Local Black Mountain or Buncombe potential allies: Difference between revisions

From Neighborhood Economics
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
(3 intermediate revisions by one other user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
The core group working to get a ban on plastic bags in Black Mountain and Buncombe, likely to be allied with the concept of local town sovereignty and reining in corporate power through establishing the rights of nature and the personhood of the Swannanoa River
The core group working to get a ban on plastic bags in Black Mountain and Buncombe, likely to be allied with the concept of local town sovereignty and reining in corporate power through establishing the rights of nature and the personhood of the Swannanoa River


From Linda Tatsapaugh the BM leader on the bag effort.  
From Linda Tatsapaugh the BM leader on the bag effort.  
Here are the most active players on the task force:
[[
Anna Alsobrook]] - [[MountainTrue]] link [[https://mountaintrue.org/]]
Ken Brame – Sierra Club
Jane Laping – MT volunteer
Hartwell Carson – MT/French Broad Riverkeeper
Karim O. – MountainTrue
Sarah Ogletree – MT/Creation Care Alliance
Sarah Knox – SELC
Henry Gargan – SELC
In Black Mountain, current volunteers include
Rev. Bill Moore, First Christian Church
Robin Stiles, BM Presbyterian Church


Julie Lehman, Montreat Conference Center
Here are the most active players on the [[Plastic-free WNC]]


Back to [[Rivers have rights]]
{{backlinks}}

Latest revision as of 12:56, 4 September 2023

The core group working to get a ban on plastic bags in Black Mountain and Buncombe, likely to be allied with the concept of local town sovereignty and reining in corporate power through establishing the rights of nature and the personhood of the Swannanoa River

From Linda Tatsapaugh the BM leader on the bag effort.

Here are the most active players on the Plastic-free WNC

Links to this page