Working Earth Day
While Earth Day 1990 focused primarily on individual action and responsibility, 1991 focused on collective action. The idea was to promote institutional responsibility and environmental justice. “Each one of us belongs to something — a school, workplace, or congregation,” wrote Own Byrd in the Jan–Feb Action newsletter. “As members of these institutions we can make a difference in how they treat people and the Earth. And we can make a greater difference, more quickly, if we work together. Then we can all be, as BAA’s slogan says,‘people for the environment.‘”
April 22, Earth Day 1991, was a Monday — a work day.
The following organizing packets were available from BAA for $5 each:
There was no official large-scale Earth Day event in 1991. Members of Bay Area Action held an Earth Day sunrise ceremony in the Palo Alto foothills.
On Earth Day 1991, California Governor Pete Wilson proposed a $628 million bond measure to fund the purchase of old-growth redwood forests and other lands threatened by deforestation and development. The initiative aimed to protect critical environmental areas, including forests and wetlands, and was planned for inclusion on the June 1992 ballot. It was widely welcomed by the environmental community including BAA.
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