Monday, April 30, 2007

The Common Path

On Saturday my wife and I hiked 17 miles on the Appalachian Trail, just South of Shenandoah National Park in Virginia. After a few consecutive weeks of running and mountain biking races, it was refreshing to spend a little time outdoors in a different spirit. Ideal 65-degree weather meant that others had hiking in mind, so we passed about a dozen people on the trail. What I appreciate about trail culture is that it blurs social lines. Even though the 12 people we passed didn't look like the folks that we hang out with on a Friday night, everyone of them stopped to share a friendly word. To be rude or indifferent, like we all are everyday on city streets, is seen as strange on the trail. We chatted with an elderly couple, two African American women, and a businessman, who took a week off to backpack an 80-mile stretch. The conversations were comfortable and preconceived notions seemed nonexistent.

It's probably the vastness and vulnerability, but something about being in the woods allows us to drop our competitive urges and inhibitions and just see each other as equals. It's a simple, unspoken phenomenon, but it certainly can restore faith in humanity.

-Jedd Ferris

Thursday, April 5, 2007

Finally, A Good Air Day

This past Monday, April 2, was probably the best day for air quality since the passage of the 1970 Clean Air Act. Two Supreme Court decisions handed down on Monday will have long-term, far-reaching effects on the air we breathe, and a third decision in a small mountain town reaffirmed that people working together are still more powerful than wealthy corporate polluters.

First, the Supreme Court ruled that greenhouse gas emissions—like carbon dioxide from automobiles and power plants—can and should be regulated. For the past seven years, the Bush Administration has tried to avoid controlling greenhouse gas emissions. The Supreme Court smackdown finally acknowledges the U.S. government’s responsibility to regulate greenhouse gas emissions. The decision ultimately will change the way cars are built, coal-fired power plants are operated, and energy is produced in the United States.

Hours later, the Supreme Court ruled on a South-specific case brought by Southern Environmental Law Center against Charlotte-based Duke Energy. The unanimous Supreme Court decision prevents Duke Energy from continuing to operate old coal-fired power plants without installing modern pollution controls. Duke Energy’s coal-burning plants—many of which were built 40 or more years ago, and each of which emits up to 10 times more pollution than a new plant—are the nation’s single largest source of air pollution. With our heavy reliance on coal-burning plants, the Southeast is paying a particularly heavy price in terms of health and environmental problems. More appeals and court battles will follow, but this precedent-setting Supreme Court decision has placed the South—and the entire nation—on a path to cleaner air.

A third clean air decision took place on Monday—not in the hallowed halls of the Supreme Court, but in the small mountain town of Woodfin, N.C. Another coal-burning energy giant, Progress Energy, had bullied a proposal to build an oil-burning power plant past the county board of commissioners, and all it needed was the rubber stamp of the tiny outskirts town of Woodfin. Courageously, the little town stood up to the big corporation and rejected the power plant. Citizens from all political and socioeconomic backgrounds came forward to oppose the plant, fiercely defending the health of their community. Even though the county commissioners had already acquiesced to Progress Energy’s big-money back-door deal, the seven-member Woodfin board listened to the concerns of the people and unanimously voted against the power plant. It was a rare and inspiring demonstration that democracy still works, and that a small Southern mountain town can make a big difference.

—Will Harlan

Wednesday, April 4, 2007

Runners High

Last weekend was a big one for the Southeastern running scene. On Saturday I joined 25,000 people at the Ukrop's Monument Avenue 10K, a big party of a race that ran along the tree-lined streets of Richmond's Monument Avenue. Nothing gets you through 6.2 miles like the eye candy of the Mardi Gras style rager that took place on the sidelines. Who knew a massive foot race could inspire someone to down a fish bowl-size margarita at 9 in the morning? If you're looking to try a 10K, mark this race on your calendar for next year. It's perfect for newbies. The course is fast and flat, the spring weather is bound to be crisp and clear, and the live bands and cheering supporters (some of them a little tipsy) will keep you moving.
But Richmond wasn't the only city in the region that was running. Over in Charlottesville another 2,000 people tackled the town's venerable 10-Miler. Down in Charleston, S.C., 40,000 runners took a coastal cruise at the Cooper River Bridge Run. Then on Sunday up in D.C. another 18,000 ran the Cherry Blossom 10-Miler. And in Knoxville, Tenn., another 2,000 ran the town's marathon and half-marathon. Who says the South isn't active?

-J.F.