RadioActive 2/04/10

Producer/Host: Meredith DeFrancesco

Segment 1: On February 8th, the Bangor City Council will vote on an ordinance that would allow Bangor homes in residential zones to keep up to 6 chickens in their yards.   Guest: Thomas Young, farmer and organizer

Segment 2: On February 23rd, the Alliance for a Clean & Healthy Maine will organize and host a “Lobby Day” in Augusta concerning a number of bills the legislature will rule on which will effect environmental and human health in the state.    Two in particular are:  LD1547 “An Act to Revise Notification Requirements for Pesticide Applications Using Aircraft & Air Carrier Equipment”, and LD1631 “An Act to Provide Leadership Regarding Recycling of Consumer Products”   Guest:  Taryn Hall Weaver, Toxics Action Center   FMI: www.cleanandhealthymaine.org or 207-871-1810

RadioActive 1/28/10

Producer/Host: Amy Browne

Topic: LD 1611: “An Act To Ensure Humane Treatment for Special Management Prisoners”

State Representative Jim Schatz (D-Blue Hill) has introduced legislation that is aimed at reducing abuses of solitary confinement in Maine’s prisons.  Today we take a closer look at the legislation, the reasons it was proposed, and why it has drawn widespread support from a growing, diverse coalition of groups & individuals in the state.
LD 1611 “An Act To Ensure Humane Treatment for Special Management Prisoners”, would, if passed, do several things to reduce abuses on the SMU’s in Maine’s prisons.   It would protect severely mentally ill prisoners from being placed there, require the discharge of those who develop major mental illnesses while in solitary, restrict the use of restraints, chemical agents and other corporal punishment, require a system of reviews— and a need for justification for long-term placement on the SMU, and prevent prison officials from transferring prisoners out of state if they were to be placed in prisons that still allow such abuses.
Guests:
Emily Posner, Mainers Against the Abuse of Solitary Confinement, www.maineprisonproject.org
Reverend Stan Moody, former state legislator, former chaplain at the Special Management Unit, or SMU at Maine State Prison. He’s the  author of “Crisis in Evangelical Scholarship” and “McChurched: 300 Million Served and Still Hungry”, and author of several articles about his experiences there, that have been published in Village Soup.  He currently serves as pastor at the Meeting House Church in Manchester.  FMI: www.stanmoody.com & www.villagesoup.com
Alysia Melnick, Maine Civil Liberties Union FMI: www.mclu.org
Sheila Comerford, Executive Director, Maine Psychological Association
Link to text of LD 1611:

As we’ve reported previously on RadioActive,  State Representative Jim Schatz (D-Blue Hill) has introduced legislation that is aimed at reducing abuses of solitary confinement in Maine’s prisons.  Today we take a closer look at the legislation, the reasons it was proposed, and why it has drawn widespread support from a growing, diverse coalition of groups & individuals in the state.
Prisoners on the Special Management Units, or SMU, spend 23-24 hours per day in solitary confinement.  LD 1611 “An Act To Ensure Humane Treatment for Special Management Prisoners”, would, if passed, do several things to reduce abuses on the SMU’s in Maine’s prisons.   It would protect severely mentally ill prisoners from being placed there, require the discharge of those who develop major mental illnesses while in solitary, restrict the use of restraints, chemical agents and other corporal punishment, require a system of reviews— and a need for justification for long-term placement on the SMU, and prevent prison officials from transferring prisoners out of state if they were to be placed in prisons that still allow such abuses.

Guests: Emily Posner, Mainers Against the Abuse of Solitary Confinement, www.maineprisonproject.org
Reverend Stan Moody, former state legislator, former chaplain at the Special Management Unit, or SMU at Maine State Prison. He’s the  author of “Crisis in Evangelical Scholarship” and “McChurched: 300 Million Served and Still Hungry”, and author of several articles about his experiences there, that have been published in Village Soup.  He currently serves as pastor at the Meeting House Church in Manchester.  FMI: www.stanmoody.com & www.villagesoup.com
Alysia Melnick, Maine Civil Liberties Union FMI: www.mclu.org
Sheila Comerford, Executive Director, Maine Psychological Association
Link to text of LD 1611:www.mainelegislature.org/LawMakerWeb/summary.asp?ID=280035042

RadioActive 1/21/10

Producers/Hosts: Amy Browne & Meredith DeFrancesco

The Natural Resources Council of Maine is calling upon it’s membership to attend public hearings in Augusta tomorrow on what it calls “Three of the most important bills of this legislative session”.   Matt Prindiville, the Project Director of the Toxics and Clean Production campaign at the Natural Resources Council of Maine, is with us today to tell us why the NRCM considers LDs 1662, 1631 and 1568 to be so important
And as we’ve reported in the past on RadioActive,  legislation has been introduced that would regulate the use of Solitary Confinement in Maine prisons, which many believe is being used abusively.    At a press conference in Augusta this morning it was announced that a coalition of groups has come together to work for the passage of LD 1611 “An Act to Ensure Humane Treatment of Special Management Unit Prisoners” (sponsored by Rep. Jim Schatz, Blue Hill), including the Maine Civil Liberties Union, the Jeremiah Project, the Maine Psychological Association, the NAACP- Portland Branch, and the Maine Council of Churches. We speak to Emily Posner of Mainers Against the Abuse of Solitary Confinement.  FMI: maineprisonjustice.org

The Natural Resources Council of Maine is calling upon it’s membership to attend public hearings in Augusta tomorrow on what it calls “Three of the most important bills of this legislative session”.   Matt Prindiville, the Project Director of the Toxics and Clean Production campaign at the Natural Resources Council of Maine, is with us today to tell us why the NRCM considers LDs 1662, 1631 and 1568 to be so important.  FMI: www.nrcm.org

And as we’ve reported in the past on RadioActive,  legislation has been introduced that would regulate the use of Solitary Confinement in Maine prisons, which many believe is being used abusively.    At a press conference in Augusta this morning it was announced that a coalition of groups has come together to work for the passage of LD 1611 “An Act to Ensure Humane Treatment of Special Management Unit Prisoners” (sponsored by Rep. Jim Schatz, Blue Hill), including the Maine Civil Liberties Union, the Jeremiah Project, the Maine Psychological Association, the NAACP- Portland Branch, and the Maine Council of Churches. We speak to Emily Posner of Mainers Against the Abuse of Solitary Confinement.  FMI: maineprisonjustice.org

RadioActive 1/14/10

Producer/Host: Amy Browne

Today we’re joined by Tom Jackson, filmmaker, founder of Joe Public Films, and producer of the award-winning “Out of Balance”, “Greetings from Missile Street”,
“Worlds Apart: 9-11 First Responders Against War”, and “Defending the Commons: Making Water a Commodity”   He has just returned from a trip to Gaza, where he taught Palestinian youth documentary filmmaking skills, American Friends Service Committee, and where he, and they, participated in the “Gaza Freedom March”.

RadioActive 1/7/10

Producers/Hosts: Meredith DeFrancesco & Amy Browne

Today, as we wait to hear back from the most recent delegation of human rights activists to visit Gaza, we bring you an interview with Aziz Abu Sarah, a Palestinian peace activist now living in the U.S.  Meredith spoke with him in June 2009, when he was in Bangor, speaking at an event was co-sponsored by the Eastern Maine Chapter of Brit Tzedek v’Shalom (the Jewish Alliance for Justice and Peace) and The Center for World Religions, Diplomacy and Conflict Resolution (CRDC) at George Mason University, where Aziz Abu Sarah is a Senior Research Associate.

FMI: www.gmu.edu/departments/crdc , www.azizabusarah.wordpress.com

You can also hear the talk given by Aziz Abu Sarah (recorded by Carolyn Coe, and broadcast on WERU’s Weekend Voices in June 2009), here:  archives.weru.org/voices/weekend-voices-62709

RadioActive 12/17/09

Producers/Hosts: Amy Browne & Meredith DeFrancesco

Topic:  Activists report from Copenhagen COP15 U.N. Climate Conference

Guests (both by phone from Copenhagen):

Janet Redman, Co-Director, Sustainable Energy & Economy Network, Institute for Policy Studies (www.ips-dc.org), and founding member of “Climate Justice Now” (climatejustice.blogspot.com/)
Camila Moreno of Brasil, from the Global Justice Ecology Network (www.globaljusticeecology.org0 . Lawyer, researcher at Terra de Direitos, a Brazilian NGO working on land rights; a member of the Political Ecology working group of the Latin American Council of Social Sciences (Consejo Latinoamericano de Ciencias Sociales).  Doctoral Candidate at the Graduate Program in Social Sciences in Development, Agriculture and Society of the Federal Rural University of Rio de Janeiro (CPDA/UFRRJ).

RadioActive 12/10/09

Producers/Hosts: Meredith DeFrancesco & Amy Browne

Topic: The 15th United Nations’ Conference on Climate Change

Guests:

James Hoggan, the co-author (with Richard Littlemore) of “Climate Cover Up: The Crusade to Deny Global Warming”, and head of DeSmogBlog.com;

Janet Redman is a former resident of Hancock County, who is now the Co-Director of the  Sustainable Energy & Economy Network at the Institute for Policy Studies in Washington, DC.

The 15th United Nations’ Conference on Climate Change, aka COP15, got underway in Copenhagen this week, with representatives from 192 countries, NGO’s, Indigenous People’s groups, scientists, activists, and others, coming together in hopes that an international agreement can be reached to address the climate change crisis.

Smaller countries, poorer countries and islanders, who are already feeling the impacts of climate change more severely—are pitted against giant industrialized nations like the US and China, who are the most responsible— and the most resistant to change.

Earlier today, at a press conference in Copenhagen, a spokesperson for the 43-member Alliance of Small Island States, told a news conference that “100 nations had signed up for a goal of limiting rises in temperatures to 1.5 Celsius above pre-industrial levels.”   This would require cuts in greenhouse gas emissions by rich nations, of at least 45 percent from 1990 levels by 2020

In a separate statement issued earlier today, The Group of 77, representing the majority of the world’s developing countries, urged the United States to join the Kyoto Protocol and commit to emission reductions comparable to those of other industrialized nations.

Lumumba Stanislaus Di-Aping, chair of the G-77  stated:  “(The)USA is the world’s largest emitter historically and per capita. A reduction of four percent (compared to 1990) will not help save the world. We ask USA to join the Kyoto Protocol and take on commitments comparable to Annex 1 countries (industrialized countries),”

“This is a challenge that President Barack Obama needs to rise to as a Nobel Prize winner and as an advocate of a multilateral global society. We know he is proud to be a part of that community through his family relations in Africa,”  He went on to say:

“The American Congress approves billions of dollars in defense budgets. Can you not approve 200 billion to save the world?”

Today on RadioActive we talk with 2 people who will be participating in the COP15 Conference.  James Hoggan is the co-author (with Richard Littlemore) of “Climate Cover Up: The Crusade to Deny Global Warming”, and head of DeSmogBlog.com; and Janet Redman is a former resident of Hancock County, who is now the Co-Director of the  Sustainable Energy & Economy Network at the Institute for Policy Studies in Washington, DC.