Wednesday, November 5, 2014

Sustainable Tourism Consultation Seeks to Provide Input To the United Nations

The University of South Florida Patel College of Global Sustainability hosted a Sustainable Tourism Consultation on U.N. Day, October 24, 2014.
The Consultation was moderated by Dr. David Randle, director of the Patel College of Global Sustainability, Sustainable Tourism Concentration, and Mr. Richard Jordan, NGO Representative at the UN for the Royal Academy of Science International Trust.
Special guest and keynote speaker was Sarbuland Khan, Senior Counsellor, U.N. Headquarters Liaison for the U.N. World Tourism Organization.
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L-R Dr. David Randle, Richard Jordan, & Sarbuland Khan
The consultation included about 50 persons including leaders in the tourism business and industry sector, environmental NGO's, academia, professional organizations related to tourism and the United Nations.
The event resulted in a Communique that includes:
  • A recalling of past U.N. actions related to sustainable tourism.
  • An effort to build upon the Sustainable Tourism Workshop and Outcome Document of the 65th Annual UN DPI / NGO Conference and the Samoa Pathway that calls upon the tourism industry for increased certification using the Global Sustainable Tourism Council's criteria.
  • A call for the tourism industry to address the issues of climate change and ocean acidification through a reduction of carbon use in the industry.
  • An acknowledgement that the tourism industry can play a major role in poverty alleviation, economic development, protection of cultural heritage, and protection of the environment.
  • Encouraged that tourism develop education programs that build lifelong conservation values, and develop an ethic to protect the environment for both present and future generations.
  • A call for greater integration of sustainable food practices including composting, local sourcing, and reduction of waste.
  • A call for Heads of State or Government to take a proactive role in the development and promotion of sustainable tourism initiatives and the forging of dynamic entrepreneurship initiatives at academic institutions.
The Consultation examined the Nine Planetary Boundaries , developed by Johan Rockstrom and other scientist colleagues. The planetary boundaries include: climate change, ocean acidification, stratospheric ozone depletion, the nitrogen / phosphorus cycle, global freshwater use, changes in land use, biodiversity loss, atmospheric aerosol loading, and chemical pollution.
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A team of graduate students at the Patel College of Global Sustainability including Barbra Anderson, Marcela Bonilla, Patrick Brady, Bianca Cassouto, Justin Farrow, Xiaomin Liu, Ericka McThenia, Katie Neff, Catalina Zafra, and presented to the consultation some best practices in tourism for mitigating the adverse impacts of the nine planetary boundaries and provided a few case studies for each one.
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Barbra Anderson presents on the planetary boundaries of climate change and ocean acidification and tourism.
The consultation also reviewed best practice examples in the tourism industry for the 12 Blue Community Strategies. The 12 Blue Community Strategies were developed in collaboration with the Walt Disney Company with an emphasis on protecting coastal habitat and marine environments. The strategies focus on major issues such as climate change, ocean acidification, ocean pollution especially plastics, and overfishing.
The participants in the USF Patel College of Global Sustainable Development Consultation suggested to undertake the following concrete measures:
1. Creation of a "geo-mosaic" to identify good practices that can be replicated worldwide, in local contexts.
2. Creation of an ongoing informal coalition of the participants for further communication and cooperation.
3. Explore new ways of collaborating with the UNWTO to further the education, research, and implementation of sustainable tourism best practices.
The Consultation continued with a visit to Anna Maria Island where participants experienced some of the sustainable tourism consultation best practices featured during the university meetings. The tour of Anna Maria Island was led by Ed Chiles, Micheal Coleman, & Mike Miller.
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Anna Maria Island
Some of the highlights included:
  • A farm to fork dinner at the BeacHhouse
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  • Lodging at the Pine Avenue Guest House Group that received Platinum status from the Forida Green Building Coalition.
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  • A tour of the Edible Community Garden on Pine Avenue. ECHO, international experts in tropical agriculture, provided special seeds to enable the garden project to grow fruits and vegetables year round, even in the hot Florida summer sun.
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  • A tour of the Green Village project. The project includes over 400 solar panels resulting in net zero energy and 6000 gallon cisterns for rain water storage. The project received a platinum LEED rating from the U.S. Green Building Council.
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  • Lunch and dinner at the Sandbar & Poppo's restaurants. The Sandbar Restaurant offers over a dozen sustainable seafood entrees along with fresh organic and hydroponic fruits and vegetables. The Sandbar contracts with the nearby Cortez fishing village for both sustainable seafood and to keep waterfront jobs in the community. In addition the chefs have recipes to cut down on waste. Poppo's delivers authentic Mission style Mexican food using well sourced ingredients, like organic produce and antibiotic/hormone free meats. Poppo's also uses CIAO water bottles which are a biodegradable alternative to plastic water bottles.
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  • Tour of the Gamble Creek Farm which supplies a number of restaurants on Anna Maria Island with both organic and hydroponic food. This 26 acre farm enables the Anna Maria Island visitor to have the farm to table experience in many of their meals. When complimented with the sustainable seafood and the ECHO edible gardens, about 40% of the food becomes locally sourced.
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The Sustainable Tourism Consultation brought diverse groups and interests together for a common cause.
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The Consultation is perhaps best summed up with the remarks of Sarbuland Khan, following the close of the Friday session.
We invite you to participate in the ongoing conversation by sharing your comments and by sharing the Communique with others in your networks.
Dr David W. Randle - Director USF Patel College of Global Sustainability Sustainable Tourism, Managing Director International Ocean Institute Waves of Change Blue Community Initiative, and President & CEO WHALE Center.

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

How to navigate Windows using a keyboard.

How to navigate Windows using a keyboard.: Moving a window

Before you can move any window In Microsoft Windows it must not be maximized. To make the window appear in window mode, press ALT and the spacebar at the same time, move to the restore option, and press enter.

Once the window is not maximized you can move a window by pressing ALT and spacebar at the same time, move to the move option, press enter, and then move the window using your arrow keys on the keyboard.

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

How to view data in an ADF file? | GeoNet

How to view data in an ADF file? | GeoNet: The .adf file you have downloaded is actually a raster grid file; this can be directly brought into ArcMap. If you would like to take this file further, you are able to simply right click on it and export it to any format needed. I am including some documentation on this file type, this should assist you further. Gracias, Alex!


Raster To Other Format (Conversion)
http://help.arcgis.com/en/arcgisdesktop/10.0/help/index.html#//001200000032000000
Esri Grid format
http://help.arcgis.com/en/arcgisdesktop/10.0/help/index.html#//009t0000000w000000
Supported raster dataset file formats
http://help.arcgis.com/en/arcgisdesktop/10.0/help/index.html#//009t0000000q000000

Always Pop Out: Disabling Reading Pane Reply - MSOutlook.info

Always Pop Out: Disabling Reading Pane Reply - MSOutlook.info: This is one of those options you really can search forever for if you are not really sure what you are looking for. The fact that the option itself doesn’t hold a reference to “Pop Out” as well, doesn’t exactly help either.

To stop Outlook from using the Reading Pane when replying or forwarding a message, enable the following option:

File-> Options-> Mail-> section: Replies and forwards-> option: Open replies and forwards in a new window

Monday, June 30, 2014

HOW TO Foster Sustainable Behavior

Hi Dave,

I did pilot projects at two large townhouses and several apartment buildings in Metro Vancouver. The thing that was universal is that THERE WAS NEVER ENOUGH VOLUME.

Metro Vancouver's goal is to divert 70% from garbage, and yet over and over again, 90% of the volume was for garbage and 10% was for recycling.

It does not matter how much signage, how many brochures, how many Recycling Captains or community groups or bylaw officers you have, if you only give them 10% of the space, you will capture at most 15% of the materials.

People want to recycle. They want to do the right thing. Very few people are sociopaths. If you give them a system that works FOR PEOPLE, they will use it. You can see we would get 15% of the material in only 10% of the space--people were really jamming it in.

(I emphasize the system must work for the people, because almost all of our systems are built to work for the recycling trucks, or the materials sales, or the bulldozers, or the incinerators. These mechanical systems should serve the residents, not the other way around. Unless you want to fail, that is.)

Shifting the space also sends strong social signals--nothing says reduce your garbage like a giant recycling bin and a small garbage can.

Because of the very space constraints you mention, we experimented with common bins, especially for cardboard. This was very easy in townhouses, but we also saw some good results by just dropping one in an alley for everybody to use.

We thought it was best to calculate tote and dumpster needs by the number of bedrooms--that gives a better sense of how many people are actually using the system.

So, say at a townhouse complex, in each little cul-de-sac, we had a garbage dumpster, a dumpster for cardboard, centralized totes for food and yard scraps, and a big blue tote shared between two units.

The absolute least I would recommend is a 96 gallon tote for every 14 bedrooms. That is AFTER you have cardboard, food scraps and garbage containers in place. If you are going to expect people to fit their cardboard in a blue tote, you should probably double the totes.

As a side note, to emphasize the fact that people CAN NOT recycled if you do not give them the space --take a look at Maple Ridge. They are far and away the most impressive system in the Lower Mainland, and probably in most of North America. They have six recycling streams, all colour coded. If your tote fills up, you can give them a call and they will come empty it.

They know you need space in your tote in order to recycle. This is the only jurisdiction I have ever seen that TRULY acts like they want you to recycle.

Ruben Anderson
smallanddeliciouslife.com

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

FW: Serious Incident today at Patel College

I just linked together all these together for you... office emails. . .
USF Hosts Modern Warfare Conference WFTS-TV 

Some of the nation’s top military leaders are at USF this week for a conference on modern warfare (open to the public)





Dear All, 

Today we had a serious and disturbing incident at the college. 

At around 4.20pm today, several important and valuable items went missing from the ground floor of our building and the building went into 'lock-down'. An extensive search was carried out, and finally the items were found on our floor in the space where we have the coffee station. An armed police officer came to our floor with a team of 3 administrators to recover the items, and they were safely removed. Many items were missing from the original batch and concerns were raised about where the missing items went. This was an extremely embarrassing and disturbing event for the Patel College of Global Sustainability – something I will never be able to live down.

FYI, the important and valuable items that went missing were a few sandwiches. These were no ordinary sandwiches – they were  Aramark 'specials'- you know the ones that are stale and taste like old shoes. Anyhow a search was undertaken on our floor by an armed police officer and the sandwiches were recovered. However, several  sandwiches were missing (a detailed audit was performed). When the armed police officer arrived, George panicked (he had bread crumbs and bits of ham on his lips) and locked himself in the women's restroom (he might still be there!). Kelly was enjoying one of the sandwiches and had only completed half, when the police officer arrived. She had to quickly dispose of the evidence (I'm sure she might  be experiencing serious indigestion as a result). Sue, Alyssa and I had to experience the humiliation of the search (we were asked to stand with our hands behind our backs and not to say a word). Unfortunately, it's not clear who removed the sandwiches from the ground floor, but the police officer described the suspect as having long hair, wears a tie that does not match his shirt, and he has the initials EW. Not sure who it could be, but I would welcome your help in tracing this person. 

This really happened today folks!!! It was surreal! That's why it's always fun working at the Patel College. 

Moral of the story…..please don't take food from the ground floor when they're having events (and if you do please, please, please don't get caught! …..there's always someone watching you!).

Have a good night. 

Best, Kala



Sent: Tuesday, February 18, 2014 9:41 PM
Hi Kala:

Thanks for this heads up on the current crime wave at the College.  I may need to bring my pirate sword until the crime wave dies down.

I am glad to hear that no one tried to do any texting when the police arrive on our floor.  I have heard that retired police officers have been known to shoot people for this offense.

To be proactive on this serious matter, I have prepared the attached poster for you to circulate around the office.

Be Well,

Dave



From: Philippidis, George
Sent: Tuesday, February 18, 2014 9:52 PM
Now, seriously folks ... can someone come unlock the bathroom door?

Sent from my iPhone


From: Matthews, Michael
Sent: Tuesday, February 18, 2014 9:59 PM
I hear in Russia they just break through locked bathroom doors.

Sent from my iPad


From: Weaver, Eric
Sent: Tuesday, February 18, 2014 10:42 PM
Thanks Dave!

I revised the Poster as appropriate!
Have a wonderful Day
Eric
Eric R. Weaver MBA., Research Associate
Patel College of Global Sustainability
University of South Florida, (813) 974-8337