Industrial Environmental Compliance – Current Requirements and Recent Changes Two Session Offerings Available: April 25th & May 16th
8:00am – 9:00am
Cambium Inc. – 52 Hunter St. East, Peterborough, ON
Admission: Free
Overview:
TRA. ECA. NPRI. Is your operation subject to current environmental regulations? Join us as our Cambium staff provides an overview of today’s most common environmental regulations including:
Ontario Regulation 419 – Air and Noise Environmental Compliance Approvals (ECA)
National Pollutant Release Inventory (NPRI)
Our team will provide you with a summary of these regulations, detailing the specific requirements of each, and will tell you how to go about achieving compliance.
Consider attending if your company:
Operates a manufacturing facility and has more than 10 full time employees; OR
Discharges anything to the natural environment; AND/OR
Uses a substance considered by the government to be of concern or toxic.
There is help for moderate income, renter households to realize the dream of owning their own home. The City of Peterborough is offering home ownership assistance loans to eligible applicants in the City and County of Peterborough.
The loan will be repayable if the house is sold within twenty (20) years. Any loans, which are repaid, will go into a revolving fund to help other households purchase a home in the future.
Since 2008, the Canada Ontario Home Ownership program has been successful in assisting 55 renters achieve their dream of owning a home in this area.
The 2013 program will assist approximately 15 households to purchase a new or resale home in the City and County of Peterborough priced at $240,000 or below.
The Agreement of Purchase and Sale must be executed after April 2, 2013 and have a minimum of 30 days notice of the closing date.
Homebuyers who are 18 years of age and older, earning a gross annual household income of $69,800 or less, currently renting, do not currently own a home and are pre-approved for a mortgage may be eligible.
Application packages are now available from the Housing Division at City Hall.
Susan Bacque, Manager, Housing Division with the City of Peterborough,
is excited about this program saying, “This is the third time we have been able to offer assistance for the purchase of an affordable home.”
The range of Housing programs available to City and County residents is broad, addressing the entire housing continuum “from people who are homeless, to low income renter households, to those renters who, with a little assistance, can become successful home owners”.
The City and County support this program as a way to assist moderate -income renter households who are able to carry a mortgage but have not been able to save a full down payment.
For further information please contact Susan Bacque, Manager, Housing Division City of Peterborough 500 George Street North Peterborough ON K9H 3R9 705-742-7777 ext 1492Â Toll-free 1-855-738-3755 Ext 1492
High winds are forecast to continue throughout this week. In order to reduce the amount of recyclable items blowing around City streets, residents are asked to please wait till the morning of your collection to place blue boxes at the curb.
Tips to avoid blowing recyclables include:
Do not to over-fill blue boxes
Place paper and flattened cardboard sideways in your “Fiber and Plastic Film” box, rather than piling upwards.
Place lighter materials in a secure spot (e.g. put clear plastic trays underneath heavier steel and glass containers).
Residents are encouraged to write their address on their blue boxes, so they can be identified and returned if they should blow away from your property. Lost blue boxes will not be replaced for free.
For more details, please call the City of Peterborough Waste Management Division at 705-742-7777, extension 1657.
This information is also available on the City of Peterborough website www.peterborough.ca
With toilets accounting for up to 30 % of domestic in-house water, replacing your current toilet with a low -flow toilet is a sustainable approach to saving both water and money.
The City of Peterborough offers a $50.00 per toilet rebate on the purchase and installation of “WaterSense certified” low – flow toilets as part of an effort to conserve water. Over 900 residential toilets were replaced through the rebate program in 2012.
The Low -flow Toilet Replacement Rebate Program is funded to a maximum of $40,000 for 2013. These rebates will be available on a first come, first served basis or until the funding has been exhausted.
To qualify for a rebate, you must be replacing a residential toilet. The rebate program is open to all residential units, including apartments, condominiums, townhouses, social housing, and single family houses. The rebate, however, does not apply to toilets being installed as part of additions or new construction. Industrial, commercial and other non-residential properties are not eligible at this time.
The Low – flow Toilet Replacement Rebate Program application forms are available on the City’s website or may be picked up at the Recreation Division at City Hall.
For more information on the rebate program contact the City of Peterborough
Sustainability Office at 705-742-7777 ext. 1441 or view our web site at
The Masters in Sustainability Studies Graduate Program at Trent University is pleased to present and welcome everyone to their Community Colloquium series of special presentations beginning this coming Wednesday, February 27th and continuing on Wednesdays through to Wednesday, March 27th.
Over the next five weeks, Trent University – both the main Symons campus as well as the downtown Traill Campus will host some renowned and important guests exploring various sustainability topics.
Robert Paehlke is a political scientist and Professor Emeritus of Environmental and Resource Studies at Trent University. He is a founding editor (1971) of the Canadian journal/magazine Alternatives: Canadian Environmental Ideas & Action. He is the author of: Some like It Cold: the Politics of Climate Change in Canada (2008); Democracy’s Dilemma: Environment, Social Equity and the Global Economy (MIT Press, 2004), a book on sustainability in a global age; and Environmentalism and the Future of Progressive Politics (Yale UP, 1991). He also edited Conservation and Environmentalism: an Encyclopedia (1995) and Managing Leviathan: Environmental Politics and the Administrative State (1990 and 2005). He has published more than a hundred articles and chapters on environmental policy, the history of environmentalism, sustainability and climate change.
Talk description: Sustainability, Society and Economy: Six Key Concepts: Efficiency, Economic Growth, Entrepreneurship, Social Class, Citizenship and Democracy”
Stephen Hill is an Associate Professor of Environmental & Resource Studies at Trent University with an education and professional background spanning the fields of engineering, renewable energy, environmental policy and corporate environmental management. His research is sponsored by Carbon Management Canada and SSHRC. He was the 2011 winner of the Symons Award for Excellence in Teaching, and the 2011 CMHC Award for Excellence in Education.
Talk description: Feeling the Wind: Contested Notions of Wind Power, People, Place and Climate
Gilles Paquet is currently Professor Emeritus at the School of Management and Senior Research Fellow at the Centre on Governance of the University of Ottawa. He is also associated to the consulting firm INVENIRE.
For some 18 years, he taught economics at Carleton University where he also was Dean of the Faculty of Graduate Studies and Research in the 1970s. From 1981 to 1988, he was Dean of the Faculty of Administration at the University of Ottawa, and in 1997, he became the Founding Director of the Centre on Governance at the University of Ottawa.
Professor Paquet has authored or edited over 50 books and written over 400 reports, scientific papers or chapters in books on issues pertaining to the economic history of Canada, urban and regional studies, industrial organization, public management, knowledge management, and governance; he has authored an equally large number of papers in a variety of magazines and newspapers .
In 1982, Gilles Paquet was awarded the Jacques-Rousseau medal in recognition of important contributions to research of a multidisciplinary nature, and in 1989 the Esdras-Minville medal for the corpus of his work in social sciences. He was made a Member of the Royal Society of Arts in 1989, and a member of the Order of Canada in 1992.
Gilles Paquet has been active as a journalist on the radio and television network of Radio-Canada since the 1970s, as an editorial writer for some 5 years in the print media in the 1990s, and as a regular commentator on national affairs on TV Ontario from 1995 to 2006. He has also been the Editor in Chief of www.optimumonline.ca — a journal of public sector management and governance that reaches over 10,000 subscribers since 1994.
Talk description: The Governance of Sustainability as a Wicked Problem
Dr David B. Brooks, who was educated in geology and economics, spent much of his professional career with the International Development Research Centre. He now advises several Canadian Non-Governmental Organizations, including the International Institute for Sustainable Development, and the POLIS Project on Ecological Governance (University of Victoria). His main research interests are split between water soft paths (an approach to sustainable governance of fresh water) and water demand management in the Middle East, with particular emphasis on Israel and Palestine. Among his books are Zero Energy Growth for Canada (McClelland & Stewart, 1981); Watershed: The Role of Fresh Water in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict (IDRC Books, 1994 – co-author); and Making the Most of the Water We Have: The Soft Path Approach to Water Management (Earthscan, 2009, co-editor). In 2012, Dr Brooks received an honorary doctorate of environmental studies from the University of Waterloo.
Talk description: Trans-boundary water agreements are usually conceived as allocation agreements. In other words, water is treated as if it were a pie to be divided among the riparian states. Though sometimes useful to avoid conflict in the short term, this approach is flawed as a way to ensure efficient, equitable, and sustainable management of water over the long term. This presentation proposes adoption of a joint management structure that allows for ongoing conflict resolution concerning water demands and does so in a way that effectively de-nationalizes and de-securitizes water uses. Though specifically applied to water shared by Israelis and Palestinians, the objectives, principles and institutional structure are relevant to any place in the world where trans-boundary water divides rather than unites two or more peoples.
Elizabeth (Lisa) Nisbet is an Assistant Professor of Psychology at Trent University in Peterborough and an Adjunct Professor of Psychology at Carleton University in Ottawa. Her research encompasses personality, social, health, and environmental psychology, exploring individual differences in ‘nature relatedness’ and the links between human-nature relationships, happiness, health, and sustainable behaviour. Her work is supported by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) and appears in Environment and Behaviour, Canadian Psychology, the Journal of Happiness Studies, and Psychological Science. Dr. Nisbet teaches courses on health psychology, emotion and motivation, personality, and the psychology of environmental behaviour. She is an avid (and happy) nature enthusiast. For more information, visit http://www.naturerelatedness.ca
Talk description: Sustainability is in our Nature: Linking Individual Differences in Nature Relatedness to Well-being and Environmental Behaviour
Bob Paehlke: Wed, Feb 27th, 4 pm – 7 pm: Traill College, Bagnani Hall, Room 101
Stephen Hill: Wed, March 6th, 4 pm – 6 pm: Blackburn Hall, Room 126
David Brooks: Wed, March 20th, 2 pm – 5 pm: Blackburn Hall, Room 126
Lisa Nisbet: Wed, March 27th, 4 pm – 7 pm: Traill College, Bagnani Hall, Room 101
Quick Facts:
The Community colloquiums are a required course for all MA Sustainability Studies students, bringing together students, community members, faculty, visiting scholars and experts for an intensive exploration of relevant historical, theoretical and practical issues. Each talk examines how we, as a global human community, can foster social equity, stimulate our economy and still limit our impact on the natural environment.
The M.A. in Sustainability Studies is an interdisciplinary research and reflective practice training program designed to enable students to explore the sustainability of human societies and the natural environment on which they depend. The program aims to provide students with education and training that will prepare them to be intellectual and organizational leaders within academia, government, industry, and the non-profit sector. The program attracts students from around the world and this coming September will see the fourth cohort begin the two year full-time program.
The research area of MA students is vast and covers everything from:
sustainability of aid work in post-earthquake Haiti
social and cultural sustainability in Northern and Indigenous communities
urban food security and the potentials of vertical farming and
how small rurally situated cities in Ontario can learn from successful and sustainable economic initiatives in developing countries and Scandinavian.
For further information on any of these events or the Masters in Sustainability Studies program, please visit www.trentu.ca/sustainabilityma or contact Laurie Collette at 705-748-1011 ext. 7721 or .