Support Green Mass Group!

Donate today to help cover our 2012 costs
if you'd like to see GMG survive & thrive!


Fundraising Thermometer

Menu

- Home
- About GMG
- Contact
- F.A.Q.
- How to use GMG
- Policy
- RSS Feed
- Diaries

Make a New Account

Username:

Password:



Forget your username or password?


Search




Advanced Search


Event Calendar
May 2012
(view month)
S M T W R F S
* * 01 02 03 04 05
06 07 08 09 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31 * *
<< (add event) >>

Facebook
Green Mass Group on Facebook



Towards a just & healthy democracy in the Commonwealth... and beyond!

Solar Street Performance Vehicle

by: gmoke

Wed Feb 09, 2011 at 19:40:52 PM EST


My friend, Tom Blue Newell, Uncle Scam, Deacon Blue, Nostrildamus, a Harvard Square busker and street performer ( http://www.unclescam.org ), stopped by this morning.  He's thinking about a new show, especially since he expects to be recuperating from an operation this season.  He wants a "Rascal," a motorized wheelchair with solar power that might also serve as a puppet in his show.  He already uses an amp for his performances and has a battery system mounted on his cargo trike.  He even has a little bit of solar.  He envisions a solar awning to charge the batteries that can run the wheelchair and power his audio and other equipment, too.  He also needs a place to keep it in Harvard Square.  He'd like something in the works within two weeks and a usable machine within two months.
gmoke :: Solar Street Performance Vehicle
For years, we've talked about some kind of solar/energy show in Harvard Square.  Tom is the "only political show" in the Square.  In the daytime, he does sing-a-longs with the kids and at night he does his political shows on hemp and war and peace and justice, conspiracy, fantasy, and fact.   Sometimes he displays the WWII posters I gave him.   A few times, he hosted some of my solar devices.  One season, I even got a street performer's license and went out myself about once a month.  He has always been willing to share his pitch with others, especially other political groups but nobody's taken him up on it, yet.

Talking it over, we got to a basic wish list:
electric wheelchair - collapsible if possible, perhaps a demonstration model of something that could be used in developing countries
solar awning - able to power the chair, audio/video, computer, telecom, possibly lights, another demonstration model for camping or emergency preparedness
pedal power back-up - for both mobility and power generation
battery pack - demountable from the chair for separate use

The form factor should also allow for the design of the "Rascal" as a puppet.

Tom was thinking about using off-the-shelf components and getting the equipment through sponsorship with possibly an income stream through commissions on sales.  Not sure if the market is imaginative and mature enough for that.

Alternatively, I see a number of different groups which are already working on parts of this puzzle.  The Leverage Freedom Chair ( http://mlab.mit.edu/lfc/Welcom... ) from MIT Mobility Lab
( http://mlab.mit.edu/ ) has been in the online news the last week and is one available jumping off point.  It is a hand-levered wheelchair designed for the developing world and off road use.  The designers have been working and testing their ideas for a number of years now.  Or something could be built with the help of the chopper bike crew of Skul  ( http://www.scul.org/skynet/ind... )

The solar group at Boston Latin School ( http://www.blsyouthcan.org/BLS... ) has a solar tent, perhaps they can help with the solar awning or there's a Facebook friend of Tom's who works in a solar retail store and could come up with something that fits.

There are college Energy, Environmental, and Sustainability Clubs at many of the colleges in the area
( http://collegeenergy.org/ ), some with hundreds of members.  There are many local green groups in the area from Union of Concerned Scientists ( http://www.ucsusa.org/ ), which is also in Harvard Square, to Maasai Stoves and Solar (http://www.maasaistovessolar.org/index.html) which builds high efficiency woodstoves with the Maasai peoples in Tanzania and installs small solar electric systems on their homes.

The Cambridge Climate Emergency Action Group has a subcommittee (of which I am a member) working on climate emergency preparedness.  It plans to participate in Cambridge Science Festival
( http://cambridgesciencefestiva... ) and will concentrate on simple solar and solar is civil defense, with solar displays in some of Cambridge's many squares.  They might want to help too.

The Boston Area Solar Energy Association and the Northeast Sustainable Energy Association and the MA Technology Collaborative are among the many other organizations worth contacting as well.

I can envision a new venue for energy education in Harvard Square where Uncle Scam has his autonomous power station and groups like the college and high school energy clubs, the citizen's preparedness groups, environmental, social, and green business groups could come by for a weekend or two all summer.  This year could be a practical demonstration and public performance of what renewable, green technology is capable of now, today.  With enough power and the right telecom tools, Tom could be recording, receiving, and broadcasting to the Web from Harvard Square by means of sunlight every day he works this summer.

If enough of the right people are interested, this does not seem like an outlandish project to me and there's no reason why it couldn't be replicated in cities and towns across the country and the world.

cross posted to globalswadeshi.net and dailykos, bluemassgroup, and eutrotrib.com

Poll
A solar street performance vehicle is possible this season?
yes
no
not yes
not no
neither yes nor no
both yes and no
don't understand the question?

Results

Tags: , , , , , , , , (All Tags)
Print Friendly View Send As Email

About
Green Mass Group is an online forum for Green thought and collective action in Massachusetts. It is a community forum for justice, sustainability, democracy and health in the Commonwealth and beyond. Read more

Quotes
"Now, is this the deal I would have preferred? No. I believe that we could have made the tough choices required - on entitlement reform and tax reform - right now, rather than through a special congressional committee process. But this compromise does make a serious down payment on the deficit reduction we need and gives each party a strong incentive to get a balanced plan done before the end of the year. Most importantly, it will allow us to avoid default and end the crisis that Washington imposed on the rest of America."
--President Barack Obama on the debt ceiling "deal"



"Despite Democratic control over the White House, despite Democratic control over the Senate, despite overwhelming opposition from the American people, a small minority of the members of the Republican-controlled House have successfully pushed an extreme right-wing agenda onto the American political landscape. It is an ideology which believes that despite the fact that the rich are getting richer, the middle class is shrinking, and poverty is increasing, all - all of the burden for deficit reduction should rest on working people."
--Independent Senator Bernie Sanders on the debt ceiling "deal"


Then and Now

Then...

"Last year Evergreen, a Massachusetts company, agreed to establish their first-ever United States based manufacturing facility here in Massachusetts. They did so, or are doing so, at Devens. They have now agreed and chosen to triple their size at Devens. Their next phase of expansion, right here in Massachusetts, a signature company in a signature sector, and we congratulate all of the folks at Evergreen and look forward to continuing to work with you... We made a personal commitment to Evergreen for the sake of Evergreen, but also because we wanted to show that there are ways in which state government, in working together with private industry and with the utility companies, could begin to create a different kind of environment, a different kind of business climate here, to grow that sector, and it is happening. It's happening. Evergreen is one of the most prominent examples, but there are a whole host of examples."
--Governor Deval Patrick, April 7, 2008, boasting about state investment in Evergreen.

and Now...

"Evergreen Solar Inc. filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection yesterday, completing a stunning reversal of fortune for a high-flying alternative-energy company that once seemed to herald a new era for the Massachusetts economy... At its peak, Evergreen employed roughly 900 people locally and attracted more than $50 million in state support, as its stock price soared above $100 a share.
Yesterday, Evergreen's stock closed at 18 cents. The company shuttered its manufacturing plant in Devens earlier this year and now has only 85 employees left. Massachusetts is one of its top creditors, owed $1.5 million in rent."
--Erin Ailworth, Boston Globe, August 16, 2011


Connect with us


Find GMG on Facebook

Blog Roll
We recommend
AlterNet
The Automatic Earth
Club Orlov
Common Dreams
CounterPunch
Democracy Now!
Energy Bulletin
Green Change
Green Horizon
Green Party Watch
Mass Greens
No Supper Tonight
The Oil Drum
Open Media Boston
The Sanctuary
Sustainability by Design
Sustenance
techPresident
Truthdig
Web of Debt
YES! Magazine

Third Party Politics
Ballot Access News
Free & Equal
Independent Political Report
Poli-Tea

MA Politics
All Politics is Wicked Local
Blue Mass Group
Bob LeLievre's Blog
CommonWealth Unbound
Gold Mass Group
Mass Roundup
MassBeacon.com
Mass Politics Blog
Planet Valenti
Red Mass Group


Important Links
Massachusetts
Alliance for Democracy
Alternatives for Community and Environment
Bioneers by the Bay
Boston Workers Alliance
Center for Popular Economics
The Crash Course
Dudley Street Neighborhood Initiative
The E.F. Schumacher Society
Greater Boston Peak Oil & Climate Change Meetup
Green Justice Coalition
Green-Rainbow Party
Massachusetts Budget & Policy Center
Massachusetts Coalition for Healthy Communities
Massachusetts Global Action
Massachusetts Green Jobs Coalition
Massachusetts Jobs with Justice
Massachusetts Peace Action
New Economics Institute
Northeast Organic Farming Association - Mass.
Nuestras Raices
ONE Massachusetts
Peacework Magazine
PV Sustain
Secure Green Future
Small Planet Institute
Stop the Wars Coalition
Student Immigrant Movement
Students for a Just and Stable Future
Time Trade Circle
Transition Massachusetts
Traprock Center for Peace & Justice
United for a Fair Economy
United for Justice with Peace

New England
Gund Institute for Ecological Economics
New England United

National
Business Alliance for Local Living Economies
Center for the Advancement of the Steady State Economy
Grassroots Economic Organizing
Green America
Green Party of the U.S.
The Greens/Green Party USA
Institute for Local Self Reliance
Institute for Policy Studies
New American Dream
Post Carbon Institute
Progressive Democrats of America
Slow Money Alliance
The Story of Stuff
Transition US
US Solidarity Economy Network

Global
350.org
African Greens
European Greens
Federation of Green Parties of Americas
Global Greens
New Economics Foundation


check to have links open new windows
Powered by: SoapBlox