Who Will Own Minnesota’s Information Highways?

Date: 9 Jun 2005 | posted in: information, MuniNetworks | 0 Facebooktwitterredditmail
Consumer-Friendly Broadband Service Within Reach of Most Minnesotans; Municipalities Can Play Vital Role in Making Telecom Markets Competitive.

Current federal telecom policies are biased toward corporations at the expense of consumers.

Competitive broadband service and pricing is within reach of most Minnesotans if anti-competitive polices and practices are removed and municipal governments build broadband infrastructure, according to this report by the Institute for Local Self-Reliance.

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Resources Up in Flames: The Economic Pitfalls of Waste Incineration versus a Zero Waste Approach in the Global South

Date: 22 Apr 2004 | posted in: waste - anti-incineration, waste - zero waste, Waste to Wealth | 0 Facebooktwitterredditmail

by Brenda Platt, Institute for Local Self-Reliance for GAIA (Global Anti-Incinerator Alliance/Global Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives) Download the Press Release (PDF) Decision-makers in any community considering a waste incinerator will find Resources up in Flames essential reading. Pitfalls such as high capital costs, tonnage shortfalls, expensive pollution control equipment, and hampering least-cost options such as waste … Read More

Report: A Better Way to Get From Here to There – A Commentary on the Hydrogen Economy

Date: 5 Jan 2004 | posted in: Energy | 0 Facebooktwitterredditmail

In January 2004, we published this report by David Morris describing a promising domestic energy strategy that relies on biofuels and plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEV) as a solution moving the U.S. towards energy independence.The idea of a hydrogen economy has burst like a supernova over the energy policy landscape, mesmerizing us with its possibilities while blinding us to its weaknesses. Such a fierce spotlight on hydrogen is pushing more promising strategies into the shadows.

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Washington, DC

Date: 19 Dec 2003 | posted in: waste - deconstruction | 0 Facebooktwitterredditmail

2002-2003 In 2002, ILSR inaugurated its Washington, DC deconstruction training program at the Stanton Dwellings public housing complex, working closely with the DC Housing Authority and Just U Wait’N See CDC (JUWNS), a community development corporation serving the residents of the Stanton community. ILSR provided screening and training guidelines to JUWNS to facilitate the selection, interview, … Read More

10 Reasons Why Vermont’s Homegrown Economy Matters: And 50 Proven Ways to Revive It

Date: 1 Oct 2003 | posted in: Retail | 0 Facebooktwitterredditmail

This report, a collaboration between the Institute of Local Self-Reliance and The Preservation Trust of Vermont, outlines why locally owned businesses matter and provides practical ways to build a homegrown economy. Most strategies are applicable anywhere, not just Vermont.… Read More

The Economic Impact of Locally Owned Businesses vs. Chains: A Case Study in Midcoast Maine

Date: 1 Sep 2003 | posted in: Retail | 1 Facebooktwitterredditmail

Three times as much money stays in the local economy when you buy goods and services from locally owned businesses instead of large chain stores, according to this analysis, which tracked the revenue and expenditures of eight locally owned businesses in Midcoast Maine and compared their economic impact with that of a large big-box retailer. … Read More

Philadelphia Rowhouse Deconstruction Pilot Project

Date: 19 Jul 2003 | posted in: waste - deconstruction, Waste to Wealth | 0 Facebooktwitterredditmail

Summer 2003 ILSR conducted a Phase One deconstruction pilot project in cooperation with the City of Philadelphia Neighborhood Transformation Initiative (NTI) during the summer 2003. NTI is a multi-year strategy for eliminating blight ad revitalizing communities in Philadelphia. ILSR’s Jim Primdahl supervised the two City-chosen demolition contractors in the pilot project that resulted in the deconstruction … Read More

Roseburg, Oregon

Date: 1 Dec 2002 | posted in: waste - deconstruction | 0 Facebooktwitterredditmail

2002 ILSR helped the Umpqua County Community Development Corporation (UCCDC) prepare a successful application to HHS, providing funds to create 13 new jobs in deconstruction over three years. (Six low-income workers already have been trained and employed at this writing.) Once funds were awarded, we helped train UCCDC staff, primarily in business management and development to … Read More

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