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Friday, April 5, 2019 - 11:30am
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Hooray! Summer is Just Around the Corner

Join us for a summer of fun, friends, and all the great things Girls on the Run has to offer!

Check Out Our Camp Locations

Rowland Hall Camp 1

Girls Have Heart • June 17-21

 

Rowland Hall Camp 2

Girls Have Power • July 15-19

Eastmont Middle School Camp 1

Girls Have Heart • June 17-20 (no camp Fridays)

 

Eastmont Middle School Camp 2

Girls have Power • June 24-27 (no camp Fridays)

 

South Jordan Health Center Camp

Girls have Power • July 29-Aug 2

 

Attendees receive a camp bracelet, camp t-shirt, healthy snacks and drinks PLUS four/five half days of interactive lessons and activities!

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Sign up here for Rowland Hall camps

Our two camps at Rowland Hall are in conjunction with Rowland Hall's SummerWorks. To sign up for these camps, visit Rowland Hall's summer camp website.

Sign up here for Eastmont &
South Jordan Health Center camps

Our two camps at Eastmont Middle School are in conjunction with Canyons School District's Community Ed summer camps. To sign up for these camps as well as our camp at South Jordan Health Center, go to our website under Camp GOTR.

If you have questions regarding any of our summer camps, please contact our Program Director, Ivy Denihan at ivy@girlsontherunutah.org.

 

Join Us for Our 5K Celebration! 

Join us at our annual Girls on the Run 5K Celebration at Sugar House Park! Our girls have been training all season for the 5K and would love you to be part of their special day. From face painting and happy hair to dancing and more, come run, walk, skip or jump with our girls as they cross the finish line

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Want to Coach this Summer? Let Us Know!

Coaching with Camp GOTR is such a rewarding way to get involved with Girls on the Run. As a coach, you get to inspire girls in your community and help them learn skills they will use now and as they grow.

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Save the Internet Act is set for a House vote the week of April 8 and it’s widely expected to pass. Although it may not pass the senate, or a Trump veto, the importance to consumers of this bill and looming data privacy regulation cannot be overstated.

 

COMMENTS for your coverage of the upcoming April House vote, I have provided comments from Harold Li, vice president and online privacy expert at ExpressVPN:

“The internet economy has thrived because it provides a fair and open marketplace for all, benefiting consumers and businesses alike. The repeal of net neutrality in the U.S. undermined this level playing field in ways that has had global impact, particularly given the centrality of the U.S. in the internet ecosystem.

 

“Reinstating net neutrality is crucial for providing key protections for the free and open internet. This broader fight to restore net neutrality principles must continue, not only in the US, but around the world.”

 

DATA for your coverage: A recent survey reports 43% of Americans would switch to a new ISP if they found that their current one was throttling web sites or apps. Many Americans also stated that lawmakers’ stance on net neutrality could sway voting in elections (via ExpressVPN-2018).

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988 words

April 5, 2019

 

Suggested headline: Senate right to block ‘Green New Deal’

 

By Dr. Jay Lehr & Tom Harris

 

On March 26, the United States Senate voted against putting forward Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s (D-NY) and Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) Green New Deal (GND) resolution to the Senate floor for debate and final vote. Those voting against the GND included all 53 Republicans, three Democrats and one Independent. Voting merely “present” (also known as a cloture vote) were 42 Democrats and one Independent. This included all of the resolution’s Senate co-sponsors.

 

Director of the Washington DC-base Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI) Center for Energy and Environment Myron Ebell said in a CEI news release last Friday: “Today’s Senate vote on the Green New Deal has revealed that the 12 Democratic sponsors who courageously voted present are only interested in favorable green PR and are not serious. For those who truly believe that there are only twelve years to save the planet, the Senate sponsors of the Green New Deal are missing in action and cannot be counted on.”

 

This is a good thing of course. If passed into law—as unlikely as that might seem—the Green New Deal (GND) would crash the U.S. economy. The GND would ban fossil fuels in the United States over the next decade and implement a universal basic income program and single-payer health care model. It would also “upgrade” all buildings, including homes, to meet impractical environmental standards.

 

On the one hand, GND supporters display an utter lack of knowledge about basic economics and energy policy. On the other hand, it presents a wonderful opportunity to reinforce to the public the inherent value and necessity of fossil fuels. Such is the intent of this article.

 

For the most part, humans have eliminated the negative aspects of fossil fuel use. We can mine coal safely and burn it cleanly. Drilling sites that bring us oil and gas are safe and efficient. Yes, oil, natural gas, and coal will likely become very scarce someday, but it is very unlikely that this will happen during the lifetime of anyone alive today.

 

As explained by the late Thomas Gold, Professor Emeritus of Astronomy at Cornell University (ref. here, here, and, updating his work, here), research suggests we likely have enough fossil fuels to last hundreds of years into the future. And just in case those estimates are way off, we can rely on nuclear energy, which is essentially limitless.

 

Regardless, it’s completely untrue that fossil fuels are running low, and there is absolutely no definitive physical proof that carbon dioxide emissions from fossil-fuel combustion affect Earth’s temperature. Only mathematical models support this farce.

 

Nevertheless, in recent years, Americans have been inundated with endless amounts of anti-fossil-fuel propaganda. Yet, we depend on fossil fuels, because they exhibit five characteristics that result in their superiority over all other potential energy sources, including: power density (the amount of power produced divided by volume), widespread availability, storability, ease of transport, and cost.

 

Although nuclear power outpaces all sources for power density, compressed natural gas is not far behind—followed by oil and coal. In fact, coal has 50–75 percent the power per volume of oil (ref. here).

 

While the United States leads the world in coal, natural gas, and oil reserves, all three can be found in most parts of the world (ref. here and here and here). Even better, America possesses the best technology to extract all three economically, efficiently, and safely.

 

When it comes to storability, a small pipe carrying natural gas can supply a home with all its heating needs, while a 12-gallon tank of gasoline can carry most cars more than 300 miles. Further, people can generally store oil, natural gas, and coal anywhere onsite, if need be.

Ease of transport is yet another way that fossil fuels trump all other power sources. Everyone has seen railroad cars filled with coal carrying energy across the nation. Likewise, natural gas pipelines crisscross the country. Oil can also be safely transported by rail and trucks, although safety concerns remain an issue.

 

Finally, the cost of fossil fuels has plummeted in recent years (ref here). Hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling alone have cut the cost of natural gas and gasoline by half of what they were only five years ago.

 

All these fossil fuel wonders are ignored by GND supporters, because they are more concerned with using climate change as their Trojan horse for socialism.

 

And of course, climate change alarmists are compensated rather handsomely to produce “data” that support this theory. For some reason, their false predictions have been ignored and swept under the proverbial rug by the “fake news” media. Even more puzzling is that life depends upon an abundance of carbon dioxide, a fact that is nearly always ignored.

 

Socialists and left-leaning lawmakers and environmentalists have put fossil fuels in their crosshairs, because they don’t care that fossil fuels are the lifeblood of America’s exceptional productivity and high standard of living. Perhaps they even want the U.S. economy to crumble so they can push big government “solutions,” including the Green New Deal.

 

Ocasio-Cortez’s and her fellow socialists’ long-term goal is to establish a government that controls everything—energy, health care, housing, education, and more. Life in such states is documented in books like Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World and George Orwell’s 1984. Better examples are the real-life tragedies taking place in Cuba and Venezuela.

 

The facts are on the side of climate realists, who advocate for the responsible use of fossil fuels, but most Americans don’t realize it because the alarmists still monopolize the media, schools, culture, and just about every other sphere of influence.

 

Our arguments are fully supported by the more than 100 scientists who participated in the writing of a 700-page report titled Climate Change Reconsidered Part Two: Fossil Fuels. We hope this will belay the public’s fears and energize them to combat the efforts of Ocasio-Cortez and others working to implement socialism through the guise of an unnecessary, unaffordable Green New Deal.

 

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Jay Lehr, Ph.D., is a Senior Policy Analyst with the Ottawa, Canada-based International Climate Science Coalition (ICSC) and former science director at The Heartland Institute. Tom Harris is ICSC executive director.

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Of the 2.3 million U.S. students not yet connected to high-speed internet, 1.9 million are in just 62 school districts. Visit EducationSuperHighway.org to learn how your state can upgrade internet access in every public school classroom to empower more students to take advantage of the promise of digital learning.

 

What Others Are Saying

"To provide students with the education they need to thrive in a globally connected world, we must find ways to design, fund, acquire, and maintain the infrastructure that will make connectivity a reality for every teacher and student in every learning environment."
 

USED Office of Educational Technology, Building Technology Infrastructure for Learning

"A multi-pronged approach has generated the surge in school connectivity. In 2014, the Federal Communications Commission overhauled the E-rate program, which helps subsidize the cost of internet access and other telecommunications services for schools and libraries. A bipartisan group of governors has leaned into the effort, providing state matching funds and technical support to schools seeking to upgrade their internet connections. And telecommunications companies have mostly bought into the idea of providing schools with substantially more bandwidth for marginally more money."  
 

Education Week, "Schools See 'Incredible Progress' on Internet Connectivity, Report Says"