Eco Friendly Dry Cleaning…. Wash Day Laundry Centre Whitby…

Editor’s Note… :)

Dress shirts on wooden hangers. Stock Photo - 7990227

We are always on the look out for companies and business’s who try hard to leave a soft foot print upon our earth. 

In this day of use and throw away, and so many different chemicals and toxins being placed upon and in our precious resources , it’s nice to see people who are actively trying to make a difference while still maintaining a business.

This shows us that having a successful business doesn’t mean we have to ruin our world at the same time… We can be successful and leave a soft foot print behind… 

Please note: Staff from SGC have not tried this business, if you do have an experience with this business and would like to share it, please feel free to Email us. 

Washday Laundry Centre and Dry Cleaning Service state they offer eco-friendly dry cleaning services…. 

Located at: 352 Brock Street South Whitby. 905 217 0540 

Wash Day offers the following: 

Over 65 machines fully attended:

GreenEarth Eco Friendly dry cleaners, no hazardous chemicals, 100% odor-free:

Free pick and delivery services: 

Please visit www.greenearthcleaning.com for more eco-friendly tips and information about their Dry Cleaning Services. 

FYI: Lake Research Shutdown doesn’t make sense!! The David Suzuki Foundation

Editor’s Note: From our inbox to you… :)

The following is the latest email from The David Suzuki Foundation and it’s focus is on the recent Bill passed by our government regarding potentially damaging and dangerous changes to environmental and fisheries laws…. If you are concerned about the potential impacts of these changes and wish to voice your concern, please consider emailing or writing to our Prime Minister’s Office, The Environmental Minister’s Office and/or the Fisheries Minister’s Office. (links will be included at the end of this post)

Dr. David Suzuki has many years experience regarding the environment and the effects of Climate Change. He is a scientist and advocate for fair and just treatment of our planet and her resources. 

If you would like to receive The Foundation’s news letter and updates please Click Here to go to The David Suzuki Foundation’s website…. 

Landscape of Moraine Lake, Banff National Park, Alberta, Canada Stock Photo - 8043942

Lakes research shutdown doesn’t make sense

We can’t live without clean water. Canada is blessed with an abundance of lakes and rivers and has a global responsibility to manage them well. But if we really want to protect freshwater supplies and the ecosystems they support, we must understand how human activity and natural disturbances affect them. 

The world-renowned Experimental Lakes Area in Northwestern Ontariohas served as an outdoor laboratory for this purpose since 1968. By manipulating and studying conditions in 58 small lakes and their watersheds, scientists there have made many discoveries about the effects of human and natural activity on freshwater ecosystems and fish. Over the past 45 years they’ve taught us about the impacts of acid rain, mercury pollution, nanoparticles, nitrogen overload, climate change, fish farming, and many other issues. 

That’s about to end. The federal government announced it will close the unique facility in 2013. It’s an odd decision, especially considering that it costs just $2-million a year to operate – one-tenth the cost of Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s security detail and about the same amount the government spent during the 2010 G20 Summit in Toronto to build a tourism pavilion with a fake lake. To make matters worse, it will cost taxpayers $50 million to shut the ELA down! 

In an open letter to government, senior scientists point out that “research conducted at the ELA has been instrumental in the development of environmental policy and legislation both nationally and internationally.” They also note that “ELA scientists have been recipients of numerous prestigious national and international awards, and the scientific output from ELA has been impressive – more than 1,000 scientific articles, graduate theses and books.” We often hear how Canada “manages” its natural resources, but how can we do that without sound knowledge about the intricacies of the water cycle? 

The timing is also odd. The ELA is being shut down as the government eviscerates laws and regulations designed to protect freshwater and marine habitat and resources with its omnibus budget bill. Included in the bill are changes or cuts to the Fisheries Act, Navigable Waters Protection Act, Species at Risk Act, and Canadian Environmental Protection Act, and a complete gutting and rewriting of the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act. 

Changes to the Fisheries Act are especially troubling. Habitat protection has been removed, and the focus has shifted to economically viable and aboriginal fisheries only. That has some former fisheries ministers worried. In a letter to the prime minister, Conservatives Tom Siddon and John Fraser and Liberals Herb Dhaliwal and David Anderson wrote, “Canadians are entitled to know whether these changes were written, or insisted upon, by the minister of fisheries or by interest groups outside the government. If the latter is true, exactly who are they?” 

It’s a valid concern. Postmedia obtained government documents showing that Enbridge, the company behind the dual Northern Gateway pipeline proposal, lobbied the government heavily before the changes were brought in. Documents also indicate that pressure from Enbridge was partly responsible for the government’s decision to pull out of a joint marine-planning process on the Pacific North Coast between industry, First Nations, citizens’ groups, and conservation organizations. 

One can’t help but notice that many recent cuts and changes are aimed at programs, laws, or entities that might slow the push for rapid tar sands expansion and pipelines to the west and south, along with the massive selloff of our resources and resource industry to Chinese state-owned companies, among others. Any research or findings that don’t fit with the government’s fossil fuel-based economic plans appear to be under attack. 

The National Round Table on the Environment and the Economy, for example, warned that failing to address climate change would have both economic and environmental consequences. The government also axed that arm’s-length agency, under the guise of saving $5.5 million a year. 

Development is important, but when it’s focused on a single polluting industry, at the expense of other economic priorities and the environment, it doesn’t make sense. When industry and government go to such extreme lengths to promote a short-sighted and narrow interest, it’s an affront to the democratic traditions that Canadians of all political stripes have built over the years. 

By David Suzuki with contributions from David Suzuki Foundation Editorial and Communications Specialist Ian Hanington.

For more insights from David Suzuki, please read Everything Under the Sun (Greystone Books/David Suzuki Foundation), by David Suzuki and Ian Hanington, now available in bookstores and online

A message to slow down and appreciate… :)

Nicole's avatarCelestial Messages

This picture is so touching to me. It sends out so many important messages. First that nature is something that is natural. It is not meant to be feared. It is where we came from.

It is sad that humans now are so cut off from where we should be. We have shelter and forget that we are not meant to spend all of our time inside away from our mother (mother earth)

There are lots of benefits to spending time in our natural habitat. Stress relief is one of those benefits. Being connected and barefoot on mother earth can help diminish feelings of depression and lonliness. This occurs because anyone that is grounded to mother earth at the same time as you is automatically connected. It takes those feelings of alienation and allows you to feel the connection to all that is. It gives a new meaning to the…

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Little People Alert!!! Splash and Boots coming to Whitby…. :)

From the Editor: From our inbox to you…

Little People Alert Splash and Boots coming to Whitby…. :) 

 

Parents, Grandparents and babysitters as 

Supporters of 

Class Act Dinner Theatre

 we are proud to bring you on  

Tuesday August 14th at 4pm

Canadian Children’s Group Of The Year (INDIES)

Children’s Album Of The Year, Hamilton Music Awards (TWICE)

John Lennon Songwriting Contest

‘Best of the best’ International iParenting Award Winner

International Songwriting Competition Finalist

 Splash N Boots Logo

Canadian breakthrough children’s performers, Splash’N Boots, have been bringing their infectious melodies into the lives of families around the globe. Now they are coming to Class Act Dinner Theatre in Whitby Ontario Hailed as the “U2 of children’s entertainment” by the Standard and awarded Children’s Music Group of the Year, the cutting-edge duo recently achieved a major career milestone, gaining national exposure on Treehouse TV for their music video “For the Love of Dance”. Subsequently, the two landed a cross-Canada theatre tour – Roll Play Live Animal Party – with the popular children’s network, also slated for national broadcast!

Tickets Only

$17 ea or a family Pack for $55

Order online @

http://www.classactdinnertheatre.com

or

Call 905-668-2229

Click Here to go to Splash and Boots website… 

Guided Meditation with Julie Ditta. July 11 Whitby

Guided Meditation

Wednesday, July 11

Relax your body, open your heart and activate your imagination as you go on a personal and enlightening journey. A new theme which touches the soul and stimulates the spirit, is introduced each month.

 A woman quietly sits meditating in the middle of eight smaller men and women running around her in a counter clockwise direction. The eight men and women doing various things run in circles. Stock Photo - 7290641

7:30 pm
604 Byron St., Whitby
**(please use backdoor)**
Refreshments served
$10.00

Contact Julie Ditta for information or to register.

905-666-8238