Marin CCL Newsletter

April 9, 2025

View as Webpage (or if images don't appear)

You are invited to CCL's monthly meeting

Saturday, April 12 at 9 and 10 AM


First, at 9 AM, join CCL Marin and Sonoma Chapters


Our nation is in crisis, and so are many people the world over. We'll first allow time for personal connections and reflections, discuss strategies for coping and actions we can take, both individually and collectively. We'll discuss ongoing climate efforts at the federal and state levels, upcoming local Earth Day events and how you can participate.

Join here


Then, at 10 AM

CCL National Call

with Bay Area (that's us) meteorologist

Kari Hall


Local meteorologists are generally highly trusted communicators, and many have been harassed for linking local climate events to global warming. Kari Hall is an Emmy Award-winning meteorologist for NBC Bay Area’s morning newscast, Today in The Bay. She holds a degree in Geoscience with an emphasis in Broadcast Meteorology. Her career has spanned the country, from covering Hurricanes Katrina, Rita and Gustav to tornadoes and snowstorms in Kentucky, to serving as Chief Meteorologist at News 12 in Connecticut. She is a member of the American Meteorological Society and a leader with the Climate Reality Project who has won two Emmy Awards for her weather and climate coverage.


Join here



Local Earth Day events

One of the best coping strategies is to participate in your community, meet like-minded neighbors, hear the laughter of children and get some fresh air.



MILL VALLEY: Earth Day Change Makers: a special event for climate champions, hosted by Green Change on Wednesday, April 23, 2 to 5pm, at the Mill Valley Community Center.  At this free networking event, we will have the opportunity to connect with other climate champions and promote our CA electric rate reform campaign. We will also be hosting a youth climate workshop. Rep. Jared Huffman is expected to attend some time after 4 PM.


TAM VALLEY: Earth Day Festival in Tam Valley at the Tam Valley Community Center - 203 Marin Ave, Mill Valley, from 11am-2pm on April 26. We may have a small tabling presence at this event.


TIBURON: Earth Day 2025 Celebration will kick off at Zelinsky Park at 11am. A lively non-motorized parade will move along Tiburon Boulevard from Zelinsky Park to the Angel Island Ferry Deck, where local environmental groups will be tabling. The event runs from 11am to 2pm. We can arrange to have a small tabling presence at this event.


Town Hall with U.S. Reps. Jared Huffman and Jamie Raskin: Tuesday, April 22, 1-3 PM at College of Marin Gym,  700 College Ave., Kentfield. RSVP here.



CCL Alameda Hosts the annual

Wild & Scenic Film Festival and

Home Electrification Fair

Saturday, April 19, in Berkeley

Trump Administration Cuts Research Funding, Claiming It Creates ‘Climate Anxiety’


The Trump administration announced it is cutting nearly $4 million in federal funding for climate change research at Princeton University, saying that the work promoted “exaggerated and implausible climate threats” and increased “climate anxiety” among young Americans.


Wouldn't want to frighten the children, now, would we?


NYT, April 9

Clean energy generates major economic benefits, especially in red states




When President Biden left office, the Department of Energy was overseeing more than $300 billion in public and private investments in clean energy under the Inflation Reduction Act. Nearly three-quarters of these investments were slated to flow to states that voted for Donald Trump in the 2024 election.


But on the first day of his second term, President Trump signed an executive order attempting to halt some payments under that law, with the potential to hurt his own voters the most.

Skeptical Science


More than 1,900 scientists write letter in ‘SOS’ over Trump’s attacks on science


Members of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine warned Americans of ‘real danger in this moment’


The letter comes amid the administration’s relentless assault on US scientific institutions which has included threats to private universities, federal grant cancelations and ideological funding reviews, mass government layoffs, resignations and censorship.


The National Academies of Sciences was established by an act of Congress in 1863, during Abraham Lincoln’s administration.


The Guardian


Full text: (emphasis added)


TO THE AMERICAN PEOPLE:


We all rely on science. Science gave us the smartphones in our pockets, the navigation systems in our cars, and life-saving medical care. We count on engineers when we drive across bridges and fly in airplanes. Businesses and farmers rely on science and engineering for product innovation, technological advances, and weather forecasting. Science helps humanity protect the planet and keeps pollutants and toxins out of our air, water, and food.


For over 80 years, wise investments by the US government have built up the nation’s research enterprise, making it the envy of the world. Astoundingly, the Trump administration is destabilizing this enterprise by gutting funding for research, firing thousands of scientists, removing public access to scientific data, and pressuring researchers to alter or abandon their work on ideological grounds.


The undersigned are elected members of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, representing some of the nation’s top scientists, engineers, and medical researchers. We are speaking out as individuals. We see real danger in this moment. We hold diverse political beliefs, but we are united as researchers in wanting to protect independent scientific inquiry. We are sending this SOS to sound a clear warning: the nation’s scientific enterprise is being decimated.


The administration is slashing funding for scientific agencies, terminating grants to scientists, defunding their laboratories, and hampering international scientific collaboration. The funding cuts are forcing institutions to pause research (including studies of new disease treatments), dismiss faculty, and stop enrolling graduate students—the pipeline for the next generation’s scientists.


The administration’s current investigations of more than 50 universities send a chilling message. Columbia University was recently notified that its federal funding would be withheld unless it adopted disciplinary policies and disabled an academic department targeted by the administration. Destabilizing dozens of universities will endanger higher education—and the research those institutions conduct.


The quest for truth—the mission of science—requires that scientists freely explore new questions and report their findings honestly, independent of special interests. The administration is engaging in censorship, destroying this independence. It is using executive orders and financial threats to manipulate which studies are funded or published, how results are reported, and which data and research findings the public can access. The administration is blocking research on topics it finds objectionable, such as climate change, or that yields results it does not like, on topics ranging from vaccine safety to economic trends.


A climate of fear has descended on the research community. Researchers, afraid of losing their funding or job security, are removing their names from publications, abandoning studies, and rewriting grant proposals and papers to remove scientifically accurate terms (such as “climate change”) that agencies are flagging as objectionable. Although some in the scientific community have protested vocally, most researchers, universities, research institutions, and professional organizations have kept silent to avoid antagonizing the administration and jeopardizing their funding.


If our country’s research enterprise is dismantled, we will lose our scientific edge. Other countries will lead the development of novel disease treatments, clean energy sources, and the new technologies of the future. Their populations will be healthier, and their economies will surpass us in business, defense, intelligence gathering, and monitoring our planet’s health. The damage to our nation’s scientific enterprise could take decades to reverse.


We call on the administration to cease its wholesale assault on U.S. science, and we urge the public to join this call. Share this statement with others, contact your representatives in Congress, and help your community understand what is at risk. The voice of science must not be silenced. We all benefit from science, and we all stand to lose if the nation’s research enterprise is destroyed.


The views expressed here are our own and not those of the National Academies or our home institutions.


(Signed by almost 2,000 members of the NASEM and counting...)

NIH Ends Future Funding to Study the Health Effects of Climate Change


If this sounds unbelievable-- and it should -- read this: ProPublica


Aftermath of the devastating L.A. fires

Senator King Presses Intelligence Director on Climate Impacts


Watch Sen. Angus King (Ind-ME) grill Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard on why climate change was omitted from the current National Threat Assessment report. What a relief to know that problem is solved! (Don't expect much of an explanation.)


YouTube

(at 5'57" after interrogation on "Signalgate")

The Tipping Points of Climate Change — and Where We Stand | Johan Rockström


Should your climate anxiety level need to be further jolted into the stratosphere, tolerate 18 minutes with this world renowned scientist, who explains why earth scientists are "getting nervous" to say the least.


He demonstrates that climate and other environmental tipping points are already here, that the changes are accelerating, buffering systems are weakening, we are way behind and about to lose control....


But there is still hope that if we act really fast we might be able to stabilize Earth's climate in a habitable zone, a great reason to finally harness the enormous power of the global energy economy by deploying CCL's (and the US economics profession's) proposed carbon fee, dividend and border carbon policy to forcibly apply the brakes on fossil fuel demand -- thus supply and emissions -- before it's too late. It's not the only thing we must do, but it's essential. Focus on demand reduction by raising the price in a way people will tolerate --by governments not keeping the revenue -- rather than focusing on throttling supply, which may be inexhaustible if suppliers drill deep enough.


Watch it here

And finally,

How to Find Joy in Climate Action

with Ayana Elizabeth Johnson


We all need it. Get involved and do what brings you joy. It works.



TED Talk


Do Not Miss This Series! 

If you've already seen it, watch it again. You'll then understand how we got into this mess -- Denial, Doubt and Delay -- and what it will take to get us out: Massive popular political pressure supporting robust solutions that this industry and their agents will inevitably oppose.

You're invited, but...

This is how one behaves inside The Capitol:

Make an appointment. Business attire recommended. Bring nothing that even looks like a weapon.

Long live Democracy.

Visit CCL's website
Visit Marin CCL




Prepared by Peter G. Joseph, M.D. 

Peter.Joseph@cclvolunteer.org

Apologies for cross postings.

If you know someone who would like to be added to this distribution list, please suggest they join CCL.