Producer/Editor: Amy Browne
Award-winning artist & activist Robert Shetterly talks with Sandra Steingraber, one of the subjects of his “Americans Who Tell the Truth” portrait series. FMI: http://steingraber.com/ and www.americanswhotellthetruth.org
WERU 89.9 FM Blue Hill, Maine Local News and Public Affairs Archives
Audio archives of spoken word broadcasts from Community Radio WERU 89.9 FM Blue Hill (weru.org)
Producer/Editor: Amy Browne
Award-winning artist & activist Robert Shetterly talks with Sandra Steingraber, one of the subjects of his “Americans Who Tell the Truth” portrait series. FMI: http://steingraber.com/ and www.americanswhotellthetruth.org
Host: Andree Bella
Studio Engineer: Amy Browne
How the summer solstice is celebrated? What evidence exists that the sun was originally female? How did hte sun become male, and what is the cultural significance of this?
Guest: Rev Dr Anu Dudley, anu@umit.maine.edu
Call in show
Producer/Editor: Amy Browne
Interviewer: Robert Shetterly
Award-winning artist and activist Robert Shetterly continues his series of conversations with the subjects of his portrait series “Americans Who Tell the Truth” in this conversation with Jessalyn Radack of the Government Accountability Project, a whistle-blower protection agency. Radack talks about her own experiences as a government employee and whistle-blower, and about the upcoming espionage trial for former NSA staffer Thomas Drake.
FMI: http://www.whistleblower.org/ , www.americanswhotellthetruth.org
Producer/Host: Amy Browne
Continuing our coverage of yesterday’s work session on LD 1534, “An Act To Reform the Land Use and Planning Authority in the Unorganized Territories” which eliminates the Maine Land Use Regulation Commission, effective July 15, 2012. This bill as it is currently worded also establishes a “Land Use Planning in the Unorganized Territory Transition Advisory Board” to advise the Joint Standing Committee on Agriculture, Conservation and Forestry on matters relating to the transfer of authority over land use planning in the unorganized territory to the counties in which the land is located. The board is required to render its advice to the Joint Standing Committee on Agriculture, Conservation and Forestry by December 2, 2011. The board is dissolved July 15, 2012. At that point the counties would presumably take over the responsibilities now handled by LURC, though many at the public hearing expressed serious concerns about their ability to do so.
The Maine Land Use Regulation Commission (LURC or the Commission) was created by the Maine Legislature in 1971 to serve as the planning and zoning authority for the state’s townships, plantations and unorganized areas. LURC’s jurisdiction stretches over half the state, encompassing more than 10.4 million acres and the largest contiguous undeveloped area in the Northeast.
Producer/Host: Meaghan LaSala
Topics:
Segment1: Interview with Annie Sprinkle and Beth Stephens, about their art collaborations, upcoming performances in Maine, sex positivity, and their role in creating the ecosexual movement. What is sex positivity? What does it mean to be ecosexual? FMI: http://www.loveartlab.org/
Segment 2: Audio from a panel “Journalism and Democacy: Rebuilding Media for Our Communities,” from the National Conference for Media Reform. Is journalism finding new models in the age of the internet, as newspapers continue to fold? Is American journalism supporting democracy? NCMR website (for the full panel and more audio from the conference):
http://conference.freepress.net/
Producer/Host: Andree Bella
Guest: Rev. Dr. Anu Dudley
Producer/Host: Jim Campbell
Producer/Host: Jim Campbell