually-fulfilling, socially just human presence on this planet. The symposium was created to shift the dominant culture of consumption and alienation to one that honors and sustains all life.

“Awakening the Dreamer” symposium has been delivered to hundreds of thousands of participants in more than 80 countries since 2005.

Find out more at pachamama.org/engage/awakening-the-dreamer

Supporting Wild Pollinators – Such as Mason Bees

Courtesy Bees of Southwest Oregon – Travis Owen

© by Jerry Allen 2018

Scientists tell us there is a worldwide big decline of insect species. We depend on insect pollinators to pollinate the plants we eat. Without them we would starve. Honeybees as well as wild bees and other pollinators are seriously threatened by pesticides and mites, as well as by climate changes. One response we need to take is to stop the poisons, the pesticides and support bees. We can learn more about neonicotinoid pesticides, glyphosate and other toxins and work to educate and eradicate their use. Alternatives exist such as planting native grasses. Klamath Siskiyou Native Seeds is a small company locally that sells native grass seeds, such as California Brome, Blue Wild Rye, Roemer’s Fescue and Lemmon’s Needlegrass, as well as others. These grasses are resistant to fire, very hardy and can help eliminate the need to spray pesticides on our land.  Take a look at their website.

Blue Orchard Mason Bee of Oregon

Another response alongside that is to intensively support wild pollinators. One excellent one is Mason bees, also called blue orchard bees. They are very woolly so they get coated with pollen. 100 mason bees can pollinate as many trees as a 1000 honey bees. They also stay close, only traveling about 130 feet so they won’t go far and get infected with distant pesticides. They also will come out when it is still too cool for honeybees, so they are crucial early season pollinators. They are solitary bees, not living in hives. Each female lays eggs in hollow places. We can duplicate that by building mason bee boxes, or buying them.

A mason bee box is usually a little birdhouse shaped box or a big bamboo tube, filled with 6″ long cardboard tubes that are like little straws about a 1/4 inch wide. We can buy paper straws to go inside the cardboard straws so we can discard the used paper straws at the end of each season. That reduces the infestation of harmful mites in the tubes. We can hang those bee boxes in our gardens or orchards, out of direct sun, like under an eave. The female mason bees will put a dollop of pollen food with an egg in it, in the tube and then dam it up with wet clay. (I think that’s why they are called mason bees, like a stone mason.) Then they will repeat with four or five more eggs in the same tube, one after the other. It is crucial to have an area of moist clay on the ground near the mounted mason bee box. They need clay to dam up the eggs. Look them up on google. In the Spring they hatch out and start doing their work, similar to bumblebees and other wild bees.

Insect Hotel in the Bees and Pollinators bed at Firewise Demonstration Gardens, Josephine County Fairgrounds Oregon

We can also support all the pollinators by planting many flowers, shrubs and herbs that pollinators like to feast on. Plan for some that bloom early and some that bloom late in the season, to give a wide range of support to pollinators. We get to enjoy the beauty at the same time and have our food plants pollinated. A win-win.

At our farm, ThistledownOrchards.com, in Selma, Oregon, we plan to build Mason bee boxes to sell to other farmers, gardeners and orchardists to support the local mason bees. You can also buy them online.

About the author –
I’m a former 9-year elected pension fund trustee and board chairman. I hold a financial planning certificate and a masters in public health education from UC Berkeley and a masters in counseling psychology. I’ve been a California licensed Marriage & Family Therapist since 1991. I began my medicine man training in my first vision quest in 1973. I was initiated as a medicine man in 2016. I have been studying Aikido for 30 years and received 3 black belts. I live and practice in Oregon as a coach, health educator, farmer, storyteller, puppeteer and musician and enjoy playing music, tending our fruit orchards, and spending time with my partner and my two wonderful children.
Jerry Allen, LMFT, SEP, MPH, Anishinaabe Mashkikiiwinini (Medicine Man)
Gratitude Way Counseling, Coaching and Health Education – jerry@gratitudeway.org

UPCOMING ACES & MENTORING TRAININGS

UPCOMING ACES & MENTORING TRAININGS

The Southern Oregon ACEs Training Team is offering free monthly open training sessions in Medford and Grants Pass, and Rogue Valley Mentoring is offering a training for people interested in helping to build resilience in our youth by becoming mentors in 2019. Info below!

 

ACES TRAININGS IN GRANTS PASS:

Public Adverse Childhood Experiences Study (ACES) Presentation

Dinner and Childcare provided (ages 3 to 10)

 
The Grants Pass School District is pleased to invite the Grants Pass community to public presentations on the Adverse Childhood Experiences Study, or ACES for short. This 90 minute presentation will cover what the study was, what we now know about the amazing ways we as humans adapt to our world, why ACES play a significant role in the quality of our health as adults, and most importantly, what we can do together to reduce adversity in our community and improve our overall health and quality of life.
 
We will serve a pizza dinner at 5:30 pm to everyone who can come. We will also be providing childcare for ages 3 to 10. We encourage you to bring your children to dinner. After dinner, our Grants Pass high school leadership students will be providing childcare for you. While they play, you can come to the presentation to learn about ACES, how it impacts most of us, and how we can become resilient through our adversity. The presentation will begin at 6 pm. 
 
Interested? Click here and let us know you are coming. You will get a confirmation email when you register for the event. No email? No problem. Give us a call at (541) 474-5715 (press 1 at the voice message).
 
Dates, and Locations
 
January 15 at Lincoln Elementary School (1132 NE 10th Street, Grants Pass, OR 97526)
 
February 11 at Parkside Elementary School (735 SW Wagner Meadows Drive, Grants Pass, OR 97526)
 
April 8 at Redwood Elementary School (3163 Leonard Road, Grants Pass, OR 97527)
 
May 6 at Riverside Elementary (1200 SE Harvey Drive, Grants Pass, OR 97526)
 
These presentations are open to the public. 
Todd Bloomquist
tbloomquist@grantspass.k12.or.us
541-474-5715

Resilience Awareness Month – November 2018

BryonBrookingsBeachPhoto

FREE EVENTS in Jackson & Josephine Counties throughout the Month to Raise Awareness of Trauma-Informed Practices and the Tools for Building Resilience for Individuals, Families and Our Communities:

November 3: Green Bag Day for the Food Project–sign up to join the Food Project all around Jackson County: www.onegreenbag.org

November 5: Open ACEs Training at Highland Elementary School, 2320 Williams Hwy, Grants Pass). Pizza at 5:30, training to follow, childcare provided. RSVP at this link.

November 7: Rogue Community Health “Rogue Way to Health” Luncheon, Noon, Inn at the Commons in Medford. For information on attending or sponsorship, please call 541-842-7711.

November 14: Strengthening Families Workshop in Grants Pass, 9 am to noon, Department of Human Services, 2101 NW Hawthorne in Grants Pass.

Strengthening Families™ is a research-informed approach to increase family strengths, enhance child development and reduce the likelihood of child abuse and neglect.  It is based on engaging families, programs and communities in building five protective factors:

  • Parental resilience
  • Social connections
  • Knowledge of parenting and child development
  • Concrete support in times of need
  • Social and emotional competence of children

To register email, Chelsea_Reinhart@soesd.k12.or.us

November 14: Community Showing of new documentary“Screenagers at Phoenix High School, 745 North Rose Street, Phoenix, 6 pm. No RSVPS necessary, doors open at 5:30 p.m.

November 15: Open ACEs Training at Hidden Valley High School, 651 Murphy Creek Road, Grants Pass. Pizza at 5:30, training to follow, childcare provided. To register, email jessica.durrant@threerivers.k12.or.us

November 16: Open ACEs Training at SOESD, 101 North Grape Street, Medford, 1 pm to 3 pm. Register at this link.

November 27: Community Showing of new documentary “Screenagers” at Ashland High School Mountain Ave Theatre, 201 South Mountain Ave, Ashland, 7 pm: no RSVPs necessary, doors open at 6:30 pm

November 28: Strengthening Families Workshop in Medford, 9 am to 4 pm, at the SOESD, 101 North Grape Street, Medford. Strengthening Families™ is a research-informed approach to increase family strengths, enhance child development and reduce the likelihood of child abuse and neglect.  It is based on engaging families, programs and communities in building five protective factors:

  • Parental resilience
  • Social connections
  • Knowledge of parenting and child development
  • Concrete support in times of need
  • Social and emotional competence of children

To register email, Chelsea_Reinhart@soesd.k12.or.us

November 28: Community Showing of new documentary“Screenagers”at Grants Pass High School, 830 NE 9th Street, Grants Pass, 6 pm. No RSVPS necessary, doors open at 5:30 p.m.

AND THROUGHOUT THE MONTH:

Great events and workshops for Parents & Families from The Family Connection! Check out the full calendar event here.

New Fairgrounds Sign Post

Sometime during this years Fair at the Fairgrounds, the main sign for our Firewise Demonstration Gardens was ripped off it’s post…most likely an accident.  It has taken a while to get it repaired, but this week Mike Nelson donated and installed a large heavy-duty post that will not be easily damaged!  Thank you, Mike!

NewFirewiseSignPost3cropped

NewFirewiseSignPost2cropped

Up on the grape vine post you will see a bird house that Mike also installed last spring. It housed TWO families of swallows – one right after the other! Mike cleaned it out this fall so it is all ready for next spring.  The swallows that created the nest used grasses and pigeon feathers to line it!

There were TWO crops of grapes on the grape vines this year as well and lots of yummy strawberries and figs. Our little fig tree put on a lovely crop this year.

We harvested a good crop of Showy Milkweed seed from the Monarch Butterfly Garden. If you are interested in growing this beautiful native Milkweed to support the Monarchs, please contact me at barb22 at manddalaarts.com.

The gardens are doing well overall. A few plants have struggled with the conditions and a few plants have done so well we had to take them out because they threatened to take over the bed they were in! This winter we will thin out a few things and dig a few volunteer plants that are great plants but in the “wrong” place. We will keep you posted.

Happy fall!

 

What if? — Scaling-out regenerative development glocally

1 0ypCJpuz4iR9jYbGMBtHlAEcological State: Regenerative land management practices create dramatic increases in biodiversity, water retention, and carbon sequestration. Regen Network monitors on-the-ground conditions and generates trusted attestations about the ecological state of managed land and water areas. Source: Regen Network

Building educational ecosystems of collaboration to improve planetary health

A couple of times in my life I have been thrown into deep reflection by the question “what if this was a magic wand and you could make a wish come true?”

The other day I was not asked that question, but I had a conversation with someone who is in an exceptional financial position and connected with powerful influencers. One person with the potential of being a key enabler of scaling-out capacity and action in regeneration around the globe. Yes there are many people in such positions, yet few who are so switched on to the urgency for redesigning the human impact on Earth.

Our conversation — and please don’t ask me for names at this point — was wide ranging and encouraging. It made me ask myself the big ‘What if questions’:

What if funding was no longer an issue and billions would be liberated to support the local and bioregional capacity building for ecosystems restoration and the regeneration of communities, cities, and globally cooperative bioregional economies?

What if we were suddenly enabled to convene conversations, planning and implementation locally and bioregionally to engage in the scale-linking redesign of the human presence and impact on Earth?

What if we were challenged to scale-out a glocal (global-local) capacity building and education programme that enables people to learn the needed skills and knowledge while already being an active part of the regeneration rising?

What if all of the experienced organizations, teachers, businesses that hold important skills and experience to contribute to this process where suddenly asked to collaborate in building the capacity of many millions of people to get involved and become active healers of the Earth and her people?

In the conversation I was asked whether I had a solution to the converging global crises and an idea how to create a wise response to them. My response was that anyone who claimed he had might be deluded at worst and at the least lacking the necessary humility to match the intensity of the challenges we face.

We will have to find those answers and solutions together. And to do so we need a shared overall vision and get started so we can learn along the way.

We also have to understand that this will be a continuous learning journey that will need many adjustment of course and constant redesign to adjust answers and solutions to changing conditions.

As I mentioned before, maybe questions rather than answers are the appropriate cultural guidance system — or ‘deep code’ ;-) — in this situation?

That said, we do know that bringing carbon back home, restoring healthy ecosystems functions, cleaning up the oceans and restoring watersheds, reforesting the planet rapidly with biodiversity reserves, productive analogue forests that provide food and biomaterials, creating healthy agro-ecological ecosystems in which farming is also about healing landscapes and safe-guarding biodiversity, building capacity for decentralized renewable energy production and catalyzing the massive amount of innovation that will be needed to shift towards regionally focussed circular biomaterials-economies and regionalized production and consumption patterns … all of these activities will take us into the right direction.

What is more, engaging in all these activities as and in community will provide a shared context of meaning locally, regionally and globally that might just take us into celebrating our diversity of opinions and finding a higher ground on which we can collaborate in the healing of the Earth and her people.

We need to find this higher ground to see our diversity as a source of vitality, resilience and creativity, rather than a reason to argue, go to war, dismiss and compete.

So what if the money was suddenly available to engage everyone who is holding pieces in the complex puzzle of redesigning and transforming the human impact on Earth in a concerted effort to enable this shift through education, community organizing, multi-sector/stakeholder regional visioning and planning processes, and enabling platforms and processes for glocal collaboration, knowledge exchange along with established pathways for flowing financial capital into living capital?

Are we ready? We better be!

Too often have I seen organizations that are broadly aligned on their higher vision and mission fall into patterns of behaviour that were more competitive rather than collaborative. Budget constraint made people more concerned with keeping their individual organizations functioning — rightly convinced of the importance of their contribution to positive change. It stopped them from feeling able to dedicate time and space to the exploration of how to link up with other players in the field and create synergies that would lead to all agents of positive change working in a concerted effort. This pattern could sabotage an effective scale-out regenerative literacy, capacity and implementation.

What if we no longer had the excuse to on the one hand admit that wider cooperation and whole systems design processes linking diverse efforts into a whole that is more than the sum of its parts are necessary and on the other hand justify inaction by saying that we don’t have the funding for it?

Imagine convening a series of meetings that would explore what needs to be done to skill-up and build capacity for ecosystems restoration and regenerative development everywhere.

Can we create a list of skilled agroforestry, regenerative agriculture, permaculture design and holistic land management professionals, of analogue foresters and biodiversity experts for every locality, region and biome? So we know who to call on as trainers.

Can we create an ecosystem of training and education opportunities that are taking place in existing projects, rapidly spreading ‘ecosystems restoration camps’, and the growing network of Regenerative Regional Development Hubs? So people who want to become active change agents know their options.

Can we link the different permaculture associations, agroforestry training centres, organic and biodynamic farming schools, demonstration sites and large implementation project of holistic management and diverse regenerative agriculture approaches into a global networks that trains people on the job? So we can begin to make progress while we scale-out capacity.

Can we establish multi-sector partnerships that link business, public authorities and civil society organizations into bioregionally focussed collaboration in regenerative development plans and implementation? So we can coordinate efforts that draw on our diversity of skills and experiences in ways that truly enable change.

Can we build the appropriate platforms to enable knowledge exchange, skill sharing, and capacity building through local, regional and global collaboration? So we can co-create a more regenerative and thriving future for all of humanity and the whole community of life (as a planetary process).

I will resist the temptation to continue as pieces that take more than 5 minutes to read don’t get a lot of attention. Below is a 11 minute rant to myself on my SUP board that explores the big What if even further. I sense soon there will be a lot of funding flowing into restoration and regenerative development. How do we make sure we are ready to scale-out when that time comes?

“We may not be able to raise the winds, but we can set sails so that when the wind comes we are ready.”

— E.F. Schumacher

11 minute rant on my SUP board exploring the ideas in this post further

For a map of converging efforts in regenerative development, ecosystems restoration, resilience building and improving planetary health, see this list of resources and the dynamic ecosystems map at the end of this article on ‘Planetary Health and Regeneration’.

Daniel Christian Wahl — Catalyzing transformative innovation in the face of converging crises, advising on regenerative whole systems design, regenerative leadership, and education for regenerative development and bioregional regeneration.

Author of the internationally acclaimed book Designing Regenerative Cultures

Twitter: @DrDCWahl

Medium: Blog with more than 280 articles

Facebook: RegenerativeCultures and Ecological Consciousness

View at Medium.com

Sustainable Rogue Valley becomes an Ally to Southern Oregon Climate Action Now

SOCAN-logo-300x126

Southern Oregon Climate Action Now

is a grassroots, volunteer, non-profit organization of area residents who care about climate change and have joined forces to take bold action against it. Through volunteer projects, we focus on reducing the impacts of Global Warming across Southern Oregon.

Our Mission

Recognizing the urgent need for bold action, SOCAN’s mission is to promote awareness and understanding about the causes and consequences of climate change, to develop solutions, and to motivate concerned citizens to take individual and collective action.

Our Goal

We seek a reduction in the global atmospheric greenhouse gas concentration to 350 parts per million (Carbon dioxide equivalent: CO2e). To achieve this, we collaborate with individuals and organizations throughout the world and encourage both personal and governmental actions that reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Pachamama Alliance “Drawdown Solutions: Getting into Action!” course.

Sign up for the next offering of the 4-session Pachamama Alliance “Drawdown Solutions: Getting into Action!” course. It will run Thursday evenings, July 19 & 26, and August 2 & 9, 7:00 – 9:00 p.m., in the Casbah Tent, at Jackson Wellsprings  –  2253 Highway 99, Ashland, 97520, OR, United States .

Pre-requisite for this course is attendance at an “Introduction to Drawdown” event–next one scheduled in our area is July 5, same time and same place as this course.

DD Wellsprings July2018

Want to help support Drawdown in the Rogue Valley? Here’s a simple way

For Ashland’s 4th of July Parade, Southern Oregon Pachamama Alliance is imagining an entry that features lots of people marching, each one holding a sign with one of the 80 Drawdown Solutions (for details, see the book Drawdown: The most comprehensive plan ever proposed to reverse global warming).  We’d like as many families and children as possible.

You and your family and friends are invited to be Drawdown Solution sign carriers in the Parade! To sign up, please contact Catie Faryl (catiefaryl@hotmail.com or 541 535-1854) and let her know if you have a favorite Drawdown Solution you’d like to carry and how many people you’d like to bring along.

You are also warmly invited to jump right in and participate in either of the planning sessions scheduled for:

Wednesday May 23,  2-3 pm
at the Center for Creative Change
107 W. 1st St in Phoenix

or

Thursday May 31, 6 – 7  pm
at the Bellview Grange
1050 Tolman Creek Road in Ashland

Join us for sharing the vision that it’s not game over, it’s Game on!

Lorraine Cook
Southern Oregon Pachamama Alliance