Podcast appearances and mentions of mark dubois

American environmental activist

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Best podcasts about mark dubois

Latest podcast episodes about mark dubois

On Air
From Install to Sales: Why Consistency and Process Matter - Recorded at Lennox VisionTECH

On Air

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2024 48:19


In this episode of ON AIR, Dave and Joe sit down at Vision Tech 2024 with industry leaders Doug Smiley and Dave Nichols. They talk about what makes teams effective across installation, service, sales, and ownership, focusing on how adaptable processes can drive performance and boost customer satisfaction.  Award-winning installer Mark Dubois and Comfort Advisor of the Year Tom Schwartz share strategies for improving installations and sales. Tune in as we go back to the basics and explore ways to keep improving for team success.On Air is a Lennox Learning Solutions Production.

The CopDoc Podcast: Aiming for Excellence in Leadership
Charting the Course of Progressive Police Leadership in Portland, Maine with Chief Mark Dubois

The CopDoc Podcast: Aiming for Excellence in Leadership

Play Episode Play 60 sec Highlight Listen Later Jun 4, 2024 44:58 Transcription Available


Hey there! Send us a message. Who else should we be talking to? What topics are important? Use FanMail to connect! Let us know!Season 6 - Episode 130 Discover the progressive leadership approach that's reshaping the Portland, Maine Police Department.  We had a conversation with Chief Mark Dubois and talked about starting his career as a part-time dispatcher, rising through the ranks in several Massachusetts police agencies to become the head of Maine's largest police force.  Chief Dubois opens up about his educational pursuits and the mentors who've shaped his policing philosophy. In an era where the role of law enforcement is under intense scrutiny, Chief Dubois shares the complexities of modern policing, discussing the management of homeless encampments and the opioid crisis. Our chat tackles the real-world challenges and triumphs of leadership in times of adversity.  Dubois relates the critical need for cross-sector collaboration to address societal challenges effectively, and the delicate balance of improving community relations while navigating the evolving dynamics of public service.The chat with Portland's Mark Dubois will help your understanding of the forces that drive effective police leadership and the intricacies of departmental restructuring with this episode. We discuss staffing strategies, departmental restructuring, and the challenges of transitioning to a new leadership role in an unfamiliar city. You should gain valuable insights from Chief Dubois' experience, which highlights the importance of being both a pillar of strength for his team and a proactive force for change in the community. Don't miss this exploration into the experiences that have shaped a police chief's career, offering a unique vantage point on the road to progressive leadership in law enforcement.Contact us: copdoc.podcast@gmail.com Website: www.copdocpodcast.comIf you'd like to arrange for facilitated training, or consulting, or talk about steps you might take to improve your leadership and help in your quest for promotion, contact Steve at stephen.morreale@gmail.com

The River Radius Podcast
The Last River Lost

The River Radius Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2023 52:38


EPISODE SPONSORSOver It Raft CoversPromo Code:  riverradiusWholesumPromo Code:  riverradius GUESTSMark DuboisKevin WolfRESOURCESThe Stanislaus River ArchiveRestoring the Stanislaus RiverTim PalmerTim Palmer's book:  Stanislaus: the Struggle for a RiverFriends of the RiverEpisode Cover Photo by Tim Palmer from the Stanislaus River Archive 

The Landscaper's Guide to Modern Sales & Marketing
How To Use Real Estate To Retain Snow and Landscape Employees Year Round

The Landscaper's Guide to Modern Sales & Marketing

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2022 25:03


Have you had a hard time bridging the gap between snow events for your snow removal and landscape crews? Check out today's interview where I talk with Mark DuBois a landscaper who invested in real estate so he could keep his staff employed year round in between snow events, doing home repair on his properties, including:How real estate has opened a lot of opportunities, not only for himself, but his peopleHis retention strategyProfit-sharing pros and consFull transcript at: https://landscapersguide.com/podcast/More episodes, videos, show transcripts at https://landscapersguide.com/podcast/We were at the SIMA Snow Symposium and I recorded my talk Attract and Sell Your Hell Yes Customers. So if you do landscaping and snow removal and you'd like to get a copy of that recording, send me an email jack@ramblinjackson.com, just say symposium recording and I'll send you a recording!

Law and Legitimacy
LAL Live Part 2: Mark Dubois + Regulating the Practice of Law (NPS May 18)

Law and Legitimacy

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2022 46:51


Norm is joined in the second hour by a friend of the LAL podcast, attorney Mark Dubois.  Norm opens this hour discussing the obvious lack of focus monopolizing our political structure as it prioritizes proxy wars abroad while ignoring the very obvious shortcomings of the current administration at home.  How are lawyers regulated? Mark is the former Chief Discplinary Counsel for the State of Connecticut.  The first lawyer code came about in 1883, and Mark believes we are still getting it wrong.  What is the attorney-client privilege? How does it compare to the duty of confidentiality? Listen to gain an invaluable understanding of how knowledge assymetry in the practice of law functions to inform expectations of practitioners of law as it relates to regulating the legal profession.  Like, share, and subscribe! Norm is live on WICC600 AM every weekday from 12pm ET to 2pm ET. Stream Norm live at https://www.wicc600.com/#. Follow @PattisPodcast on Twitter. 

Law and Legitimacy
LAL Live Part 2: Mark Dubois + Regulating the Practice of Law (NPS May 18)

Law and Legitimacy

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2022 46:51


Norm is joined in the second hour by a friend of the LAL podcast, attorney Mark Dubois.  Norm opens this hour discussing the obvious lack of focus monopolizing our political structure as it prioritizes proxy wars abroad while ignoring the very obvious shortcomings of the current administration at home.  How are lawyers regulated? Mark is the former Chief Discplinary Counsel for the State of Connecticut.  The first lawyer code came about in 1883, and Mark believes we are still getting it wrong.  What is the attorney-client privilege? How does it compare to the duty of confidentiality? Listen to gain an invaluable understanding of how knowledge assymetry in the practice of law functions to inform expectations of practitioners of law as it relates to regulating the legal profession.  Like, share, and subscribe! Norm is live on WICC600 AM every weekday from 12pm ET to 2pm ET. Stream Norm live at https://www.wicc600.com/#. Follow @PattisPodcast on Twitter. 

Law and Legitimacy
LAL #065 — Alex Jones v. Select Committee to Investigate January 6

Law and Legitimacy

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2021 59:05


Today's episode is a constitutional deep dive into the uniquely American phenomenon that is the separation of powers.  As LAL listeners well know, I represent Alex Jones in a number of matters including in his recently filed lawsuit against the U.S. House of Representative's Select Committee to Investigate the January 6 Attack on the United States Capitol.  We begin with a foundational blueprint for conceptualizing the constitutional separation of powers and its aim for inefficiency as a matter of founding design. Pointedly, just because someone wants something doesn't mean they get it. And, indeed, some things, such as the Bill of Rights, are 'off limits' to the government.  We then explore the fundamental tension between natural law and a subjective construction of reality endemic to movements anchored in cultural marxism and/or identity politics, and thus how jurisprudence has become the battleground in a never-ending debate between what is and is not within the purview of government regulation. Our legislature wields the plenary power to conduct investigations. Pursuant to the Speech and Debate clause, Congressionally issued subpoenas are immune from the judicial oversight otherwise reserved for our Article III courts.  Query: If not comply, what is a private individual to do in the face of what reasonably appears to be an invalid exercise of the Congressional subpoena power? What did we see in the case of Steve Bannon? How might one contrast that with Mark Meadow's current ongoings?  While I find brilliance in the finer points of our separation of powers' construction, there are areas of extreme disappointment with respect to the J6 committee, including the media's treatment of it, its improper procedural foundations, and the obviousness of the pretext for its creation—impeachment of President Donald Trump by another means.  An improperly formed Congressional committee does not wield the aforementioned legislative immunity. And that is the true significance of the Alex Jones lawsuit: the right to be free from arbitrarily exercised power.  We close by discussing the little-known nuances of Congressional immunity, such as the power to overlook the judicially-created doctrine of attorney-client privilege. Keen listeners will recognize the hypothetical from our recent interview with Mark Dubois. Who will be the first lawyer to do federal time? I sense a demagogue in our midst.  Please like, share, subscribe, and rate us sixty-five stars. Join me and other fellow contrarians and free-thinkers on Patreon.  And follow us across our social media. Mike is a dopamine-addicted millennial. He is fueled by notifications.  Adam Schiff's book: "Midnight in Washington" Read my 2/14/21 blog post of suggestions to the J6 Committee. And tell Kevin Brien how much you dig the LAL sounds.  

Law and Legitimacy
LAL #064 — Mark Dubois, Esq. on Legal Ethics and Lawyer Discipline

Law and Legitimacy

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2021 66:20


The true test of Mike's genius? Convincing you that our best performing episode #063 with Mark Richards pales in comparison to my interview here with Mark Dubois.  Branding ethics as "heady" or "engaging" is indeed a tough task. But what former Chief Disciplinary Officer have you ever heard discuss the realistic prospects of psilocybin or invite your favorite criminal defense and civil rights attorney to an LSD trip in his post-practice life? I didn't think so. But what else would you expect from us at this point? Mark "the Accidental Lawyer" Dubois is a dear friend and one of the greats in Connecticut Bar history and the only person I've ever heard of to have retired six (6) times in one life.  Like various of the other lawyers we've hosted on Law and Legitimacy, Mark thinks about law and has performed within the law in unique ways. He is the only lawyer we have hosted, however, to have washed dishes under the supervision of Justice Clarence Thomas while the two matriculated as undergrads at The College of the Holy Cross.  So there—LSD, retirements aplenty, sudsy early dealings with a Supreme Court Justice. "Heady" and "engaging" are mere table stakes for legal ethics and lawyer discipline.  In this interview, you'll learn about Mark's rather unique path through the field that culminated with his role as the Connecticut Supreme Court's very first Chief Disciplinary Officer. You'll also hear about Mark's prolific legal career prior thereto, which spanned the domains of civil litigation, personal injury, regulatory and administrative law, commercial and residential real estate, and more.  And you'll be gripped as I was to learn about the true historical origin of model ethics code in America, the difference between Harvard and Columbia's respective philosophical approaches to teaching the law, and how what Mark regards as the great "demoralization" in the legal field created a robust demand for new methods in lawyer discipline.  Of course, no episode would be complete without a Norm Pattis hypothetical or two. Does Congressional Privilege entitle Congress to hold me in contempt if I refuse to break attorney-client privilege at its command? Will Connecticut's new law attempting to regulate lawyer speech be the nail in my socially opprobrious coffin? This is Mark Dubois. Listen. Rate. Share. And share again. We love you for that.  Become a patron as I create a space for the free thinkers, contrarians, and the unafraid. Find us on social media. Follow us. Share our stuff. Talk to us in the comments. We love you for that, too.  You can find our producer, Michael Boyer, on Twitter and Instagram @michaelboyer_. And you can find the guy who created the LAL sound here.   

The Bewilderness Podcast
Lights On: Finding the Through Line with Mark Dubois

The Bewilderness Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2021 106:14


In this episode I sat down with the founder of Friends of the River, Mark Dubois. Mark's love affair with rivers begin on the Stanislaus in the early 70's. When it's existence was threatened by the construction of a damn Mark chained himself to a rock in the river valley in protest. Since then Mark has dedicated his life to the preservation of wild rivers. Join us for a truly enlightening conversation around following our life's purpose in troubling times. 

Water Stories
If A River Could Speak - Mark Dubois

Water Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2021 11:03


Can a River's transmission be given words? Lessons from an extinguished river… Mark Dubois expresses how a condemned river became his life's most profound teacher. The depth of the river's transmission still eludes verbal translation, even decades later. The loss of this sacred place set him on a path exploring how to support and catalyse humanity's Great Global Emergence, re-membering our connectedness and operating from love.

lessons speak mark dubois
The Kitchen Sisters Present
169—Cry Me A River

The Kitchen Sisters Present

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2021 33:11


Today we're thinking about Pack Creek Ranch in southern Utah and an incredible archive of material, gathered by river guide and environmental activist Ken Sleight, that was consumed by fire in early June, 2021. The archive held over 50 years of photographs, writings, and correspondence chronicling Ken Sleight's years of guiding on the Colorado River, his fight to stop the damming of Glen Canyon and the filling of Lake Powell in the 1950s and 60s, and his close friendship with Edward Abbey, author of The Monkey Wrench gang. Ken is the inspiration for Abbey's character Seldom Seen Smith. In honor of Ken Sleight and all who are out there working to save our planet we share again “Cry me a River” – the dramatic stories of three pioneering river activists—Ken Sleight, Katie Lee, and Mark Dubois and the damming of wild rivers in the west. Katie Lee, born in 1917, a former Hollywood starlet, ran the Colorado River through Glen Canyon long before it was dammed, and in 1955 was the 175th person to run the Grand Canyon. An outspoken conservationist, singer and writer, she spent her life fighting for rivers. Mark Dubois, co-founder of Friends of the River, Earth Day and International Rivers Network, began as a river guide who opened up rafting trips to disabled people in the 1970s. Dubois protested the damming and flooding of the Stanislaus River by hiding himself in the river canyon and chaining himself to a rock as the water rose in 1979. We thank producer, river activist and “Keeper,” Martha Ham for her inspiration, her work on this story, and for chronicling Ken Sleight's life and world on the river. This piece is part of Stories from the Heart of the Land, a series featuring intimate stories from around the world about the human connection to land and landscape, produced by Atlantic Public media and supported by The Nature Conservancy. Special thanks to Jay Allison and Emily Botein.

Torsion Talk Podcast
Torsion Talk IDA Expo 2020 Season 2 Episode 10 Jamison & Mark Dubois

Torsion Talk Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2020 34:27


Ryan gets schooled on how to say "Dubois" and interviews Jamison & Mark. Mark just started working for Jamison and they talk about how the company got where they are today and how they acquired talent like Mark Dubois. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/torsion-talk/message

A Lott Of Help with James Lott Jr
Live From Oakland with Keller Williams' Mark DuBois

A Lott Of Help with James Lott Jr

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2019 31:03


Host James Lott Jr sits down LIVE with Keller Williams Oakland's Mark Dubois. Former Army and AIr Force Captain, Mark is brokering real estate in the Oakland California area. Great discussion on the the market and how to help buyers and sellers. teamdubois.com

Law Talk
Law Talk: Lawyer/ Client Issues (10/19/19)

Law Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2019 39:46


Atty. Mark Dubois, former Chief Disciplinary Counsel for the State of Connecticut Judicial Branch (he prosecuted complaints against lawyers) and currently Professor at the University of Connecticut School of Law, talked about a whole slew of lawyer-client issues, hoping to provide helpful info to the lay people in the audience.  Topics included:  how lawyers get paid (and how you as a client can save money on legal fees); the purpose of “retainers;” client confidentiality and attorney-client privilege, and related matters.  Listener calls included questions about getting a Driving Under the Influence conviction pardoned

We Are Rivers
Episode 23 - From the Stanislaus to the Klamath: Speaking up for Free-flowing Rivers

We Are Rivers

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2019 39:59


In 1979, Mark Dubois chained himself to a boulder to protest filling of the reservoir behind the New Melones Dam that would drown California’s Stanislaus River. In episode 23 of the We Are Rivers podcast, listen to Mark share his story and lessons on saving beloved places. We also hear from Craig Tucker on the Klamath River, which promises to be one of the most significant dam removal and river restoration projects the world has seen. Photo Credit: Klamath River, Josh Miller

Dancing with Words, Dancing with Wisdom
Dancing with Words, Dancing with Wisdom (47) Mark Dubois

Dancing with Words, Dancing with Wisdom

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2019 58:00


Dr. Janet Smith Warfield interviews Mark Dubois, a lifelong student of rivers and proponent of Love’s Great Emergence, who reminds and inspires humanity of the magnitude of who we truly are, our interconnectedness, and our opportunity at this historic time.

love wisdom dancing mark dubois janet smith warfield
Travel With Meaning
Ep 15: Richard Bangs

Travel With Meaning

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2019 55:53


Richard Bangs is co-founder and Chief Adventure Officer of  http://www.Steller.co   Richard Bangs has been a pioneer in travel, digital media, e-commerce, and other frontiers.   In the early 90s Richard produced the first internet travel site http://www.mtsobek.com, the first travel CD ROM (The Adventure Disc), and the first virtual expeditions http://www.terra-quest.com.   He was founder and editor-in-chief of Mungo Park, a pioneering Microsoft travel publishing effort. He also founded www.terra-quest.com. He was part of the founding executive team of Expedia.com (www.expedia.com), and served as its Editor-at-Large. He was creator and publisher of Expedia Travels Magazine (published in partnership with Ziff-Davis), and executive producer of Expedia Radio, and founder and executive director of Expedia Cafes. He also served as president of Outward Bound; Founded Well-Traveled.com for Slate, and was founding editor and executive producer of Great Escapes, another Microsoft Travel initiative (www.greatescapes.msnbc.com). He also ran and founded First and Best for MSN, and founded Sobek Expeditions, which in the early 1990s merged with Mountain Travel to become Mountain Travel Sobek (www.mtsobek.com).   Richard Bangs has oft been called the father of modern adventure travel, and the pioneer in travel that makes a difference, travel with a purpose. He has spent 30 years as an explorer and communicator, and along the way led first descents of 35 rivers around the globe, including the Yangtze in China and the Zambezi in Southern Africa. He recently co-directed the IMAX Film, Mystery of the Nile, and co-authored the Putnam book of the same name. His recent book, The Lost River: A Memoir of Life, Death and the Transformation of Wild Water, won the National Outdoor Book Award in the literature category, and the Lowell Thomas Award for best book.   Richard has published more than 1000 magazine articles, 19 books, produced a score of documentaries and several CD-ROMs; and has lectured at the Smithsonian, the National Geographic Society, the Explorers Club and many other notable venues. He writes a semi-regular feature with the NYTimes. Richard served as executive producer of Richard Bangs Adventures on Yahoo.   He executive produced and hosted the Emmy-winning PBS series, Richard Bangs’ Adventures with Purpose (www.adventureswithpurpose.tv), and his companion book, Adventures with Purpose, won the 2007 best book award from NATJA. His latest books are Quest for the Sublime (2008), and Quest for the Kashah (2009).   Richard won the Mark Dubois lifetime achievement conservation award in 2007.   Richard won the CINE Golden Eagle Award in 2008 for the special, Quest for Kaitiakitanga, and six Tele Awards for Quest for the Nile, Quest for the Sublime, and Quest for the Kasbah. Quest for Kaitiakitanga was nominated for an Environmental Media Award (“The Green Oscars”) for best documentary, and won the annual Platinum Award from HSMAI (Hospitality Sales & Marketing Association International). Richard’s film Quest for the Viking Spirit won the 2009 Gold Lowell Thomas award for best documentary; and the same award for 2010 for the India show. Also, the series won two Emmys in 2010 in the History/Culture categories.   In 2011 Richard won the Lowell Thomas Travel Journalism Gold Award for Hong Kong: Quest for the Dragon—2011; the 2011 CINE Golden Eagle Award for Greece: Quest for the Gods; and two Telly Awards for Hong Kong: Quest for the Dragon.   Richard’s show Quest for Harmony won the Gold in the Destination Marketing Category of the 2012 Travel Weekly Magellan Awards, as well as two Bronze Telly Awards, and the 2012 Lowell Thomas Award. His special, Richard Bangs’s South America: Quest for Wonder, won two Telly Awards for 2013; and the Cine Golden Eagle for 2013.   Richard Bangs’ Quests for PBS     He is co-founder of www.steller.co, now the world’s largest travel storytelling platform and app.   www.richardbangs.com www.adventureswithpurpose.tv www.mtsobek.com www.whitenilemedia.net

The Kitchen Sisters Present
96 - Cry Me a River — Keepers of the Environment

The Kitchen Sisters Present

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2018 33:03


The dramatic stories of three pioneering “Keepers” and environmental activists—Ken Sleight, Katie Lee, and Mark Dubois and the damming of wild rivers in the west. Ken Sleight is a long time river and pack guide and activist in southern Utah who fought the damming of Glen Canyon and filling of Lake Powell from 1956-1966. An inspiration for Edward Abbey’s, Monkey Wrench Gang, Sleight is currently working on the campaign to remove Glen Canyon Dam. Katie Lee, born in 1917, a former Hollywood starlet, ran the Colorado River through Glen Canyon long before it was dammed, and in 1955 was the 175th person to run the Grand Canyon. An outspoken conservationist, singer and writer, she spent her life fighting for rivers. Mark Dubois, co-founder of Friends of the River, Earth Day and International Rivers Network, began as a river guide who opened up rafting trips to disabled people in the 1970s. Dubois protested the damming and flooding of the Stanislaus River by hiding himself in the river canyon and chaining himself to a rock as the water rose in 1979.

Law Talk
Law Talk 2-3-18

Law Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2018 54:44


Mark Dubois, one of Connecticut’s leading experts on legal ethics and lawyer malpractice, joined John to talk about legal fees, establishing, maintaining, and salvaging a successful client – attorney relationship (from both the client’s and the lawyer’s perspective), how to resolve disputes, and how the lawyer discipline process works.

The Kitchen Sisters Present
6 – Cry Me A River: A story of three pioneering river activists and the damming of wild rivers in the west

The Kitchen Sisters Present

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2014 32:23


The story of three pioneering river activists and the damming of wild rivers in the west. Ken Sleight, now in his late 80s, is a long time river and pack guide in southern Utah who fought the damming of Glen Canyon and filling of Lake Powell. The inspiration for Ed Abbey’s character Seldom Seen Smith in his book The Monkey Wrench Gang, Sleight is currently working on the campaign to remove Glen Canyon dam. Katie Lee, born 1919, a former Hollywood starlet, ran the Colorado through Glen Canyon long before it was dammed and in 1955 was the 175th person to run the Grand Canyon. An outspoken conservationist, singer and writer, she has spent her life fighting for rivers. Mark Dubois, co-founder of Friends of the River, Earth Day and International Rivers Network, began as a river guide who opened up rafting trips to disabled people in the 1970s. Dubois protested the damming and flooding of the Stanislaus River by chaining himself to a rock in the river as the water rose.