626 Groups Present Petition with ‘Green New Deal’ Demands<

January 13th, 2019 - by admin

Nick Sobczyk / E&E News – 2019-01-13 00:36:00

https://www.eenews.net/stories/1060111515

626 Groups Present ‘Green New Deal’ Demands
Nick Sobczyk / E&E News

(January 10, 2019) — Progressive organizers today presented lawmakers with a formal wish list for “Green New Deal” legislation, asking for a sweeping plan to address climate change and move to 100 percent renewable energy.

In a letter to lawmakers on Capitol Hill [See full letter below — EAW], more than 600 advocacy groups, including Friends of the Earth, Food & Water Watch, the Center for Biological Diversity, the Sunrise Movement, and Environmentalists Against War laid down a set of principles, fleshing out the “Green New Deal” proposal floated by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.).

At the top of the list is an end to all fossil fuel leasing and subsidies and a transition to all renewables “by 2035 or earlier.”

“Congress must bring the outdated regulation of electricity into the twenty-first century, encouraging public and community ownership over power infrastructure and electricity choice, as well as permitting distributed energy sources, including rooftop and community solar programs to supply the grid,” they wrote.

The letter is the most detailed look yet at what progressives mean when they say “Green New Deal.” To this point, conservatives and energy industry groups have criticized the platform for being too vague and overly ambitious given current technology.

But the letter is still largely goals, rather than policies, and some of its more specific proposals won’t sit well with even some Democrats.

For instance, the groups write that any climate legislation should reinstate the 40-year ban on fossil fuel exports, which ended during the Obama administration.

They also said they would oppose any bill to promote “corporate schemes,” including carbon capture and storage, emissions trading, and nuclear energy, all seen in some parts of the climate policy world as viable, if incomplete, solutions to global warming.

Other ideas are unsurprising, such as an effort to update the U.S. electric grid and promote battery storage as part of the effort to get to 100 percent renewables.

“In addition, Congress must bring the outdated regulation of electricity into the twenty-first century, encouraging public and community ownership over power infrastructure and electricity choice, as well as permitting distributed energy sources, including rooftop and community solar programs to supply the grid,” they wrote.

Progressives also want an economic plan to ensure a just transition for fossil fuel workers and statutory requirements and timelines for EPA greenhouse gas regulations under the Clean Air Act.

For now, the closest thing to the progressive plan is the “Climate Solutions Act,” introduced this week by California Democratic Rep. Ted Lieu (Greenwire, Jan. 9).

And while that won’t pass the Senate or be signed by President Trump, progressives are looking to influence Democratic debates in the House headed into the 2020 presidential race.

“As the world teeters on the brink of climate catastrophe, we’re calling on Congress to take large-scale action,” Bill Snape, senior counsel at the Center for Biological Diversity, said in a statement. “Americans want a livable future for their children, and that requires keeping fossil fuels in the ground while greening the economy on a wartime footing.”


Re: Legislation to Address
The Urgent Threat of Climate Change

January 10, 2019

Dear Representative:

On behalf of our millions of members and supporters, we are writing today to urge you to consider the following principles as the 116th Congress debates climate change legislation and momentum around the country builds for a Green New Deal.

As the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change recently warned, if we are to keep global warming below 1.5°C, we must act aggressively and quickly. At a minimum, reaching that target requires visionary and affirmative legislative action in the following areas:

Halt all fossil fuel leasing, phase out all fossil fuel extraction, and end fossil fuel and other dirty energy subsidies.

The science is clear that fossil fuels must be kept in the ground. Pursuing new fossil fuel projects at this moment in history is folly. Most immediately, the federal government must stop selling off or leasing publicly owned lands, water, and mineral rights for development to fossil fuel producers.

The government must also stop approving fossil fuel power plants and infrastructure projects. We must reverse recent legislation that ended the 40-year ban on the export of crude oil, end the export of all other fossil fuels, and overhaul relevant statutes that govern fossil fuel extraction in order to pursue a managed decline of fossil fuel production.

Further, the federal government must immediately end the massive, irrational subsidies and other financial support that fossil fuel, and other dirty energy companies (such as nuclear, waste incineration and biomass energy) continue to receive both domestically and overseas.

Transition power generation to 100% renewable energy.

As the United States shifts away from fossil fuels, we must simultaneously ramp up energy efficiency and transition to clean, renewable energy to power the nation’s economy where, in addition to excluding fossil fuels, any definition of renewable energy must also exclude all combustion-based power generation, nuclear, biomass energy, large scale hydro and waste-to-energy technologies.

To achieve this, the United States must shift to 100 percent renewable power generation by 2035 or earlier. This shift will necessitate upgrading our electricity grid to be smart, efficient, and decentralized, with the ability to incorporate battery storage and distributed energy systems that are democratically governed.

In addition, Congress must bring the outdated regulation of electricity into the twenty-first century, encouraging public and community ownership over power infrastructure and electricity choice, as well as permitting distributed energy sources, including rooftop and community solar programs to supply the grid.

Expand public transportation and phase out fossil fuel vehicles.

As the transition away from fossil fuels occurs, our transportation system must also undergo 100 percent decarbonization. To accomplish a fossil-fuel-free reality, Congress must require and fund greater investment in renewable-energy-powered public transportation that serves the people who need it most.

The United States must also phase out the sale of automobiles and trucks with internal fossil fuel combustion engines as quickly as possible and phase out all existing fossil fuel mobile sources by 2040 or earlier. Federal credits for electric vehicles must be expanded.

Harness the full power of the Clean Air Act.

The Clean Air Act provides powerful tools that have proven successful in protecting the air we breathe and reducing greenhouse pollution. It can also serve as an important backstop to ensure climate targets are met.

Congress should harness the full power of the statute by setting strict deadlines and providing adequate funding for EPA to carry out all its duties under all applicable sections of the Act, including implementing greenhouse pollution reduction requirements for cars, trucks, aircraft, ships, smokestacks and other sources, as well as a science-based national pollution cap. The Act has successfully reduced many air pollutants and can do the same for greenhouse pollution.

Ensure a Just Transition led by impacted communities and workers.

In effectuating this energy transformation, it is critical to prioritize support for communities who have historically been harmed first and most by the dirty energy economy and workers in the energy sector and related industries.

We support a comprehensive economic plan to drive job growth and invest in a new green economy that is designed, built and governed by communities and workers.

Building new energy, waste, transportation and housing infrastructure, designed to serve climate resilience and human needs; retrofitting millions of buildings to conserve energy and other resources; and, actively restoring natural ecosystems to protect communities from climate change, are but a few ways to build a sustainable, low carbon economy where no one is left behind during this change.

Uphold Indigenous Rights

The United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) must be upheld and implemented, along with treaties, instruments and decisions of international law that recognize that Indigenous Peoples have the right to give or withhold “free, prior and informed consent” to legislation and development of their lands, territories and/or natural resources, cultural properties and heritage, and other interests, and to receive remedies of losses and damages of property taken without consent.

Further, we will vigorously oppose any legislation that: (1) rolls back existing environmental, health, and other protections, (2) protects fossil fuel and other dirty energy polluters from liability, or (3) promotes corporate schemes that place profits over community burdens and benefits, including market-based mechanisms and technology options such as carbon and emissions trading and offsets, carbon capture and storage, nuclear power, waste-to-energy and biomass energy.

Fossil fuel companies should pay their fair share for damages caused by climate change, rather than shifting those costs to taxpayers.

We look forward to working with you to address the gravest environmental crisis humanity has ever faced, to protect all present and future generations around the world, while centering the rights of those communities and workers most impacted.

Sincerely,

1. A Community Voice – Louisiana
2. ACHE Act
3. Acoustic Ecology Institute
4. ActionAid USA
5. Advocates for Springfield NY
6. Alabama Center for Rural Enterprise
7. Alabama Interfaith Power and Light/The People’s Justice Council
8. Allamakee County Protectors – Education Campaign
9. Alliance for a Green Economy
10. Alliance for Climate Education
11. Alliance for Energy Democracy
12. Alliance for the Wild Rockies
13. Alliance of Nurses for Healthy Environments
14. Already Devalued and Devastated Homeowners of Parsippany
15. Amazon Watch
16. Animals Are Sentient Beings, Inc. 17.Anthropocene Alliance
18. Arise for Social Justice
19. Arvadans for Progressive Action 20.Asamblea de Gonzales
21. Ashford Clean Energy Task Force
22. Athens County (OH) Fracking Action Network
23. Athens for Everyone
24. Aytzim: Ecological Judaism
25. Back Country Excursions
26. Backbone Campaign
27. Balance & Accuracy in Journalism
28. Bay Area-System Change not Climate Change (BA-SCnCC)
29. Be the Change
30. Beloved Earth Community, The Riverside Church
31. Benedictine Sisters Erie PA
32. Bergen SWAN (Save The Watershed Action Network)
33. Berks Gas Truth
34. Berkshire chapter NAACP
35. Berkshire Environmental Action Team
36. Better Path Coalition
37. Beyond Extreme Energy
38. Big Reuse
39. Biofuelwatch
40. Black Swamp Creek Land Trust Inc.
41. Blue Frontier Campaign
42. Bold Alliance
43. Bold Iowa
44. Boston Clean Energy Coalition
45. Boston Climate Action Network
46. Bridgerland Audubon Society
47. Bronx Climate Justice North
48. Brooklyn Bridge CSA
49. Buckeye Environmental Network
50. Bucks Environmental Action
51. CA for Progress
52. CA Prison Moratorium Project
53. Cache Valley Citizens Climate Lobby
54. California Young Democrats Environmental Caucus
55. Californians Against Fracking & Dangerous Drilling 56. Californians for Western Wilderness
57. Call to Action – Colorado
58. Campaign for America’s Future
59. Campaign for Renewable Energy 60.Cape Downwinders
61. Care About Climate
62.Cascadia Wildlands
63. CatholicNetwork.US
64. Catskill Mountainkeeper
65. Center for a Sustainable Coast
66. Center for Biological Diversity
67. Center for Emergent Diplomacy
68. Center for International Environmental Law
69. Center for Popular Democracy
70. Center for Story-based Strategy
71. Center for Sustainable Economy
72. Central California Asthma Collaborative (CCAC)
73. Central Jersey Coalition Against Endless War
74. Central Jersey Environmental Defenders
75. Central Jersey Progressive Democrats
76. CEO Pipe Organs/Golden Ponds Farm
77. CERBAT
78. Chatham Research Group
79. Chesapeake Climate Action Network
80. Christians For The Mountains
81. Church Women United in New York State
82. Ciel Power LLC
83. Citizen’s Committee for Flood Relief
84. Citizens Acting for Rail Safety (CARS) — Winona, MN
85. Citizens Coalition for a Safe Community
86. Citizens For Responsible Oil & Gas – CFROG
87. Citizens for the Preservation of Middletown Valley
88. Citizens For Water
89. Citizens Regeneration Lobby
90. Citizens United for Renewable Energy (CURE)
91. Citizens’ Environmental Coalition
92. Clean Coast
93. Clean Energy Action
94. Climate Action Alliance of the Valley
95. Climate Action Group of the Unitarian Society of Northampton and Florence 96.Climate Action Mondays
97. Climate Action Now MA
98. Climate Action Team of Congregation Havurah Shalom
99. Climate Defense Project
100. Climate Generation: A Will Steger Legacy
101. Climate Hawks Vote
102. Climate Justice Alliance
103. Climate Justice Committee of CNY Solidarity Coalition
104. Climate Justice League
105. Climate March
106. ClimateMama
107. Coalition Against Nukes
108. Coalition Against the Pilgrim Pipeline NJ
109. Coalition Against the Rockaway Pipeline
110. CODEPINK
111. Collaborative Center for Justice
112. Columbus Community Bill of Rights
113. Comite Civico del Valle
114. Common Sense Design
115. Communities for a Better Environment
116. Community Advocates for Sustainable Energy
117. Community Alliance for Global Justice
118. Community Ecology Institute
119. Community Free Democrats
120. Compressor Free Franklin
121. Concerned Health Professionals of New York
122. Concerned Residents of Oxford
123. Conservation Congress
124. Cook Inletkeeper
125. Corporate Accountability
126. Corporate Ethics International
127. Corvallis Interfaith Climate Justice Committee
128. Courage Campaign
129. Crawford Stewardship Project
130. Creation Care Network, Episcopal Diocese of Mass.
131. CREDO
132. CT Coalition for Environmental Justice
133. CWA Local 1081
134. Damascus Citizens for Sustainability
135. DC Statehood Green Party
136. Delaware Riverkeeper Network
137. DÄ“mos
138. Dietrick Institute for Applied Insect Ecology
139. Divest LA
140. Dogwood Alliance
141. Don’t Gas the Meadowlands Coalition
142. Don’t Gas the Pinelands Coalition
143. Don’t Waste Arizona
144. Down to Earth Storytelling Project
145. Dryden Resource Awareness Coalition
146. Earth and Sky School
147. Earth Care
148. Earth Day Network
149. Earth Ethics, Inc.
150. Earth Ministry/Washington Interfaith Power & Light
151. Earthworks
152. Echotopia LLC
153. Eco-Eating
154. Eco-Poetry.org
155. EcoEquity
156. Efficiency For All CT
157. Elders Action Network
158. Elders Climate Action
159. Elmirans & Friends Against Fracking
160. Embrace Impatience Associates
161. Emerald Coastkeeper, Inc
162. Endangered Habitats League
163. Endangered Species Coalition
164. Enviro-Build
165. Environmental Advocates
166. Environmental Health Trust, http://ehtrust.org
167. Environmental Justice Committee of the Unitarian Society of Ridgewood, NJ
168. Environmental Justice Task Force of the WNY Peace Center
169. Environmental Protection Information Center
170. Environmentalists Against War

171. Eugene Interfaith Earthkeepers
172. Evergreen Islands
173. Extinction Rebellion
174. FACTS- Families Advocating for Chemical and Toxics Safety
175. Family Farm Defenders
176. Farmworker Association of Florida
177. Fearless Fund
178. First Churches, Northampton, MA
179. Flood Forum, USA
180. Flood Victims of Richwood
181. Food & Water Watch
182. Foodshed Alliance
183. For Love of Water (FLOW)
184. For The Generations
185. Fossil Free Tompkins
186. Four Freedoms Forum
187. Frac Sand Sentinel
188. Frack Free Boulder
189. Frack Free Four Corners
190. Frack Free Frostburg (Maryland)
191. Frack Free Ohio
192. Franciscan Action Network
193. Franciscan Response to Fossil Fuels
194. FreshWater Accountability Project Ohio
195. Fresnans against Fracking
196. Friends of Merrymeeting Bay
197. Friends of the Bitterroot
198. Friends of the Earth US
199. Friends of the Pogonip
200. Fund for Wild Nature
201. GAIA
202. Gas Free Seneca
203. Gasp
204. Genesis Farm
205. Georgia WAND Education Fund
206. Geos Institute
207. GsProperties.com
208. Global Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives
209. Gloucester County Food and Water Watch
210. Good Jobs Nation
211. Good work institute
212. Grassroots Institute
213. Gray Panthers of Berkeley-East Bay
214. Great Egg Harbor Watershed Association
215. Great Old Broads for Wilderness
216. Greater Hells Canyon Council
217. Greater New York Labor Religion Coalition
218. Green America
219. Green Education and Legal Fund
220. Green For All
221. Green Map System
222. Green Newton
223. Green Party of California
224. Green Party of Nassau County
225. Green Retirement, Inc.
226. Green Sanctuary Committee, Community Church of NY, UU
227. Green Team at Evergreen UU Fellowship
228. Green-Buildings.com
229. Greenaction for Health and Environmental Justice
230. Greenbelt Climate Action Network
231. GreenFaith Bergen Circle
232. GreenLatinos
233. Greenpeace USA
234. GRID Alternatives
235. Gulf Coast Center for Law & Policy
236. Hackensack Riverkeeper
237. Hands Across the Sand/Land
238. Harford County Climate Action
239. Harlem Climate Caucus
240. Harris Management Services, LLC
241. Hawaii Institute For Human Rights
242. HealthyPlanet
243. Heirs To Our Oceans
244. Hesperian Health Guides
245. Hip Hop Caucus
246. Hold Our Ground
247. Hollywood NOW
248. Honeydew Advisors
249. Hope Glen Farm
250. Howard County Climate Action
251. Howling For Wolves
252. Hudson Valley Energy
253. Hunger Action Los Angeles
254. Idaho Rivers United
255. Idaho Sporting Congress, Inc.
256. Idle No More SF Bay
257. iEat Green, LLC
258. Indigenous Environmental Network
259. Indivisible
260. Indivisible CA-43
261. Indivisible Cranbury
262. Indivisible Lambertville/New Hope
263. Indivisible Pittsfield
264. Information Network for Responsible Mining
265. Inland Ocean Coalition
266. inNative
267. Inspiration of Sedona
268. Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy
269. Institute for Governance & Sustainable Development
270. Institute for Policy Studies
271. International Marine Mammal Project of Earth Island Institute
272. Iowa Citizens for Community Improvement
273. Iroquois Studies Association
274. Irvington Activists
275. Jackpine Savage Guide Service
276. Jesus People Against Pollution
277. Jewish Climate Action Network
278. John Muir Project of a Earth Island Institute
279. Jubilana
280. Keep Cornwall Safe
281. Kentucky Environmental Foundation
282. Kentucky Heartwood
283. Kentucky Interfaith Power & Light
284. Kentucky Student Environmental Coalition
285. Kitsap Environmental Coalition
286. Klamath Forest Alliance
287. La Union Hace La Fuerza
288. Labor Network for Sustainability
289. Labour, Health and Human Rights Development Centre
290. Lafayette Parish Flood Forum
291. League of Women Voters of the United States
292. Livelihoods Knowledge Exchange Network (LiKEN)
293. Long Beach 350
294. Long Island Progressive Coalition
295. Longmeadow (MA) Environmental Transition Group
296. Los Alamos Study Group
297. Manhattan Project for a Nuclear-Free World
298. Manifold Artworks LLC
299. Marcellus Outreach Butler
300. Maryland Environmental Health Network
301. Mattawoman Watershed Society
302. Mazaska Talks
303. Metro NY Catholic Climate Movement
304. Michigan Citizens for Water Conservation
305. Mid-Missouri Peaceworks
306. Milwaukee Riverkeeper
307. Mission Blue/Sylvia Earle Alliance
308. MLK Coalition of Greater Los Angeles
309. Mormon Environmental Stewardship Alliance (MESA)
310. Mothers Out Front
311. Nassau Hiking & Outdoor Club
312. National Council of Gray Panthers Networks
313. National Family Farm Coalition
314. Nature Coast Conservation, Inc.
315. NC WARN
316. Neighbor to Neighbor MASS Ed Fund
317. New Energy Economy
318. New Hampshire Audubon
319. New jersey Tenants Organization
320. New Paltz Climate Action Coalition
321. New York Climate Action Group
322. New York Communities for Change (NYCC)
323. New York Heartwoods
324. New York Progressive Action Network
325. New York’s Second District Democrats
326. Newark Science and Sustainability Inc.
327. NJ Skylands Sunrise Hub
328. NJ State Industrial Union Council
329. No Canton Gas Pipeline: Toward an Equitable Sustainable Future
330. No Fracked Gas Cayuga
331. No Fracked Gas in Mass
332. No Sharon Gas Pipeline | Clean Energy Now
333. No Walpole Gas Pipeline
334. North American Climate, Conservation and Environment(NACCE)
335. North Quabbin Energy
336. Northern Jaguar Project
337. Northern Michigan Environmental Action Council (NMEAC)
338. Northern NJ Chapter, National Organization for Women
339. North Jersey Pipeline Walkers
340. Northwest Atlantic Marine Alliance
341. Northwest Conservation District
342. Nuclear Energy Information Service (NEIS)
343. Nuclear Information and Resource Service
344. NW Bronx Indivisible
345. NY Buddhist Climate Action Network
346. NYC DSA Ecosocialist
347. NYC Friends of Clearwater
348. NYC Grassroots Alliance
349. NYC H2O
350. NYH2o
351. NYPIRG
352. Oakland Park Democratic Club
353. Ocean Conservation Research
354. Oil Change USA
355. Olympic Climate Action
356. On Behalf of Planet Earth
357. Oregon Physicians for Social Responsibility
358. Organic Consumers Association
359. Our Revolution New Mexico
360. Our Revolution Southern Oregon
361. Our Santa Fe River, Inc.
362. OVEC-Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition
363. Pan to Save the Planet.org
364. Partnership for Global Justice
365. Partnership for Policy Integrity
366. Pasco Activists Inc
367. Patriots From The Oil & Gas Shales
368. PAUSE – People of Albany United for Safe Energy
369. Pax Christi Florida
370. Peace Action New York State
371. Pelican Media
372. People Demanding Action
373. People Over Pipelines
374. People’s Action
375. People’s Health Movement – USA
376. Peoples Climate Movement – NY
377. Physicians for Social Responsibility
378. Physicians for Social Responsibility
379. Physicians for Social Responsibility
380. Physicians for Social Responsibility
381. Physicians for Social Responsibility
382. Physicians for Social Responsibility
383. Physicians for Social Responsibility
384. Pinelands Preservation Alliance
385. Piscataway Progressive Democratic Organization
386. Planting Justice
387. Plymouth Friends for Clean Water
388. Popular Resistance
389. Portland Gray Panthers
390. Potomac Riverkeeper Network
391. Power Shift Network
392. Presention Sisters-Aberdeen SD Justice Commission
393. Preserve Monroe
394. Preserve Wild Santee
395. Prince George’s County Peace & Justice Coalition
396. Progressive Action of Lower Manhattan
397. Progressive Democrats of America
398. Progressive Democrats of America Milwaukee
399. Project Coyote
400. Promoting Health and Sustainable Energy (PHASE)
401. PSR Iowa Chapter
402. Public Bank LA
403. Public Citizen
404. Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science
405. Quaker Earthcare Witness
Arizona Chapter. Colorado Working Group, Iowa Chapter, Maine Chapter, New York, Philadelphia
406. Rachel Carson Council
407. Rachel’s Network
408. Raging Grannies Eugene
409. Rainforest Action Network
410. RE Sources for Sustainable Communities
411. Reach Out America
412. Real Provision
413. Reconstructionist Rabbinical Association
414. Renewable Energy Long Island (reLI)
415. Resist the Pipeline
416. RESTORE: The North Woods
417. ReThink Energy Florida
418. Revolution LA
419. Richmond Interfaith Climate Justice League
420. River Guardian Foundation
421. Riverkeeper
422. ROAR (Religious Organizations Along the River)
423. Rochester People’s Climate Coalition
424. Rockland United: A Community for Social Justice
425. Rogue Riverkeeper
426. RootsAction.org
427. Rootskeeper
428. Roseland Against Compressor Station (RACS)
429. Rutland Area Climate Coalition
430. Sacramento Climate Coalition
431. Safe Energy Rights Group, Inc.
432. Safe Food Matters Inc.
433. SafeEnergyAnalyst.org
434. San Diego 350
435. San Francisco Baykeeper
436. San Juan Citizens Alliance
437. Sane Energy Project
438. Santa Barbara Standing Rock Coalition
439. Santa Cruz Climate Action Network
440. Save James Island
441. Save Nevada’s Water: Ban Fracking In Nevada
442. Save Our Shores
443. Save Our Sky Blue Waters
444. Save The Hills Alliance, Inc.
445. Save the Manatee
446. Save Wolves Now Network
447. Schmid & Company, Inc.
448. Seeding Sovereignty
449. Seneca Lake Guardian, a Waterkeeper Alliance Affiliate
450. Sequoia ForestKeeper
451. Seven Circles Foundation
452. ShaleshockCNY
453. Sharon Springs Against Hydrofracking
454. Sharon, CT Energy and Environment Commission
455. Shawnee Forest Sentinels
456. Shoreline Unitarian Universalist Society
457. Show Up LI
458. Signal Fire
459. Sisters of Charity of New York
460. Sisters of Mercy of the Americas’ Institute Justice Team
461. Sisters of St. Dominic of Blauvelt, New York
462. Sisters of St. Francis of Philadelphia
463. Slow Food North Shore
464. Slow Food USA
465. Small Ville Farms
466. SoCal 350 Climate Action
467. Social Justice Commission (Episcopal Diocese of Western Massachusetts)
468. Solar Solution
469. Solar Wind Works
470. Solarize Albany County
471. SolidarityINFOService
472. Solutionary Rail
473. South Asian Fund For Education, Scholarship and Training (SAFEST)
474. South Atlantic Fishermen’s Association
475. South Coast Neighbors United
476. South Florida Wildlands Association
477. Southern Illinoisans Against Fracturing Our Environment
478. Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance
479. Southwest Native Cultures
480. Spottswoode Winery, Inc.
481. Springfield (Massachusetts) Area Interfaith Climate Action Network
482. St. Stephen’s United Methodist Church
483. Stand.earth
484. STAR
485. Stephanie Low Artists Inc.
486. Stone Quarry House
487. Stop Fracking Long Beach
488. Stop NY Fracked Gas Pipeline
489. Sugar Shack Alliance
490. Sullivan Area Citizens for Responsible Energy Development (SACRED)
491. Summit Marches On
492. Sunflower Alliance
493. Sunnyside Village Cohousing
494. Sunrise Movement
495. Surfrider Foundation
496. Surfrider Foundation NYC
497. Sustainable Economies Law Center
498. Sustainable Energy & Economy Network
499. Sustainable Marin
500. Sustainable Sudbury
501. Sustainable Tompkins
502. Sustainable Upton
503. Sustaining Way
504. SustainUS
505. Symmetric Energy
506. Syracuse Cultural Workers
507. Syracuse Peace Council
508. Take Action Connecticut
509. TALK Environment Committee, Glastonbury
510. Texas Campaign for the Environment
511. Texas Drought Project
512. Texas Physicians for Social Responsibility
513. The Canary Coalition
514. The Climate Mobilization Hoboken Chapter
515. The Climate Mobilization Santa Barbara Chapter
516. The Ecology Party of Florida
517. The Global Cooling Project
518. The Greater Prince William Climate Action Network
519. The Lands Council
520. The Leap
521. The Mothers Project, Inc
522. The Northeast Organic Farming Association of New York (NOFA-NY)
523. The Reconstructionist Synagogue of the North Shore
524. The River Project
525. The Shalom Center
526. The Wei LLC
527. The Whale Guite Project
528. The Whaleman Foundation
529. Three Parks Independent Democrats
530. Tikkun & the Network of Spiritual Progressives
531. Time Laboratory
532. Tinker Tree Play/Care
533. Toronto Non-GMO Coalition
534. Toxics Action Center
535. Toxics Information Project (TIP)
536. Transition Express, Inc
537. Transition Sebastopol Energy Group
538. Transition US
539. Traprock Center for Peace and Justice
540. Trevor Day School Environmental Club
541. Tri-County Sustainability Alliance
542. Turner Endangered Species Fund
543. Turtle Island Restoration Network
544. Two Mooks and a Mic
545. Unitarian Universalist FaithAction New Jersey
546. Unitarian Universalist Mass Action
547. Unitarian Universalist Ministry For Earth
548. Unitarian Universalist Pennsylvania Legislative Advocacy Network (UUPLAN)
549. Unitarian Universalist Service Committee
550. United Church of Christ Environmental Justice Ministry
551. United for Action
552. Universal Income Project
553. Up Homes
554. Up Top Acres
555. Uplift
556. Upper West Side Recycling
557. Urban Climate Nexus
558. Urban Tilth
559. US Labor Against the War
560. Utah Moms for Clean Air
561. Utah Physicians for a Healthy Environment
562. UU Congregation of Binghamton, Green Sanctuary
563. Valley Watch, Inc
564. Vashon Climate Action Group
565. Vote-Climate
566. Voters of Watchunghills
567. Wall of Women Colorado
568. Wasatch Clean Air Coalition
569. Washington Physicians for Social Responsibility
570. WATCH
571. Water Protectors of Milwaukee
572. Waterkeeper Alliance
573. WATERSPIRIT
574. WE ACT
575. We of Action New York (WofA-NY)
576. Weather Medic Inc
577. Wellstone Democratic Renewal Club
578. WESPAC Foundation, Inc
579. West 80s Neighborhood Association
580. West Atlanta Watershed Alliance
581. West Berkeley Alliance for Clean Air and Safe Jobs
582. West Roxbury Saves Energy
583. Western NY Drilling Defense
584. Western Watersheds Project
585. White Rabbit Grove RDNA
586. Wild Nature Institute
587. WildEarth Guardians
588. WildWest Institute
589. Williamsburg Climate Action Network
590. Winyah Rivers Foundation, Inc.
591. Wisconsin Network for Peace, Justice & Sustainability
592. Women’s Earth and Climate Action Network (WECAN)
593. Women’s International League of Peace and Freedom US Section
594. Xun Biosphere Project
595. Zero Waste USA
596. 198 methods
597. 2017 New Jersey Coalition for Climate Justice
598. 350 Bay Area
599. 350 Brooklyn
600. 350 Cape Cod
601. 350 Chicago
602. 350 Colorado
603. 350 Connecticut
604. 350 Eastside (Seattle)
605. 350 Eugene
606. 350 Everett
607. 350 Fairfax
608. 350 Greenbelt/Greenbelt Climate Action Network
609. 350 Kishwaukee (IL)
610. 350 Loudoun
611. 350 Mass for a Better Future
612. 350 Mass Metro North
613. 350 Milwaukee
614. 350 Montgomery County, MD
615. 350 Petaluma
616. 350 Plattsburgh
617. 350 Sacramento
618. 350 Seattle
619. 350 Silicon Valley
620. 350 Tacoma
621. 350 Triangle
622. 350 Ventura County Climate Hub
623. 350 Wichita (Kansas)
624. 350.org
625. 350NYC
626. 350PDX