| Earth Day These Daysby Jennifer Walling 
 "[O]n April 22, 1970, Earth 
                        Day was held, one of the most remarkable happenings in 
                        the history of democracy..."
 American Heritage Magazine, October 1993
 .jpg)   Earth Day, April 22, 1970. A beautiful 
                          spring day. Twenty million Americans converge on a Wednesday, 
                          a day chosen so as not to conflict with studentsí 
                          weekend plans or final exams. Pete Seeger performs at 
                          the Washington Monument. Traffic is routed around New 
                          Yorkís Fifth Avenue so that Earth Day events 
                          can be held. Protests, rallies, marches, and parades 
                          take place across the country. In Urbana-Champaign, 
                          Students for Environmental Controls (SECS) -later renamed 
                          Students for Environmental Concerns coordinates an Environmental 
                          Crisis Week.Nobody planned for Earth Day to become a recurring event. 
                          For SECS, regular annual Earth Day celebrations didn't 
                          begin until 1982.
 Harry S. Dent, in his book The Roaring 2000s, uses the 
                          environmental movement to illustrate what he calls the 
                          economic "S-curve". In this paradigm, a new 
                          idea or product first gains support slowly, then suddenly 
                          surges upward in momentum until it eventually becomes 
                          "mainstream", at which time its support levels 
                          off. In his charts, support for the environmental movement 
                          climbed gradually upward in the 1960s and 1970s, surged 
                          in the 1980s, and leveled off in the 1990s. If Dent's 
                          paradigm is true, many environmentalists would be dismayed 
                          to learn that their cause has reached that "mainstream" 
                          level, since there still seems to be a lot of progress 
                          that needs to be made.
 The way Earth Day is currently celebrated is a great 
                          indicator of the changes that have happened to the environmental 
                          movement in the last 32 years. Perhaps some of these 
                          changes have occurred because many people have forgotten 
                          the original purpose of Earth Day. For example, in his 
                          Earth Day speech last year, President Bush declared, 
                          "On April 22 each year for more than three decades, 
                          Americans have paused on Earth Day to celebrate the 
                          rich blessings of our nationís natural resources 
                          and to take stock of our stewardship of nature's gifts."
 That seems a strange way to describe what Earth Dayís 
                          founder, Gaylord Nelson, described as "a nationwide 
                          grassroots demonstration on behalf of the environment", 
                          or as many have called it, the first environmental protest. 
                          Earth Day was arguably the birth of the modern environmental 
                          movement. At the very least it marked a significant 
                          change in environmentalism, from "conservationists" 
                          endeavoring to protect natural areas to protesters rallying 
                          to protect people and the environment from unseen dangers 
                          such as DDT, lead, and other pollutants.
 The original purpose of Earth Day was certainly not 
                          to celebrate the blessings of our natural resources 
                          (environmentalists do that every day), but to join together 
                          in demonstrating to those in power that they were doing 
                          a poor job of protecting and maintaining the clean environment 
                          that many people value so dearly, and that ultimately 
                          is essential to life itself. As Christine Todd Whitman, 
                          the current administrator of the US Environmental Protection 
                          Agency (EPA), has stated, "That first Earth Day 
                          launched an unprecedented national movement to correct 
                          decades of environmental degradation, destruction, and 
                          damage."
 Mr. Nelson, who "organized" the first Earth 
                          Day celebration, came up with the vision of "a 
                          huge grassroots protest over what was happening to our 
                          environment." According to him, "Earth Day 
                          worked because of the spontaneous response at the grassroots 
                          level. We had neither the time nor the resources to 
                          organize 20 million demonstrators, and the thousands 
                          of schools and local communities that participated. 
                          That was the remarkable thing about Earth Day. It organized 
                          itself."
 Many of the focal issues at the first Earth Day were 
                          those that were life-threatening. Citizens demanded 
                          laws regulating such things as pesticides, radioactive 
                          and other hazardous wastes, and air and water pollution 
                          in order to prevent human death. Some also called for 
                          recycling programs and bottle bills. In the 1970s, almost 
                          everyone wanted environmental changes.
 Republicans and Democrats agreed that environmental 
                          reforms were needed. Richard Nixon created the EPA in 
                          1970; in the same year, lead was banned from paint. 
                          The 1970s saw the passing of the Clean Water Act, the 
                          Safe Drinking Water Act, the first fuel economy standards, 
                          hazardous waste regulations, and the Clean Air Act. 
                          Other events in the decade were environmental emergencies 
                          such as the OPEC oil embargo, the Three Mile Island 
                          nuclear power plant accident, and the discovery of severe 
                          dioxin contamination at Love Canal, New York.
 Today, more than 200 million people in 140 countries 
                          celebrate Earth Day. National and international organizations, 
                          local school and community groups, governmental bodies, 
                          and even some businesses and corporations celebrate 
                          the day on which the first major environmental protest 
                          was held. Yet actual progress on environmental issues 
                          is glacially slower than it was in the 1970s. The US 
                          government''s commitment to positive environmental policy 
                          initiatives seems to have been virtually abandoned -especially 
                          under the current administration. Very few major environmental 
                          laws have been enacted in the past few years.
 Plenty of environmental concerns still exist, but environmental 
                          problems are often less tangible and seemingly more 
                          intractable than they have been in the past. An example 
                          would be the proposed drilling for oil in the Arctic 
                          National Wildlife Refuge. Environmentalists have to 
                          convince the public to care about this precious natural 
                          place that most will never see. The same is true for 
                          global warming. People must be persuaded to change their 
                          behavior in order to prevent something whose consequences 
                          may be far in the future. On the one hand, a number 
                          of environmental issues are international in scope and 
                          require cooperative international solutions. At the 
                          opposite extreme, certain environmental problems require 
                          for their solution personal behavioral changes as well 
                          as changes in government policy. These changes are often 
                          difficult to achieve, and success is uncertain.
 There's still much work to be done to repair the degradation 
                          done to our environment. Many corporations continue 
                          to employ abysmal environmental practices, polluting 
                          throughout the world. A number of the regulations passed 
                          in the 1970s and 1980s need to be strengthened, broadened, 
                          and enforced more consistently.
 Still, one of the best places to achieve an environmental 
                          victory is in your own back yard. Locally, environmentalists 
                          are working to expand the City of Champaign's recycling 
                          ordinance, to restore prairie areas, to encourage the 
                          use of renewable energy, to combat sprawl, and to increase 
                          environmental education.
 This year's local Earth Day celebration, hosted by Students 
                          for Environmental Concerns, will be held on the Quad 
                          at the University of Illinois on Sunday, April 21 from 
                          12 to 6 pm. For more information, you can contact Jennifer 
                          Walling at jwalling@uiuc.edu or Joanne Messerges at 
                          messerge@uiuc.edu.
 Local Environmental 
                          Organizationshttp://www.prairie.20m.com/Illinois.html
 This web site has a listing of many of the local environmental 
                          organizations.
 Students for Environmental Concerns,
 www.uiuc.edu/ro/secs 
                          ; contact jwalling@uiuc.edu
 Earth Doctors,
 www.uiuc.edu/ro/earthdocs 
                          ; contact messerge@uiuc.edu
 Environmental Resources,
 www.uiuc.edu/ro/er 
                          ; contact hayers@uiuc.edu 
                          or ebond@uiuc.edu
 Red Bison,
 www.uiuc.edu/ro/redbison 
                          ; contact meuchans@uiuc.edu
 Community Heartland Pathways,
 www.prairienet.org/heartland-pathways/heartlnd.htm 
                          ; contact dmonk@prairienet.org
 Sierra Club Champaign
 www.illinois.sierraclub.org/prairie
 County Audubon Society,
 www.web-makers.com/audubon/ 
                          ; contact j-chato@uiuc.edu
 Prairie Greens,
 www.prairienet.org/greens/ 
                          ; contact greens@prairienet.org
 Illinois Student Environmental Network,
 www.isenonline.org 
                          ; contact isen@isenonline.org
 Grand Prairie Friends,
 www.prairienet.org/gpf/ 
                          ; contact gpf@prairienet.org
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