2023 Saratoga Sustainability FairSunday, April 16th10:00 AM- 4:00 PM |
and Skidmore College have partnered to host the 2023 Saratoga Sustainability Fair. The fair brings exhibitors, presenters, and the community together to advocate for and improve awareness about sustainability activities and opportunities. The 2023 fair will include a keynote speaker; workshop presentations; an electric vehicle car and bike show; and exhibitor booths presented by businesses and non-profits in energy, climate, equity, environmental education.
The mission of the sustainability fair is to support the three interconnected pillars of sustainability— environmental responsibility, social equity, economic development—by connecting people to community resources and organizations that contribute to making our community a more sustainable place to live for current and future generations.
Event Details
Keynote (Filene Auditorium, 11:00 am - noon): "Let’s talk Climate: Finding Ways to Build Hope and Action for a Resilient Future"
by Jen Kretser and Elodie Linck
We are living in a changing world. Climate change is impacting all of us and it is
happening right here in New York State. Climate change is overwhelming and can feel
pretty hopeless, but there are many ways we can work together to build hope and optimism
for the future. Join Jen Kretser and Elodie Linck from The Wild Center for this interactive
presentation and conversation that will explore what climate impacts are happening
here in NYS and the solutions that are available to address the climate crisis. With
this climate solutions lens in mind, we’ll share how education and engaging youth
is essential to promote climate action and just transition to a more resilient future.
We will provide some direct examples on what youth are doing across NYS and around
the world and help you get started at home and in your community. We are also streaming
the keynote live on .
As Director of Climate Initiatives, Jen Kretser (she/her) leads The Wild Center’s climate change engagement programs including the global Youth Climate Program, which was highlighted by the Obama White House Office of Science and Technology. In 2021, she led The Wild Center’s Youth Climate delegation at the UN COP 26 climate conference in Glasgow, Scotland in 2021. Jen serves on Climate Literacy Energy Awareness Network (CLEAN), serves on the U.S. Action for Climate Empowerment (ACE) Coordinating Team, is a board member of the Adirondack Mountain Club and core team of the Adirondack Diversity Initiative. |
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As the Jeanne Hutchins Youth Climate Coordinator at The Wild Center, Elodie Linck (she/her) spreads Youth Climate Summits around the world and supports youth in their goals to take climate action in their schools and communities. Elodie has supported summits around the world, including the Catskills, Sweden, Delaware, and Northern Ontario. In 2021, Elodie attended the TED Countdown Summit in Edinburgh, Scotland, and managed communications for The Wild Center’s youth delegation at COP26 in Glasgow. She graduated from Skidmore College in 2021 with a BA in Political Science and Dance Performance & Choreography. At Skidmore, Elodie worked in the Sustainability Office and developed the college’s Environmental Justice Resource Guide. |
Exhibitor Booths (Case Center Spa, 10:00 am - 4:00 pm): Our 25 exhibitors are non-profits and businesses focused on renewable energy, social justice, alternative transportation, natural resource protection, energy efficiency, and sustainability efforts in the Saratoga area.
Local Students Work to Limit the Spread of invasive Fish in NYS
Written by Ella Daley
Emma Willard School offers a program called STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Art, Math) 10, where students work in small groups on a project together for the entire school year. A group of motivated students including Ella Daley, Nadia Mitic, Olivia Berkman, and Roz Kurd focused on the research of invasive fish species found in our waters. They studied the harmful actions of these fish and found out ways to help our community to increase awareness about this problem and to help take positive action.
Research about the invasive fish revealed the damage they do to the environment and our local ecosystem. Through a program at Cornell CALS called “Fish Tracker”, the team will send collected water samples to test the eDNA to determine which invasive species are found in our regional waters. In addition to testing the water the team decided to raise awareness of limiting the spread of invasive species. Invasive species are non-native so they don’t have natural predators to regulate their quick, growing population and they diminish the food supply for the native fish. One of the current issues is the Round Goby fish, which is already in New York waters. The Round Goby is a small fish so it is not an issue of being a top predator but is a problem because they eat native fish eggs, specifically the smallmouth bass. The Smallmouth Bass only lays eggs once a year and the Round Goby is diminishing their population by inhibiting the reproduction success rate. Another big current issue is that of the Snakehead fish which is a non-native top predator, which kills and eats all the native species.
The team wants to emphasize the impending issue of the Blue Catfish to New York State. If these fish got into New York waters, their diet of mussels, which filter our waters, would lessen the purity and clarity of our waters.
The student team came up with the idea to sell merchandise that raises awareness and all the proceeds will be donated to the Natural Heritage Trust. The Natural Heritage Trust works on the preservation of native species and one of the ways they do this is limiting the spread of invasive species. The team proposed their idea to Youth 2 - Youth Helping Youth (youthsquared.org) and wrote a grant proposal for financial support to design and purchase merchandise. They received a $500 grant. The merchandise is a canvas bag with a custom design done by Ana VanPlew, one of the students at Emma Willard School.
The team plans on raising awareness at their school and at the Sustainability Fair on April 16th, from 10am-4pm, at Skidmore College in Case Center. Come join us to learn more and help take social action to keep our waters healthy!
Kids’ Activities (Case Center 2nd Floor, 12:30 - 3:30 pm): Stop by for free, hands-on activities for all ages to enjoy, including a compost touch tank and crafts.
Electric Vehicle Car and Bike Show (Case Center parking lot, 12:30 - 3:30 pm): Stop by to see electric vehicles of various makes and models and chat with dealers
and car owners.
- Chevy Bolt
- Kia EV6 Wind
- Tesla Model Y
- Tesla Model 3
- Nissan Leaf
- Mach-E Mustang
- Volkswagon ID4
- Hyundai Ioniq
- Saratoga Suburu - Solterra
- Saratoga Ford - F150 Lightning
- New Country Toyota - BZ4X
Bicycles from Grey Ghost
- LG Niner Rip 9 E (Full Suspension Mtn Bike)
- Specialized Levo SL (Full Suspension Mtn Bike)
- Giant Fastroad E (Commuter Hybrid)
- Momentum Voya E (Commuter Hybrid)
- Cannondale Treadwell Neo (Comfort Hybrid)
- Momentum Vida E Step-Thru (Comfort Cruiser)
Vehicle and bike list is subject to change.
Repair Café (Ladd Hall, 12:30 - 3:30 pm): Toss it? No way! Bring an item that needs repair and work with a Repair Café coach to fix it.
Workshop Presentations (1:00 - 4:00 pm): From 10-11 am Sustainable Saratoga will offer an energy efficiency and electrification
savings workshop at Case 2nd Floor Computer Stations by Starbucks. We're offering
four tracks for workshops: Environmental Justice and Action in Wyckoff Center in 2nd
floor Case, Nature in Ladd 106, Local Sustainability Efforts in Ladd 206, and Finance
in Ladd 207. Sessions begin on-the-hour and last roughly 45 minutes with time for questions. Click
for details below.
10 - 11am
ENERGY EFFICIENCY AND ELECTRIFICATION SAVINGS WORKSHOP
Join members of Sustainable Saratoga’s Climate and Energy Committee to explore how you can save money and improve the health and comfort of your home with federal and state incentives for energy efficiency improvements, building electrification, and more. We’ll also offer you an opportunity to better understand your household’s carbon emissions and what actions you can take to . This is a drop-in workshop. Stop by and see how much money you can save with the Inflation Reduction Act, NYSERDA, and utility incentives!
1-2pm
NDAKINNA FILM SCREENING AND DISCUSSION OF CO-CREATION & PLACE BASED FILMMAKING
This session begins with a screening of Ndakinna, a short documentary film centered on the Bruchac family and their work at the Ndakinna Education Center in Greenfield, N.Y. The film explores the family’s multigenerational stewardship of this land and Indigenous teachings about acknowledgment, listening, remembering, and sharing. Following the screening, panelists will discuss the collaborative process of making a place-based documentary film.
Angela Beallor (she/they), as the Documentarian in Community Co-Creation, facilitates the MDOCS Co-Creation Initiative at Skidmore College. Beallor is an artist working primarily in collaborative performance, video, and photography, addressing themes of memory, history, and politics. |
Dr. Joseph Bruchac, writer, musician, and traditional storyteller, is a citizen and member of the Elders Council of the Nulhegan Abenaki Nation. A best-selling author of over 180 books in several genres, his poems, essays, and stories have appeared in numerous anthologies and hundreds of magazines ranging from Akwesasne Notes, Cricket, and Highlights for Children, to the Paris Review, Smithsonian, and National Geographic. |
Siobhan Hart (she/her) is an archaeologist and professor at Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs, New York. Her work is concerned with using material culture, place, and community collaboration to address inequities in the world today. |
2-3pm
SHARE (Sheridan Hollow Alliance for Renewable Energy) ADVOCACY UPDATE
Join the Co-chairs of the Sheridan Hollow Alliance for Renewable Energy (SHARE) to learn about the legacy of pollution in the predominantly Black, formerly redlined Albany neighborhood of Sheridan Hollow. In this workshop, we will learn how a coalition of residents, environmental justice advocates, and community groups is working to eliminate the disproportionate exposure of Sheridan Hollow residents to harmful fossil fuel emissions by supporting the development of 21st century, pollution-free infrastructure that will also help achieve the state’s bold climate goals for renewable heat and power.
Merton Simpson is the Co-founder and Co-Chair of the Sheridan Hollow Alliance for Renewable Energy. He resides in Albany in the neighborhood of Sheridan Hollow and is serving his third term in the Albany County Legislature representing residents of the 2nd Legislative District. (Photo description: Merton D. Simpson, Grandson Chris Rivers & wife Joyce Love, 3rd Ward Council Member) |
Ruth Foster is the Co-founder and Co-chair of the Sheridan Hollow Alliance for Renewable Energy. Ruth has been a committed social justice advocate for her entire life, organizing for tuition cuts for SUNY, for nuclear disarmament, against Apartheid and for climate action.Ruth helped to lead the successful fight to stop the Northeast Energy Direct (NED) fracked gas pipeline that cut through Rensselaer County where she lives. She joined Divest NY and helped win divestment of the state pension fund and is currently leading the effort to demand that the New York State Teachers Retirement System divest from fossil fuels. She serves on the Admin Committee of Climate Can’t Wait, a collaborative of over 40 local and statewide groups organized around the demand that the governor and legislature act on climate. |
3-4pm
URBAN ECOSYSTEM JUSTICE- INTERSECTIONAL ENVIRONMENTALISM AT ALBANY'S RADIX CENTER
The Radix Center is a non-profit ecological literacy education and just sustainabilities advocacy organization based in the South End of Albany, New York. Maintaining a one-acre urban farm and demonstration site of regenerative tools and technologies, Radix provides educational and employment opportunities for local youth while also working for environmental justice in the South End community. In this presentation, Radix co-founders Scott Kellogg and Stacy Pettigrew will discuss how urban soils, food, air, rivers, compost, forests and climate intersect with issues of equity, justice, access, race and class.
[We are sorry to miss our originally scheduled workshop from Loreen Hackett, long time PFAS advoacte from Hoosick Falls, due to illness. You can read more about her powerful activism and work in these New York Times stories from and and on her twitter .]
1-2pm
COMPOSTING AT HOME
Composting has a role to play in fighting climate change since food scraps and yard waste produce methane when they decompose in a landfill. Composting also creates rich, organic material for use in your gardens. In this workshop, we will describe the important basics of composting in clear and easy-to-understand terms.
Lenore and Jack Reber are retired teachers who taught special ed and fourth grade, and elementary and middle school English, respectively. They are volunteers with Sustainable Saratoga and have been gardening and composting for 50 years.
2-3pm
PLANT A TREE IN YOUR YARD THIS SPRING
Learn how to select and plant a tree for your yard. Spring is the perfect time to plant a tree that will beautify your property and provide benefits for years to come. The right tree (preferably a native species) planted in the right spot can grow to reduce cooling bills in summer, reduce street temperatures, or absorb rainwater runoff. Plant a tree for fall color, or spring flowers, or to feed and house local wildlife. Whatever your reason, there's a tree out there for you.
Caroline Rothaug is the Chair of Sustainable Saratoga's Urban Forestry Project as well as a Master Gardener with the Saratoga County Cornell Cooperative Extension. |
3-4pm
WLI DOGO WONGAN/ ALL OUR RELATIONS
How our traditional Northeastern Native stories and life ways recognize and teach the importance of sustainability and environmental balance. The session will include the telling of stories from Abenaki and Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) traditions. It will also consider how indigenous ideas influenced modern ideas of conservation and deep ecology.
Dr. Joseph Bruchac, writer, musician, and traditional storyteller is a citizen and member of the Elders Council of the Nulhegan Abenaki Nation. A best-selling author of over 180 books in several genres, his poems, essays, and stories have appeared in numerous anthologies and hundreds of magazines ranging from Akwesasne Notes, Cricket, and Highlights for Children, to the Paris Review, Smithsonian, and National Geographic. |
1-2pm
SARATOGA SPRINGS SUSTAINABILITY COMMITTEES PANEL DISCUSSION
Join the Chairs of the Saratoga Springs Open Space Advisory Committee, Complete Streets Advisory Board, and the Climate Smart Task Force for a panel discussion on the work of these committees and the role they play in helping the City develop and carry out sustainability plans.
2-3pm
SUSTAINABLE LIVING 101: ARCADIAN REVIVAL’S GUIDE FOR THE HOMEOWNER
Join Sustainable Living 101: Arcadian Revival’s Guide for the Homeowner to learn more about how to begin living life and managing home through a more sustainable lens that aligns action with values. Whether you’re renovating, managing a busy home with kids, or have time to re-think your approach to everyday life, we hope this workshop leaves everyone with a useful takeaway that can be implemented when they walk out the door. By attending this workshop we’ll equip you with ideas on incorporating best practices into your home and inspiring intentionality with decision-making. By making small changes, we’re each taking part in creating a more sustainable Saratoga community.
Bethany Bowyer Khan moved to Saratoga County with her family in 2021 where they purchased a Greek Revival home after a decade in NYC working to make the city more sustainable. She has recently launched Arcadian Revival, a brand and business inspiring sustainable living through design, renovation, garden, cultivating home, community and our relationship with nature.
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3-4pm
SARATOGA PLAN & THE SARAH B. FOULKE FRIENDSHIP TRAILS
Ensuring a climate resilient community means conserving the ecology of our forests, waters, wetlands, and other natural areas and open spaces. Come learn about plans and progress for conservation and compatible recreation in the Adirondack Foothills that Saratoga PLAN, Skidmore College and other Palmertown Range Partners are working on in your backyard.
Robert K. Davies is the Executive Director of Saratoga PLAN (Protecting Land And Nature), a not-for-profit 501(c)3 and nationally accredited land trust organization whose mission is to preserve the rural character, natural habitats and scenic beauty of the Saratoga Region so these irreplaceable assets are accessible to all and survive for future generations. Since being established in 2003, Saratoga PLAN has conserved 7,370 acres, created and manages 13 public preserves and 25 miles of multi-use trails. Saratoga PLAN helps landowners conserve their farmland, woodlands and natural habitats to sustain the county’s “quality of place” and the environment, economy, and public health. As Executive Director, Mr. Davies oversees the Saratoga PLAN Team in assisting communities create plans that balance growth with conservation to sustain the Saratoga Region as a great place to live, work, visit and farm. Prior to joining Saratoga PLAN in May of 2022, Mr. Davies served as a senior attorney in the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation’s (DEC) Office of General Counsel. In 2001 Mr. Davies became the Director of the DEC’s Division of Lands and Forests and State Forester where he was responsible for the management of approximately 4.5 million acres including 3 million acres of Adirondack and Catskill forest preserve land, 800,000 acres of state forest land, and 890,000 acres of “working forest” conservation easements. |
Over the past two decades, Peter Olmsted has dedicated his career to addressing some of the most pressing energy and environmental issues of our time. Currently, Peter serves as Director of Public Policy for FreeWire Technologies, which is manufacturing innovative solutions for electric vehicle charging and the grid. From 2015-2021, Peter played a leadership role in New York State government in helping to develop and implement the State’s ambitious clean energy and climate agenda. His roles included Assistant Secretary of Energy for the Governor's Office and Chief of Staff for the New York Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA). Prior to his NYS tenure, Peter held several roles in the non-profit and public sectors, ranging from advancing solar energy markets along the eastern seaboard to preserving farmland south central Pennsylvania. Peter graduated from Skidmore College with a degree in Environmental Studies, where he currently teaches as an Adjunct Professor. He received a master's degree from the University of Delaware in energy and environmental policy. |
2-3pm
SUSTAINABLE, RESPONSIBLE, & IMPACT INVESTING: MAKING MONEY WHILE MAKING A DIFFERENCE
Harry Moran, CFP®, AIF®, CeFT® is the owner and founder of Saratoga Springs-based Sustainable Wealth Advisors, and a Founding Member of Sustainable Advisors Alliance, LLC, a national impact advisory firm. Moran has helped clients prudently integrate SRI (Sustainable, Responsible, Impact) strategies into their investment and financial planning decision making for over 3 decades. In this fast-moving workshop, he will provide an overview of the state of the field as well as practical action steps for attendees who are evaluating whether this approach may be appropriate for them.
Harry Moran is a 30-plus year veteran of the financial advisory profession. After beginning his career with a few different Albany NY-based investment firms, he joined Cornerstone Financial Advisors and Cadaret, Grant and Co., Inc. in 1992 and worked for 19 years there before leaving to found Sustainable Wealth Advisors in September of 2011. He began working with sustainable investments in 1988 and made the commitment to specialize in this approach in 2001. He has been a network advisor with First Affirmative Financial Network since 2001 and was an Investment Advisory Representative (IAR) of Portfolio Resources Advisor Group, Inc. (PRAG) from 2011 until April 2021. Harry also served on the PRAG Investment Committee from 2018 until his departure in April 2021 to become a Founding Member of Sustainable Advisors Alliance, LLC. Harry resides in Saratoga Springs with his wife Ellen. When not at work, you can often find him out riding his bike, walking, or supporting the local art and music scene. Disclosure Language: Advisory services provided by Sustainable Advisors Alliance, LLC, with Harry Moran, CFP®, AIF®, CeFT® as Investment Advisor Representative (IAR) also doing business under the name Sustainable Wealth Advisors. Sustainable Advisors Alliance, LLC is an investment adviser registered with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Registration does not imply a certain level of skill or training. |
3-4pm
CAMPUS SUSTAINABILITY TOUR
Join Tarah Rouse, Director of Sustainability Programs and Assessment, and Paul Lundberg, Assistant Director of Construction Services, for a campus operations presentation and visit to a geothermal node. Please wear sturdy shoes.
Paul Lundberg (he/him) holds a master's of science in energy management from the New York Institute of Technology and has attained designation as a certified energy manager and certified geo-exchange designer from the Association of Energy Engineers. He has been at Skidmore for 15 years in the Facilities Services Department and has been involved with capital construction projects during all phases of development, design and implementation, including the majority of the energy conservation and alternative energy initiatives at the college. |
Tarah Rowse (she/her) is an energy and sustainability professional that has worked across public, private, and nonprofit sectors as a researcher, professor, and manager. Tarah holds a Ph.D. in natural resources, with a focus on energy governance, from the University of Vermont, a M.S. (public policy and management) from Carnegie Mellon University, and a B.S. (natural resource management) from Cornell University. She has been a Peace Corps volunteer, a political campaign manager, and an associate with the Nature Conservancy, with previous campus sustainability experience at the University of Vermont and Hobart and William Smith Colleges. Tarah is currently the Board Chair of the Agricultural Stewardship Association, a regional land trust conserving farm and forest land. Tarah, along with her husband and two daughters, returned to the area and built a net-zero energy home on the family farm. |
Event Maps
Parking will be limited. We invite you to BIKE and park at the rack outside Case Center, to WALK in, or to BUS in on the . We have 11 EV charging stations (Chargepoint and EV Smart) available around campus, map available here.
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Thanks to Our Sponsors
Eric Morser, Faculty Director of Civic Engagement