My writings - and those of others.

A New Start for our City

The City of Toronto where I live has spent the last five years addressing climate change:

  • In 2017 the City Council unanimously approved a long term climate strategy to reduce local greenhouse gas emissions and improve health - also considering economic and social well being.

  • Two years later in 2019, the council declared a climate emergency. Emissions were 38% lower that year than they were in 1990.

    On December 15, 2021, the Council Approved the TransformTO Net Zero Strategy. It includes the following goals for 2030:

    • Homes & Buildings

      • All new homes and buildings will be designed and built to be near zero greenhouse gas emissions

      • Greenhouse gas emissions from existing buildings will be cut in half, from 2008 levels

      Energy

      • 50 per cent of community-wide energy comes from renewable or low-carbon sources

      • 25 per cent of commercial and industrial floor area is connected to low carbon thermal energy sources

      Transportation

      • 30 per cent of registered vehicles in Toronto are electric

      • 75 per cent of school/work trips under 5km are walked, biked or by transit

       Waste

      • 70 per cent residential waste diversion from the City of Toronto’s waste management system

      • Identify pathways to more sustainable consumption in City of Toronto operations and in Toronto’s economy

      City of Toronto Corporate Goals

      • City of Toronto corporate greenhouse gas emissions are reduced by 65 per cent over 2008 base year

      • All City Agency, Corporation and Division-owned new developments are designed and constructed to applicable Toronto Green

      • Standard Version 4 standard achieving zero carbon emissions, beginning in 2022

      • Greenhouse gas emissions from City-owned buildings are reduced by 60 per cent from 2008 levels; by 2040, City-owned buildings reach net zero greenhouse gas emissions

      • All City-owned facilities have achieved zero waste

      • Generate and utilize 1.5 Million Gigajoules of energy from biogas

      • Approximately 107,700 tonnes CO2e per year are reduced through Organics Processing with Renewable Energy and Landfill Gas Utilization

      • 50 per cent of the City-owned fleet is transitioned to zero-emissions vehicles

      • 50 per cent of the TTC bus fleet is zero-emissions

      • Greenhouse gas emissions from food the City of Toronto procures are reduced by 25 per cent

  • It includes a directive to everyone.

The suggestions in this short video may not apply to everyone directly - renters for example - but even here, tenants associations can play a role. Most of the suggestions are actionable by families and bring participation down to the local level. Cities are where we live and work. They are also the places where we have the most impact on local policies. I commend all local councillors - and especially two who send regular newsletters I have signed up to receive. I’ve met in person with both on occasion. In the amount of noise in the news, it’s good to go back to local sources and see that citizens can have an impact.

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Learning, Reflection Norah Bolton Learning, Reflection Norah Bolton

4,000 Weeks

I’ve just finished a book with that title by Oliver Burkeman - the sub-title is Time Management for Mortals. Four Thousand weeks describes the amount of time someone has if he/she lives to be 80. My own life is now 4,260 weeks. That seems like quite a lot until it is compared to a universe of 13.8 billion x 52. As a cosmic comparison, it puts me in my place.

At the beginning of 2021 I promised myself that I would post something twice a week during the year. I fell off just before Christmas with some other activities taking precedence - and then felt guilty. Why? It’s not as though this site has many readers. It’s a perfect example of how we set goals for ourselves and then beat ourselves up for what we don’t do in comparison with what we do accomplish.

I received a Christmas gift that is an excellent choice for someone in in the 4,000 week plus category. It invites one to reflect on one’s own life by writing an answer to a question that is sent once a week. At the end of the year, it is compiled in a book. My father wrote a good family history exploring the ancestors so that let me off the hook. but this is a good assignment.

Burkeman has many ideas and the book is worth a read for anyone like me who has read too many books on time management. Perhaps the most important one is that we are time - time is spent not managed - especially in terms of working too hard toward some future that is unknowable. Another idea I liked - perhaps a better one for a retiree than someone actively working to earn a living - is to abandon a “to-do” list - which I have kept religiously using the Bullet Journal format - for a “done” list. It’s more honest and allows one to see whether time is being spent on things that really matter.

I’ll end 2021 - pandemic ridden as it is with cancelled travel plans - with an intention to write the blog once a week - and the memoir above for the other weekly assignment. In both cases the real gift is being here on earth to do them.

Happy New Year

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Reflection, Tools Norah Bolton Reflection, Tools Norah Bolton

Resilience in Pandemics

Mainstream press is full of ideas to keep us sane when we add a holiday to the stress of living in a pandemic for the better part of two years. Some of the ideas are mainstream, but one is quirky enough that you might enjoy giving it a try.

  • Take a set period every day to do things that you personally enjoy. You can set your own time limit - even 15 minutes of painting or playing the piano will help.

  • Chat with supportive people - in person if possible, but online if that is the only option. Strengthen those bonds and avoid people who weaken them.

  • Find moments for optimism - even among those that contrast with them.

  • In contrast, give yourself permission to feel stressed when it happens and is real. You don’t have to feel guilty about your feelings. The good thing is that feelings come and go.

  • One place near the door for everything you need when going out is a big help. Mask, umbrella, keys, purse, credit cards - seeing the items will remind you to take just what you need and make the load lighter.

  • Organize your fridge. Wasted food makes us feel guilty as well as costing us money. A Lazy Susan is a good device. So are glass containers that stack so you can see what is inside them. A whiteboard can remind you of what is left over. A generic shopping list pinned to the door means you can circle items for the next trip.

  • Do a short workout - seven minutes will refresh you. Call it an exercise snack.

  • Maybe you do all those things already. But here is something different. Watch Jellyfish:

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Environment, Learning Norah Bolton Environment, Learning Norah Bolton

Meanings

We used to say “climate change” - a fairly unemotional term that didn’t suggest much beyond differences in weather in different locations. Many of us were even hard pressed to know the difference between weather and climate,- including a certain defeated president - but then the media shifted to “global warming”. What we are hearing more often lately are words like “emergency” and “catastrophe” - and rightly so. We need to feel threatened if we intend to do something about it.

Remember “greenhouse effect”? We don’t hear that one any more. Linguists like Todd Ehresmann at Babbel, which checks word usage, points out that “Global Heating” would get our attention as an accurate description now. Activists have helped increase the intensity of the language. That’s helpful because scientists are often cautious knowing the media will exaggerate their claims to sell products through fear - not to arouse the best in us. It’s good that activists lobby for the proper degree of accuracy - and that media watchers like Babbel ensure that we take responsibility for the changes that are happening.

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