Showing posts with label Meaghan Cursons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Meaghan Cursons. Show all posts

Sunday, May 23, 2010


James and Angeline Street of Brambles Market talk to hanspetermeyer about food and sustainability in the Comox Valley.

This is part of the ongoing series of conversations about sustainability in the Comox Valley that was sparked in the Fall of 2009 by David Stapley, Meg Cursons, and hans peter meyer (and seeded with funding by hblanarc.com) as a parallel to the Comox Valley Sustainability Strategy. For more information visit CV2050.com
Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Saturday, November 7, 2009

Mark Holland responds to #3x2x8

In this, the 2nd of hanspetemeyer's conversations with sustainability practioner Mark Holland, Mark responds to the 3 questions that are at the heart of the #3x2x8 project.




Mark Holland is a principal with the HBLanarc sustainability planning firm (Vancouver/Nanaimo). Mark and his company are currently working with local governments, community organizations, and residents on the Comox Valley Sustainability Strategy. He talks to hanspetermeyer about sustainability planning and community strategies for meeting the future. In this interview Mark answers the #3x2x8 series of questions that are part of the CV2050 "all about sustainability and the Comox Valley" project initiated by hanspetermeyer, David Stapley, and Meaghan Cursons.




(cc) hanspetermeyer.ca / 2009




Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Sunday, November 1, 2009

Meaghan Cursons talks to hanspetermeyer about sustainability in the Comox Valley spetermeyer


This is one in a series of conversations about sustainability in the Comox Valley posted as part of the #3x2x8 project. For more on that project, go to CV2050/#3x2x8

We hope this inpsires you to do your own #3x2x8 video, audio, or text interviews. We welcome your posts. Check out our Facebook page, post your interviews, make comments. Please tag everything #3x2x8 or #CV2050 so others can follow the many voices on what a sustainable Comox Valley will look like!

Saturday, October 17, 2009

What exactly is this thing, #CV2050?

It all started with a little chat in the garden...
Right now #CV2050 is the brainchild of three people – David Stapley, Meaghan Cursons, and Hans Peter Meyer. We sat down one evening in the summer of 2009 to mull over things like "sustainability,"
Comox Valley, Fall 2008
the "Comox Valley" (the place we've been calling home for quite a few years).

David is newly involved with the 2009 Comox Valley Sustainability Strategy on a professional basis. Meaghan and Hans are long-time participants and observers of "things sustainability" in the Comox Valley and elsewhere. Meaghan's made a huge impact in this region through her long-time involvement in IslandMusicFest, among many, many other things. Hans – that's me – I used to work with the Communities Institute of BC, and I've been writing about "sustainability" stuff since the mid-90s. David has been doing "community development" work with youth, non-profit/NGOs, and local government for about 15 years in the region. We've got some history, lots of personal investment in our communities, and lots of passion about this place.

Needless to say, our little chat quickly grew past the CVSS process to wondering: OK, so we get a sustainability strategy. Then what?

Our dream... an animated conversation that leads to action!
Did I say we're a pretty passionate trio? Did I already mention that we love the Comox Valley?

We know that we're not alone here. So, although we like (very, very much) that local government is sponsoring the CVSS, we also think that this is not enough. We think that the "sustainability conversation" needs to get way past what's happening through CVSS. We're not armchair sustainabilitistas. We want to see "stuff happen" in real-time/real-space, not just policy/planning space.

Our dream with CV2050 is that it picks up and stimulates the local sustainability conversation. This needs to be more than a policy-related, local government strategic planning convo. Whatever "sustainability" means to anyone of us here in the Comox Valley, it does mean change. It does mean action. At many levels. Talking about it is a step towards making positive change happen more quickly.

So here's the idea: leverage available resources for max impact... 

We're just 3 independent citizens. We'll use whatever resources we've got to stimulate the convo. Thanks to the CVSS process, there's a little bit of cash to pay for sparking the first efforts: the 3x2x8 project (I'll be posting on that soon...). The bulk of our resources right now, however, are our volunteer time and or passion about this place.

What we can do with our resources is catch and support the buzz about the sustainability convo here in the Comox Valley. We hope that others – people like you, and others who care about life in the Comox Valley – will find ways to pick it up, make it real in your real-time convos with family, friends, co-workers, etc. Our focus is on using "social media" – videos on YouTube and VIMEO, Facebook, Twitter posts, and this blog, for example. We know this has its limits. Some will say that it's only young people who use this stuff. Well, I'm not "young" any more. My mother's using some of these tools. And more and more of us over 50 and over 70 are learning how to do the "social media thing."

What we do know is that using social media is a very efficient way for new ideas and new conversations to circulate. They are also very effective ways for a lot of people to jump into and out of the convo. We encourage you to follow our postings. Comment on them. Use them as a template.

Want to play?
Pick up a camera or a recorder or keyboard. Create your own posts (and please, please, please tag everything #CV2050 – this helps keep track of the convo on the internet).

One of the projects we don't have time for right now is an annotated Google Map of the Comox Valley. If I have time I'll create a "CV2050" map and post a link here. I'm hoping someone (or a bunch of someones) does the Google Maps thing and starts to annotate the "special places" of this landscape. [Note: I could't wait folks. The CV2050 Google map, ready for annotating is here!]

So that's it. CV2050. 3 passionate citizens of the Comox Valley, wanting to stimulate and deepen the conversation about sustainability in our community and region.

Want to play?

hpm





Reblog this post [with Zemanta]