In The News

Thank you to our Media Partner, Blue Planet Green Living, for their great stories featuring Iowans in the sustainability movement!

Eye of the Whale by Douglas Carlton Abrams - Fri, 03 Sep 2010
Intrigue. Romance. Danger. Life. Death. Loyalty. Betrayal. Eye of the Whale has what it takes to get a reader's pulse racing clear to the last page. But there's more to this novel than a mystery. After years of thorough research, author Douglas Carlton Abrams has skillfully woven a tale that teaches as much as it entertains. Abrams combines hard scientific facts about the pollution that threatens the world's sea creatures with a page-turning thrill ride. Eye of the Whale is an excellent literary vehicle for making the current threat of pollution immediate and real. The author accomplishes this by creating characters — not all of them human — that readers come to know and care about. From a mother whale who begins a new, mysterious song that carries around the world to a ravenous shark whose violent kills are simply a means of survival to a male whale stranded in a California river, the animals have compelling plot lines that draw the reader in.

My 5: Gary Sutterlin, Breeze Dryer, CEO - Fri, 03 Sep 2010
Blue Planet Green Living (BPGL) asked ecopreneur Gary Sutterlin two questions we ask all our interviewees. Sutterlin and his wife, Gayle, are the owners of Breeze Dryer, the North American distributors of Hills Hoist and other Hills clothes-drying solutions. Following are Sutterlin's responses: BPGL: What are the five most important things we can do to save protect the planet? In order to protect the planet, we need to begin to live our lives with a focus on our impact on this earth. * Consumers need to begin to understand where and how goods make their way to the store shelves....

ReUse Connection – Ideas for Repurposing, Freely Shared - Wed, 01 Sep 2010
Ian Moise is the founder of ReUse Connection, a Facebook page and future website dedicated to finding alternative uses for items or materials people might otherwise throw away. For example, do you ever wonder what to do with used plastic tape dispensers? ReUse Connection readers suggested ideas as varied as making candle holders, using them [...]

Returned Peace Corps Volunteer Helps Change Lives through Improved Sanitation - Tue, 31 Aug 2010
“There are 2.6 billion people without access to improved sanitation. And, according to the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), that’s supposed to be halved by the year 2015,” Ian Moise [mo-EEZ] told Blue Planet Green Living (BPGL). Moise is a returned Peace Corps volunteer, who currently consults on a global sanitation project for the World Bank’s Water and Sanitation Program (WSP). “Our project is one of the many projects working on expanding access to ‘improved sanitation’ for a target of roughly 1.3 billion people,” he said... (Part 1 of a 2-Part Interview)

My 5: Jennie Nigrosh, The Green Garmento, President and Co-Founder - Sun, 29 Aug 2010
Blue Planet Green Living (BPGL) asks our interviewees to answer two questions that give us insights into their thinking about the planet we all share. Today, Jennie Nigrosh, president and co-founder of The Green Garmento, gives us her responses. The Green Garmento is a reusable polypropylene bag that replaces the ubiquitous, single-use, plastic dry cleaning bags. BPGL: What are the five most important things we can do to protect the planet? NIGROSH: 1. Education. We have to learn where the problems are, understand the answers, and do the best we can to solve them....