Teatime for Palestine
Join Longmont for Palestine at SandΨs every Sunday at 1:30pm for Teatime for Palestine! This is simply an offer to hold space for each other and to be in community, bound by our solidarity and shared fight for a Free Palestine.
Join Longmont for Palestine at SandΨs every Sunday at 1:30pm for Teatime for Palestine! This is simply an offer to hold space for each other and to be in community, bound by our solidarity and shared fight for a Free Palestine.
We are thrilled to welcome back our first Empower Hour guest (January 2021), Bryan Hannegan of Holy Cross Energy (HCE) for an update!
In November, our Boulder County chapter welcomes Dr. Peter Lilienthal for a look at the history of distributed power.
Jacob Watts will discuss the OSMP three year research program which has attempted to comprehensively document the lichen biota of the Front Range foothills of Boulder and surrounding counties for the first time via extensive specimen collection, morphological taxonomy, and DNA barcoding when necessary.
A remembrance celebration honoring the life and legacy of Dr. Joanna Macy.
Join the NAACP for a Rapid Response briefing on the government shutdown and threats to the Affordable Care Act.
The Antarctic is undergoing rapid systemic change, marked by significant reductions in frozen water, including glaciers, ice shelves and sheets, and sea ice. This unprecedented transformation will have profound impacts on polar ecosystems, affecting life from phytoplankton to penguins and, ultimately, people.
This year, to honor our first decade of collaborative pollinator conservation efforts in Colorado, we have organized a 2-day Summit with 3 keynote speakers, followed by the inaugural (free!) Youth Pollinator Summit which will bring middle and high school students (ages 13+) together at the CU Museum of Natural History to advocate for Colorado’s pollinators.
In honor of Colorado Recycles Week, the Boulder County Resource Conservation Division is hosting a special Open House at the Boulder County Recycling Center!
Pesticides are a major contributor to declines in pollinators and other invertebrates. Unfortunately, our towns and cities are not immune -- plants, soil, and waterways are often contaminated with these chemicals, both from applications in yards and parks and from hidden movement from far-off sources.