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In this episode, Aaron is joined by Philip Sutton, a Lecturer at Ohio State University. Philip teaches three classes, estimating construction, heavy construction, and the program's capstone course. These courses cover a wide range of topics to prepare students to join the workforce as leaders in their respective fields. Philip draws his knowledge from years of experience in the field, both directly in the field and in the office as an estimator. Ultimately he decided that he could better serve his community in the classroom teaching others not just to do the work, but how to be leaders on the job site. If you want more insight on how you can get ahead in the construction industry, this lesson is a freebie! If you have any questions or feedback, email the Dirt Talk crew at dirttalk@buildwitt.com. Stay Dirty!
Ian Dunlop (pictured) is the chair of the Australian Security Leaders Climate Group and leads listeners through a webinar during which they hear about the unfolding challenges of climate change. The webinar was entitled "A Nation at Risk". The Melbourne Age newspaper published an editorial today (August 8) pointing out that arrival at a position to tackle climate change will be "messy" - it says: "It's messy, but co-operation on climate is the only way forward". Other climate links are: "Can Kenya's youngest MP candidate step up the climate fight?"; "Grattan on Friday: Government win on climate legislation leaves opposition looking like a stranded asset"; "Scientists Say It's ‘Fatally Foolish' To Not Study Catastrophic Climate Outcomes"; "We're no rubber stamp on climate: Pocock, Lambie warn Labor on climate bill"; "Lest we forget Philip Sutton's Climate Emergency legacy: how we restore a safe climate"; "Why climate change hits some communities harder than others"; "China warns that its temperatures are rising faster than global average"; Enjoy "Music for a Warming World". --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/robert-mclean/message
Philip Sutton (pictured) is passionate about seeing us take action on climate change and so has devised a "Climate Rescue" project. As the co-author of "Climate Code Red", Philip has been something of a climate crusader for decades and played a significant part in helping establish the climate emergency project, an idea now adopted by many Local Governments throughout the world, including Melbourne's City of Darebin, which became to the first in the world to take that bold step. Philip has now gone public with the Climate Rescue idea and is looking for help, support and advice to advance the project. He can be contacted at philip.sutton@green-innovations.asn.au. During the interview, Philip mentioned the "Council and Community Action in the Climate Emergency" website. Enjoy "Music for a Warming World". Support the show: https://www.patreon.com/climateconversations
Quick Climate Links was meant to be a thing of the past by now as the plan was to keep it alive during COP26 in Glasgow, but stories about the climate continue to populate the media, in all its forms, and so it seems appropriate to keep it alive for the moment. Setting up an interview with one of the co-authors of Climate Code Red, Philip Sutton, and discuss his new project, "Climate Rescue", was an interesting moment as it almost became "the interview" and those few seconds are included in this episode. Other Quick Climate Links for today are: "Glencore launches public attack on Indigenous pair opposing NSW mining project"; "La Nina 2021 weather event declared for Australia's summer"; "B.C. floods: The province had been warned natural disasters would hit more often, and it was not prepared"; "Wet, windy and dangerous – La Nina settles in for Australian summer"; "Funding boost to power offshore wind farms in Victoria"; "Rick Steiner: Nembe oil spill needs immediate govt, industry response"; "BOM declares La Niña as eastern Australia prepares for another sodden end to the week"; "More will die on Mount Augustus if trails not closed in hot months, police officer tells climbing deaths inquest"; "Free E-Bikes for Everyone!"; "Artificial island on Georgia coast to provide nesting habitat for shorebirds"; "For Thanksgiving, some uplifting climate news"; "Woodside's Scarborough decision sparks Perth protest as CEO Meg O'Neill defends project"; "Marinus Link project likened to Snowy 2.0 in damning new report warning of 'dead-weight loss'"; "La Niña established in the tropical Pacific"; "La Nina declared"; "Flooding hits north-east NSW as three days of storms lash eastern Australia"; "Australia ‘primed for flooding': back-to-back La Niñas points to summer of wet weather perils"; "Truffle-eating marsupial on ‘brink of extinction'"; "Coal plants are closing faster than expected. Governments can keep the exit orderly"; "New Zealand's climate change regulation is messy and complex – here's how to improve it"; "Trudeau government's Speech from the Throne contains warning that ‘Earth is in danger"; "How National Net-Zero Targets Stack Up After the COP26 Climate Summit"; "4 Ways to Design Safe Streets for Cyclists"; "Going Electric: How Ride-hailing Drivers Can Help Cities Speed Up EV Use"; "Cop26 kept the world's 1.5C limit in reach – now we will steer it over the line"; "More Equal Cities Can Help Bring Global Climate Goals Within Reach"; "What We Can Learn About Climate Action from British Cities"; "‘Adapt or die' says Environment Agency in urgent report"; "ASOS and Centre for Sustainable Fashion launch circular design guidebook"; "What we know about climate change and inflation"; "Want to fight for climate action but feel daunted or powerless? Try this"; "As climate worsens, environmentalists also grapple with the mental toll of activism"; "The Resilient Activist"; "BOM declares La Nina event as east coast braces for rains, floods and cyclones"; "Cooking with gas: Woodside's $16b Scarborough affair splits sentiment"; "Woodside takes on a lot of risk as it bets big on its only option"; "Climate Emergency Fund". Enjoy "Music for a Warming World". Support the show: https://www.patreon.com/climateconversations
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Megan Smolenyak, the former Chief Family Historian for Ancestry.com, and Philip Sutton from New York Public Library's Milstein Division of U.S. History, Local History and Genealogy explain how to trace your family tree and get started on your own genealogy project.
BZE speaks to Philip Sutton, co-founder of Safe Climate Australia, talks about the new IPCC special report on the impacts of global warming of 1.5 °C . Philip co-authored the book "Climate Code Red", which puts forward a case for emergency action on climate change.
Beyond Zero speaks Philip Sutton, sustainability strategist for RSTI (Research and Strategy for Transition Initiation), who is drafting a model "No More Bad Investment" Act that could be adopted by the state and territory governments to drive the implementation of the BZE plans, to transition Australia to a zero emissions economy.
We speak with Philip Sutton a climate campaigner and long time environmentalist. In 2008 Philip co-authored the book ‘Climate Code Red: The Case for Emergency Action’. Since the release of the book Philip has continued to work on strategies and actions for achieving a safe climate. We chat with Philip about what a safe climate is and why climate change IS an animal issue.
This show was broadcast on Monday 30th January 2017 – Kate Auty, Philip Sutton, Luke TaylorThe annual National Sustainable Living Festival starts this week and runs from 4 Feb to 28 Feb – with the Big Weekend in Melbourne Friday-Sunday, 10-12 February.In the first interview Vivien talks to Luke Taylor about the Festival program, the film The Age of Consequences, communicating the climate emergency to leave nobody behind and many things besides.In the second interview Natalie speak with Philip Sutton from RSTI and Breakthrough on the 3 parts of the thinking behind the Climate Emergency Declaration, and how people can help it be taken on at every level to create a ripple wave across Australia – starting local, state and building up to federal.We finish with a recording of Kate Auty speaking on her perspective on local level theory of change.
Dissolving teaspoons, plants that sunbathe, stopping multiple sclerosis, the ARGO floats that monitor the oceans, global warming in Antarctica, and using computers to find Kiwis. Chris Smith and Simon Morton meet some of Wellington's finest researchers, including nanoscientist Nicola Gaston, plant scientist Jason Wargent, MS specialist Anne La Flamme, ocean scientist Philip Sutton, climate researcher Tim Naish and computer scientist Ed Abraham... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Dissolving teaspoons, plants that sunbathe, stopping multiple sclerosis, the ARGO floats that monitor the oceans, global warming in Antarctica, and using computers to find Kiwis. Chris Smith and Simon Morton meet some of Wellington's finest researchers, including nanoscientist Nicola Gaston, plant scientist Jason Wargent, MS specialist Anne La Flamme, ocean scientist Philip Sutton, climate researcher Tim Naish and computer scientist Ed Abraham...
Dissolving teaspoons, plants that sunbathe, stopping multiple sclerosis, the ARGO floats that monitor the oceans, global warming in Antarctica, and using computers to find Kiwis. Chris Smith and Simon Morton meet some of Wellington's finest researchers, including nanoscientist Nicola Gaston, plant scientist Jason Wargent, MS specialist Anne La Flamme, ocean scientist Philip Sutton, climate researcher Tim Naish and computer scientist Ed Abraham... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Philip Sutton is the Manager and Chief Strategist of RSTI (Research and Strategy for Transition Initiation), a non-profit organisation that engages in strategy development and engagement to catalyse the urgent initiation of a full scale transition to a su
Philip Sutton, co-author of Climate Code Red, will lead the discussion on: Implementing BZE plans at emergency speed Philip will be joined by Adrian Whitehead and Luke Taylor.
Political campaigning for the Victorian state election