by Peggy Mansperger, NSNS Staff Writer
On April 14, people all over the country
will hold events for “Step It Up: A National Day of Climate Action.”
Organized by six recent college graduates and Bill McKibben, scholar in
residence at Middlebury College, Step It Up is expected to be the
largest day of citizen action focused on global warming in U.S. history.
Step
It Up is designed to capitalize on the national movement to spread
awareness about global warming. Parents, children, entrepreneurs, and
college students are setting up rallies and events in the name of Step
It Up, demanding that Congress put the United States “on a course to
cut carbon emissions 80% by 2050.”
Over 900 events are planned
across all 50 states. From senior citizens to first-graders, people are
planning ways they can be part of the day’s action. Events are planned
locally so supporters can emit the least amount of carbon, and so that
the educational impact of events is made at home.
In Florida,
scuba divers are planning to hold underwater signs by the damaged
reefs. There is a children’s march planned in South Dakota and a
“bubble parade” in Berkeley, California. Thousands will rally in New
York City. Citizens in other parts of the country plan to rally, march,
sing, and bike in their own hometowns.
College students are
also joining the movement, helping by planning, promoting, and
attending events. Step It Up boasts allies of student groups like
Campus Climate Challenge, Focus the Nation, Sierra Club, and Student
Conservation Voters. The Student Public Interest Research Groups’
website explains that University of Maryland College Park students
started their Step It Up campaign a month in advance. They’ve gathered
over 300 photo petitions of students asking Congress to “Step It Up!
Reduce Carbon by 2050.”
University of California San Diego
students are going to rally on the green of Eleanor Roosevelt College.
The University’s student environmental groups are getting involved, and
so are colleges like Paul Smith’s College. Students at SUNY Oneonta and
Hartwick College are painting murals. Student clubs are joining
together in La Jolla, California.
The nation’s sororities,
too, are getting involved. In January, Bill McKibben wrote an article
showing that the Alpha Phi Sorority chapter from the University of
Texas at Austin was helping to spur the Step It Up events and issues.
Teachers
are motivating some of the organizing students and friends are
motivating others, but all are being motivated by the possibility of
making a difference.
For more information on Step It Up, go to: http://www.stepitup2007.org/ |