Hi everyone
Sustainable Communities is starting to appear at Santa Barbara County
locations. Bob Banner the Publisher has given us our first SB cover of
Hopedance with a truly deep feeling painting by Paul Cumes
www.paulcumes.org
plus one more in the issue. Paul's words "were created in order to express my feelings about overdevelopment and urbanization of SB." pg 20 read more about his work.
DEADLINE FOR NEXT ISSUE NOV/DEC 2000 WILL BE OCT 5 FOR THE SANTA BARBARA SECTION
Please submit articles,cartoons, essays, book reviews, fictional stories, poems , announcements of events, and ideas for Santa Barbara Hopedance to the SB Editors Wes Roe lakinroe@silcom.com and Margie Bushman sbpcnet@silcom.com
805-962-2571.
The next meeting of Hopedance SB to talk about the articles and meet the people behind the articles gathered for the Nov/Dec issue will be Oct 3 7pm at Sola House SB.
Here is part of the intro to Hopedance Mag Sept/Oct by Bob Banner which SB Hopedance is a part
www.hopedance.com to subscribe at $10 per year
Welcome to the 24th issue of HopeDance. We’ve been at it for 4 years! And
with this issue we are completely digital.
Sprawl is an issue that crosses all political spectrums. It symbolizes a
design problem and a “progress” ethic that has run amok. The interview with
co-producer Jeff Gersh (of the superb film “Subdivide & Conquer”) explores
sprawl and offers design solutions in various cities (see p.17). Donella
Meadows, our very necessary sustainability nationally syndicated columnist
poignantly exposes the myths about sprawl (p.13). Randy Knight reiterates
what the SOAR initiative is all about and warns us about the monied
opposition (p.15). Even Paul Harvey warns us about the developer/builders who
have become so prosperous that they are “buying zoning officials” (p.12).
As typical with HopeDance’s mission, we give you solutions rather than
complain about the problems. Social worker Carla Grindle reports on various
sustainability projects that actually work (with numerous web sites and a
bibliography; p.26). Development per se is not the problem. It’s how we
develop. Larry Santoyo writes about Village Homes in Davis, CA, a highly
successful sub-division that incorporates many sustainability designs (p.37).
Our own local Oak Creek Common cohousing group writes about their plans to
use less natural resources and more sustainable designs in their new
development in Paso Robles (p.22). Gary Duncan from SmartShelter.com will be
arriving on the Central Coast in November to speak to builders, developers,
and real estate agents to discuss creating a network in California to compete
with the destructive aspects of conventional building (see p.67). And when it
comes to sustaining ourselves in the midst of an overwhelming momentum toward
ecological collapse, Bob Banner reports on a workshop designed to refresh the
batteries of social activists (p.24).
SB LOCATIONS FOR HOPEDANCE MAG
Taffy's Pizza
Vices &Spices
SB Hemp Company
IV Coop
Main Library and
Island Seed & Feed
Goleta Community Center
Paradise Found
Community Environmental Council
Herbal Spirit Path
Pablo's Juices
Copy Cat Coffee
Thrashers Books
Star Alchemy
Natural Cafe in Santa Barbara and Goleta
Pan's Garden Summerland
Pacific Health foods Carpinteria
Rainbow Bridge Natural Foods Market Ojai
Local Hero Bookstore
South Side Cafe Lompoc
Printed Matter Lompoc
Solvang Public Library