Tackling Climate Change With Joy, Collaboration, and Panache
The founders of the award-winning sustainability game called Vermontivate! have just announced their next ambitious project: launching the most successful, big-ticket crowd-funding campaign in Vermont’s history.
Created last year by energy consultant Nick Lange and climate activist Kathryn Blume, Vermontivate! was their answer to the question, “How do we make responding to the climate crisis fun and collaborative?” In response, Lange and Blume ended up creating a hybrid real-world/on-line game in which players took on a wide range of sustainability-related challenges, earning points on behalf on their town. The winning town – which turned out to be Montpelier – won a community ice cream party from Ben & Jerry’s.
“Last year was a tiny test round,” says Lange, “with 13 towns and a couple hundred players. This year, we’ve built partnerships with dozens of organizations, businesses, and agencies across the state. We’re ramping up to make a game this spring which completely permeates the culture of Vermont. And the only way we can do that is with a great, big budget!”
“This creative, fun effort to inspire and motivate more people to be part of the energy and climate challenges we face is really inspiring,” says Johanna Miller, coordinator of the Vermont Energy and Climate Action Network. “It’s why we presented Vermontivate! with a Community Energy Project award.” Miller adds, “If a dedicated duo volunteering their time could launch this effort with no resources, I can’t wait to see what they do with some real financial power behind them.”
“We set the bar high on this,” says Blume, “because the problem of climate change is so big. We’re not making a cute little game that a few people can play for laughs. We’re trying to build a huge, powerful game, big enough to actually have an impact on something as gigantic and overwhelming as the global climate crisis.”
The goal of the fundraising campaign – located at www.crowdfunding.vermontivate.
This year’s round of Vemontivate! runs May 13-June 21. Interested potential players can find out more at www.vermontivate.com, and at their Earth Day Celebration and Launch Party on April 20, 1-4pm, at the Train Station at Main Street Landing in Burlington. Partner groups in Montpelier, Middlebury, Poultney, and Brattleboro will also have information available at their Earth Day celebrations.
“When most people talk about the perils of climate change, the words “˜depressing’ and “˜impossible’ tend to come to mind,” says Blume. “We want to replace that with “˜fun’ and “˜infinite possibility.’ A game – funded, supported, and played by an entire state – seems like a great way to start!”
#BTV #VT – Please join us at the 2013 Spring Business Fair – Thursday, April 18, from 10am to 2pm at Burlington ‘s City Hall.
The event connects people interested in starting or expanding their business with a variety of federal, state and local organizations and businesses that can help.
The event will include:
This event is FREE!
From today’s New York Times…
Facebook is the most popular social network in America roughly two-thirds of adults in the country use it on a regular basis.
But that doesn’t mean they don’t get sick of it.
A new study released on Tuesday by the Pew Research Center”˜s Internet and American Life Project found that 61 percent of current Facebook users admitted that they had voluntarily taken breaks from the site, for as many as several weeks at a time.
The main reason for their social media sabbaticals?
Not having enough time to dedicate to pruning their profiles, an overall decrease in their interest in the site as well as the general sentiment that Facebook was a major waste of time. About 4 percent cited privacy and security concerns as contributing to their departure. Although those users eventually resumed their regular activity, another 20 percent of Facebook users admitted to deleting their accounts.
Of course, even as some Facebook users pull back on their daily consumption of the service, the vast majority 92 percent of all social network users still maintain a profile on the site. But while more than than half said that the site was just as important to them as it was a year ago, only 12 percent said the site’s significance increased over the last year indicating the makings of a much larger social media burnout across the site.
The study teases out other interesting insights, including the finding that young users are spending less time overall on the site…
Lee Rainie, the director of the Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project, which conducted the survey, described the results as a kind of “social reckoning.”
“These data show that people are trying to make new calibrations in their life to accommodate new social tools,” said Mr. Rainie, in an e-mail. Facebook users are beginning to ask themselves, “ “˜What are my friends doing and thinking and how much does that matter to me?,’ “ he said. “They are adding up the pluses and minuses on a kind of networking balance sheet and they are trying to figure out how much they get out of connectivity vs. how much they put into it.”
Ghost of Midnight is an online journal about fostering community within neighborhoods, with a special focus on Front Porch Forum (FPF). My wife, Valerie, and I founded FPF in 2006... read more