BrightFarms brings fresher produce to grocery stores

Published Wednesday, 11 January 2012 12:46PM CST by in Sustainability

0
BrightFarms brings fresher produce to grocery stores

What would happen if greenhouses were constructed next to, or on top of, grocery stores? Produce would almost certainly be fresher and the transportation problem of sustainable agriculture would be one step closer to being solved. That’s the idea behind BrightFarms’ on-site greenhouses; the company contracts with grocery stores to operate hydroponic greenhouses on their roofs.

Imagine being able to eat tomatoes virtually year-round—even up here on the far edge—that were grown for flavor instead of transport. Imagine being able to buy lettuce that was picked that morning instead of six days ago (half its shelf-life) in California.

According to BrightFarms, “The average item of food in the United States travels at least 1500 miles. Gasoline can account for up to half the value of a head lettuce or pound of tomatoes.”

BrightFarms reports that it has contracted with 10 grocery store chains and is close to signing with three more. McCaffrey’s Markets will host a greenhouse in either New Jersey or Pennsylvania. Brooklyn-based Gotham Greens—with consulting help from BrightFarms—began delivering produce to New York supermarkets in June 2011. And a demonstration-scale greenhouse will be constructed at the Whole Foods Market in Millburn, New Jersey.

Best 2011 live shows in the Twin Cities

Published Tuesday, 27 December 2011 1:20PM CST by in Media

0
Best 2011 live shows in the Twin Cities

After looking at the City Pages’ staff picks for best 2011 concerts in the Twin Cities, it’s clear that I’m on another planet entirely. The only shows they list that I wish I’d seen are (in order):


  1. Lucinda Williams at the Dakota, 20, 21, and 22 February
  2. Justin Townes Earle at First Avenue, 14 February
  3. tUnEyArDs at First Avenue, 12 November
  4. Wilco at the State Theater, 6-7 December
  5. Middle Brother at First Avenue, 26 March
  6. Merle Haggard and Kris Kristofferson at Mystic Lake Casino, 11 February
  7. St. Vincent at the Walker Art Center 2 October

I really wanted to make it to at least one of the Lucinda Williams shows but it was about a month before my valve job and I just wasn’t up to it. The other shows I really regret missing was Steve Earle and Allison Moorer at the Pantages Theater, 23 July and Spider John Koerner and Tony Glover at the Dakota, 7 August. There were others, but those are the big ones.

Without further comment, here are my picks for the best 2011 live shows in the Twin Cities:

  1. The Radiators “Farewell to Minnesota” at the Cabooze, 12, 13, and 14 May
  2. The Tedeschi Trucks Band at the Minnesota Zoo, 26 and 27 August
  3. David Hildalgo and Louie Perez at the Varsity Theater, 18 November
  4. Rickie Lee Jones at the Big Top Chautauqua, 30 July (Bayfield, WI; close enough)
  5. Bela Fleck & The Flecktones at the Minnesota Zoo, 3 August
  6. Dean Magraw’s Red Planet at the Artists’ Quarter, 10 December
  7. Dean Magraw with Bruce Kurnow and Michael Bissonette at the Aster Cafe, 27 October
  8. Dean Magraw with Bruce Kurnow and Michael Bissonette at the Black Dog Cafe, 5 July
  9. Pieta Brown at the Dakota, 30 January

Proper usage and accuracy is not partisan

Published Thursday, 22 December 2011 4:13PM CST by in Media

0
Proper usage and accuracy is not partisan

Bob Collins of Minnesota Public Radio (MPR) is one of my favorite corporate media reporters in the Twin Cities. He’s usually quite careful and articulate and generally has a point of view (as opposed to the view from nowhere). That’s why I was genuinely curious about his use of “fib” multiple times, in multiple forms in his “What did they know and when did they know it” piece this morning. After all, the head for the package of unrelated stories is “Credibility is early casualty in Koch probe.”

Collins’s usage of “fib” was in relation to Minnesota State Senator Geoff Michel‘s (R-District 41) comments to the press regarding the resignation of Minnesota State Senate Leader Amy Koch (R-District 19) over an “improper relationship” with a colleague.

Upon being asked when the four Minnesota State Senate leaders knew about Koch’s improper relationship, Michel told reporters—on the record—“the allegations about Koch’s behavior were first reported to them a few weeks ago.” That was not true, and Michel knew it. Tom Scheck and Catharine Richert, reporting for MPR, note Koch’s former chief-of-staff, Cullen Sheehan, revealed details of the improper relationship to the Minnesota State Senate leadership three months ago. “Three months ago, I became aware of a potential relationship between Sen. Koch and a staff person,” Sheehan told Scheck and Richert. “I then spoke to the staff person and he confirmed the relationship. We both then met with Sen. Koch and she confirmed the relationship. The next day I met with Sen. Koch to discuss the situation. I subsequently met with the Deputy Majority Leader” [Senator Geoff Michel]. Sheehan left employment at the Minnesota Senate in November, refused to identify the staff member, and refused to tell Scheck and Richert why he left the Minnesota Senate.

I was really curious why Collins chose to use “fib” to describe Michel’s outright lie to reporters asking what the leadership knew when. So I asked him, both in a comment on his piece, and in a tweet. Collins responded similarly on both Twitter and in a comment to his original piece. He finds “fib” a more interesting word. Fair enough. Except in his initial comment on his MPR blog, partially in response to another commenter, Collins writes, “Because everyone expects the word ‘lie’ when writing about politics. It has the same impact now as ‘Nazi.’ I don’t like writing words that go in one ear and out the other.”

Whoah, conflating “lie” with “Nazi” seemed way over the top to me, so I became even more curious. I looked up the definition of “fib” and according to the Oxford American English Dictionary, the word means “a lie, typically an unimportant one.” I referenced the definition in Twitter and in another comment on Collins’s article, asking if he was saying that what Senator Michel said was unimportant. Collins dodged the question in a subsequent comment on his article and told me in a tweet that I was “free to use whatever definition you wish.”

Wait. What?

Flex & release, Senator Hatch, flex & release

Published Wednesday, 21 December 2011 12:14PM CST by in Politics

0
Flex & release, Senator Hatch, flex & release

So, the US Republicans in both houses of Congress want to reduce the duration of unemployment benefits while imposing strict new qualifying requirements. Just as they adjourn without getting anything done this session.

US Senator Orrin Hatch (R-Utah)—the senior Republican on the Finance Committee—tells Robert Pear, writing for the New York Times, “I don’t see why you have to go more than 59 weeks. In fact, we need some incentives for people to get back to work. A lot of these people don’t want to work unless they get really high-paying jobs, and they’re not going to get them ever. So they just stay home and watch television. I don’t mean to malign people, but far too many are doing that.”

Well yes, Senator, you clearly did mean to malign people.

We need a national referendum to reduce congressional salaries to 10 percent less than the nation’s median income. That would be about US$26,000, Senator Hatch. Think of the 10 percent as an incentive. Then we’ll see who’s sitting around watching television. Fact is, there are no jobs—high-paying or otherwise.

The problem, Senator, is that you can no longer get any work done or even budge because so many of the one percenters have crawled up your ass and nested. Right out of Hieronymus Bosch’s The Garden of Earthly Delights.

The Garden of Earthly Delights by Hieronymus Bosch
The Garden of Earthly Delights by Hieronymus Bosch.

My top album picks for 2011

Published Wednesday, 21 December 2011 11:18AM CST by in Media

0
My top album picks for 2011

As if anyone cares, here’s my top albums list for 2011, without comment. I’m not sure the first five are in the right order; they’re all pretty much tied. Similarly, I’m not sure the last five are in the right order either. I do this mostly for me, so I can see how these selections stand up over the years. And yeah, there’s 18 because, well, there’s 18; so sue me.

  1. Tom Waits: Bad As Me
  2. Lucinda Williams: Blessed
  3. Tedeschi Trucks Band: Revelator
  4. Bela Fleck & The Flecktones: Rocket Science
  5. Pieta Brown: Mercury
  6. Ry Cooder: Pull Up Some Dust and Sit Down
  7. Gregg Allman: Low Country Blues
  8. Gillian Welch: The Harrow & The Harvest
  9. Wilco: The Whole Love
  10. The Civil Wars: Barton Hollow
  11. Jason Isbell & The 400 Unit: Here We Rest
  12. Pert Near Sandstone: Paradise Hop
  13. The Deep Dark Woods: Place I Left Behind
  14. Charlie Parr: Cheap Wine
  15. Hayes Carll: KMAG YOYO (& Other American Stories)
  16. Fleet Foxes: Helplessness Blues
  17. Dawes: Nothing Is Wrong
  18. Middle Brother: Middle Brother

Page 2 of 256 pages  < 1 2 3 4 >  Last ›