Casper Group Sets 2008 On Sacred Ground Conference Dates

OSG Casper is pleased to announce “On Sacred Ground Fall Conference” September 4-6 2008 at the RAMADA PLAZA RIVERSIDE in Casper, to make reservations please call 307-235-2531 and identify yourself with On Sacred Ground (125 rooms are blocked). Peter Illyn of Restoring Eden and Peter Sawtell of Eco-Justice Ministries are the two keynote speakers. If you are interested in being part of the planning and implementation team, please contact Linda Robinson lscarlett@vcn.com or Joan McNamara gempuppets@juno.com

1 comment March 3, 2008 sacredground

Cody Affinity Group Takes Action

On September 27-29 of this past year, over two hundred people gatheredin Lander for an event called, “On Sacred Ground: Faith and the Environment”. It brought together people of the faith community from all over the state as well as representatives of nearly all Wyoming’s environmental groups including the Greater Yellowstone Coalition. It was jointly sponsored by The Wyoming Conservation Voters Education Fund and my organization, the Wyoming Association of Churches. It was preceded by a planning retreat which included official representation from each environmental organization as well as representatives of nine different religious denominations. These folks over a three day period were able to discuss past issues, areas of historical disagreement and present day common concerns about saving the earth. They also worked to develop a common agenda that everyone could agree upon. The theme for “On Sacred Ground” was to be “Inspiration, Education and Application”.This event exceeded our expectation as organizers. People from religious organizations were able to meet environmental folks who could point them to the necessary resources needed to save creation. Environmental people commented on how refreshing it was to see many new faces at a gathering focused on saving both Wyoming and our earth in general. The final session of “On Sacred Ground” was designed to get participants involved in the next step to carry out the inspiration gained in the conference. Several “affinity groups” were formed so that “On Sacred Ground” could be carried on in other communities. Groups have been established in Cheyenne, Lander, Laramie, Douglas, Casper and Cody.The Cody group who attended, which is really all of Park County, was made up of Brian Sybert, Dick Ludwig, Jill Carrow, Andy and Stephanie Rose, Casey Horton, Deb Thomas (of Clark), Pete Meese and myself. They were representing GYC, Christ Episcopal Church, the WAC, Powder River Basin Resource Council and the First United Methodist Church of Cody respectively. Since the September event there have been two followup gatherings. The current plan is to grow the Park County group and expand our base of support. There have been additional inquiries from Powell and Clark about how to be included. The plan is to sponsor an organizing dinner this spring that will enable us to explain the “On Sacred Ground” experience, introduce new people to the mission, and decide on new ways to extend environmental awareness to all of Park County. This would include all issues from climate change to preserving landscapes to greening up church buildings. Funding assistance is being sought to help make this gathering possible. There has even been discussion about sponsoring our own Park County “On Sacred Ground” event. Anyone desiring to be a part of this spring’s follow up gathering should contact any of the above named people to be included. This is indeed a way for active environmental people of faith to work together to preserve the best of both our county and our state.

Warren Murphy

Add comment January 21, 2008 sacredground

Douglas Forms Affinity Group

I am a member of Congregational United Church of Christ in Douglas, and as a result of the OSG at Lander we have formed a Planet Partners Community Committee. We have contacted Peter Illyn about coming to Wyoming in June (probably 1 to 8th), and we are in the initial planning process. Peter would like to plan a tour of several Wyoming cities when he comes. I wanted to check with you to see if your group is interested in taking part in some way. I will also be contacting Jeffrey Dodson of the Casper United Church of Christ.

Our next planning meeting will be Tuesday January 22.

Sara Baker

307-358-33572

CUCC 307-358-2580

Add comment January 21, 2008 sacredground

Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design

Last night the Fremont County School District 1 board voted on building the new middle school LEED certified. The school district demonstrated their commitment to the well-being of their students and the community by voting to build the new school “Gold” level. (For more information on LEED building visit www.usgbc.org.) The Gold level is one step below the platinum level, which only a handful of buildings have been built at this level in the world. The Gold level vote will ensure that the building will be energy efficient, will increase air quality within the building environment, will ensure the building design is compatible with the cultural heritage and the natural setting unique to Lander, will utilize natural lighting in the building design, and potentially provide the building as an extension of learning rather than just a vessel to contain learning. I would like to thank the school board for their choice to invest in the future of the Lander youth and community. The decision to build LEED Gold is a pioneering decision that shows leadership not only at our community level but also a model of leadership for the state.

Karl Sutton

Add comment January 16, 2008 sacredground

Casper Affinity Group Creates Vision Statement

Hello Everyone…

We had a gooooood meeting last night and in short, came up with what we all agreed on and believe a good (and powerful) Vision statement:

THE VISION OF “ON SACRED GROUND- CASPER” IS….

OUR COMMUNITY TRANSFORMED FROM WASTEFUL CONSUMPTION TO SUSTAINABLE PRESERVATION OF GOD’S CREATION

Now we have to work on Mission statement: For the next meeting come prepared to share your passions and interests, and your strengths/gifts…. where and how do you fit in, what can you share, bring to our group? Decided that all ‘things’ (ideas and actions) must come from these meetings– people cannot take on things and say they are with OSG unless group agrees.Also.. next meeting: We get serious in planning the Fall OSG conference. TIme is of the essence now… Jason, Darci, Diane…. HELP! Jason: who do we ‘refer’ to … who is in charge? Contact persons? Do we ‘organize’?

Talk on changing mtg from Mondays due conflicts of several members. Think of alternate days… Next meeting is Monday… Jan. 28th 7PM

This is (obviously) ‘it’ in a nutshell… but am leaving town and group agreed that the vision statement was most important to get out…. so, people, get excited, fired up and ready to MOVE ON and OUT into the community to help TRANSFORM from wasteful consumption into sustainable preservation. It starts with US!See you in a couple weeks…and yes, Linda and I will get the letter out to all the churches in Casper inviting them to our next meeting and using our Vision Statement! Walking together on Sacred Ground!

Joan

1 comment January 15, 2008 sacredground

Lander Affinity Group LEED certification and local food

Building a LEED certified school has become a potential reality in our community thanks to the efforts of individuals connected to the On Sacred ground local chapter and individuals in the Lander Community. LEED building became front page and editorial news in our local newspaper. Community members met in late November at our local coffee shop to learn more about what exactly is a LEED building and community members wrote the school board members and attended school board meetings voicing their desires for LEED built schools. The grassroots work paid off. The school board agreed to create an ad hoc committee that had representatives from the school district, school board and community. This ad hoc committee formed to look closely at the merits of LEED building design and the costs associated with building a LEED school. The committee traveled to Greybull in December to tour a LEED built elementary school and hear the testimonies of the Greybull personnel on the merits of the building design. A final decision has not been made on building LEED. This decision should be coming shortly in January.

On the local food front, the Fremont County Food Security project called Sustainable Lives continues to move forward. At the moment six individuals representing various organizations have been working on writing a trends report that holistically evaluates our local food system. This report covers our general demographics, water quality and quantity that effects agricultural production, land use trends such as subdivision development, direct market economies such as Community Supported Agriculture, farmer’s markets and food stands, farm production and economic indicators, and food security. This document will be a base report to inform the project steering committee, which is comprised of community members who individually have expertise in various facets of our food system. The projects ultimate goal is to create a project(s) that works to address food security and relocalizes our food system. A few project ideas are farm to school, community gardens, cooperative markets, and expanded community supported agriculture.

Add comment January 14, 2008 sacredground

Lander affinity group update

This morning in Lander several of us who had attended the “On Sacred Ground” conference sat down together. We want to take steps toward stewardship in our community. We want to translate inspiration from the conference into concrete progress and action.

Diane Corsick, Darci Jones, Maia Rose, April Pendleton, Joy Owen, Karl Sutton, and I (Aaron Bannon) sat down and began to hammer out a name, a mission, potential projects, and a cause.

The name: Fremont County On Sacred Ground Community (FCOSGC – perhaps still a working title).

The mission: To provide a vision of stewarsdhip for the future that inspires care of the natural world by example, educates about social and environmental justice, and activates civic engagement. (This is also a work in progress).

The projects: Field trips, newsletters, and workshops, which are vehicles to inspire and educate people about our identified action.

The cause: All agreed that, with two to three new school buildings on the way, working with the school district to adopt LEED certification and other sustainable practices (discussing school to farm projects, etc.) for these schools is a good project to begin our collaborative work. LEED certification uses a practiced system to consider green building techniques before, during, and after construction. The main sticking point is money, as a LEED certified school in Greybull, WY Business Council offered a demonstration grant to implement the systems required to meet LEED standards.
Everyone at the meeting walked away with a personal project to add momentum to this cause. Some are developing fact sheets, others are writing LTEs, still others are reaching out to school board members.

In our next meeting, we plan to start generating a work plan. The seeds have been sown.

1 comment October 24, 2007 sacredground

“Next Steps” for Faith & the Environment

Our conference logo

Welcome!

“On Sacred Ground: Faith & the Environment” is a new Web resource for people of faith and conservationists who are working together in Wyoming to improve stewardship and sustainability of the natural world.

This blog is one of our initial follow-up steps in the wake of our historic and successful inaugural conference at Lander, Wyoming in late September, cosponsored by the Wyoming Conservation Voters Education Fund (WCVEF) and the Wyoming Association of Churches.

With 170 participants and a broad array of workshops, field trips, keynote speeches and networking activities, the conference was a tremendous success and received attention in local and national media outlets.

Central to the event’s success was its relevance to members of Wyoming congregations and conservation groups. Conferees discussed personal, institutional and governmental approaches to pressing stewardship concerns such as global climate change, wildlife habitat, excessive commercialism, local economic sustainability and waste management, just to name a few.

Now, local “affinity groups” are forming or already established in several Wyoming communities and actively drawing up plans for direct action in the months to come. We’ll be featuring some of those plans and the personalities involved in the future on this site.

We’d like to hear your thoughts, about this program, the conference or where our communities can work together in the future!

1 comment October 16, 2007 sacredground

What Others Are Saying

September’s “On Sacred Ground: Faith & the Environment” conference drew a wide array of media coverage both withing Wyoming and farther afield. Here is a brief sampling of recent media coverage.

Before the conference began, WCVEF’s Darci Jones penned a guest column for Headwaters News which can be viewed here. She explained the origin of this collaborative effort and previewed several of the event’s highlights.

Days after the conference concluded, Episcopal Life Online recapped the event, with thoughtful comments from several of the organizers and participants on the value of collaboration between congregations and conservationists. The article is available here (scroll down after following the link).

Finally, outdoors columnist Shauna Stephenson of the Wyoming Tribune-Eagle in Cheyenne shared her thoughts on the conference as well as the Wyoming Outdoor Council’s 40th Anniversary bash which immediately followed in Lander. Her words are available here.

3 comments October 16, 2007 sacredground

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