Events and Workshops

Fix-It Fair

Wednesday, November 20
3 - 6 pm at Lacey MakerSpace

Saint Martin's University Campus, Zaverl Hall, Baran Drive SE

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Fix-it Fair Flyer 2024

Join us for a community-powered event promoting sustainable living through repair and reuse. Bring up to 2 items in need of minor repairs, and our dedicated volunteers will help you extend their life rather than tossing them away—saving you money and reducing environmental waste! This is a chance to resist planned obsolescence and embrace community resources to sustain your lifestyle in an eco-friendly way. 

Possible Repairs May Include: clothing & fabric repairs, tool sharpening, ceramic fixes, bicycle adjustments, light woodwork, and small appliance repairs. (Based on volunteer availability)

Hosted by Thurston County & Lacey MakerSpace, with partnerships in Evergreen's CCAS and Student Bikeshop Co-Op. 

Sign up online at ThurstonSolidWaste.org/FixIt or call (360) 867-2491 for more information.

Fish War Poster

Film Screening & panel
Fish War (80 mins)

Monday, November 18
3 - 5:30 pm at The House of Welcome

This event is free and open to the public. Join us for a film screening of “Fish War” followed by a panel discussion with key speakers.

The documentary, produced by Northwest Treaty Tribes and the Northwest Indian Fisheries Commission, highlights Indigenous activism, treaty rights, and climate action, with a focus on Washington’s tribes and the decades-long struggle for fishing rights.

The screening coincides with Native American Heritage Month. Co-hosted by Evergreen’s CELTC, CCAS, The House of Welcome, and Tribal Relations. Funded by Evergreen’s Clean Energy Committee.

When the state of Washington started arresting indigenous tribal fishers, it was a declaration of war. Scores of legal battles culminated in a landmark Supreme Court case that was meant to put an end to the violent Fish Wars. Fifty years later, the fight for salmon continues.

Reocurring Events

Climate Cafe

Weeks 1 - 3
Wednesdays, 1 - 3 pm 
Red Square
(CAB if Rain)

Weeks 4 - 10 
Wednesdays 4 - 5 pm 
SEM2 E2105

Hosted weekly, come grab a cup of coffee, tea, or cocoa and either sit and sip at the SustainabiliTEA table to socialize, chat about projects going on campus, events in the area, or grab a spot in the quiet corner Nook to decompress. Read, listen to jams, or mindfully zone out with some mindfulness coloring sheets. We also have some eco-board games on hand. 

All are welcome to attend! Weeks 4 and onward, we'll also be screening some mini-films and videos to explore various topics (such as from Can It Save the Planet by NowThisEarth)! On occasion we'll have themed topics and activities for folx to engage in on the side.

Sustainability Roundtable

Week 6
Monday, 3:30 - 5 pm
SEM2 E2105*

Join the Sustainability Roundtable, a quarterly gathering of campus leaders, students, and staff committed to driving sustainability initiatives across Evergreen. This roundtable is an open forum for sharing updates, resources, and challenges from various stakeholder groups involved in food and agriculture, energy infrastructure, political and climate action, supply chain management, indigenous practices, and more. 

Please RSVP to let us know you're attending, and to provide a brief overview of the project or initiative you’d like to share. *Hybrid options are available for Tacoma attendees upon request

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Panelists speaking on climate justice

Climate Lecture Series

Weeks 3 and 7, Quarterly
Wednesdays, 11:30 am
Communications Building, Recital Hall 107

Guest lecturers and specialists are brought to campus to speak on a variety of topics for academic programs and the general public. Lectures occur Week 3 and Week 7 of each quarter on Wednesday at 11:30 am, Recital Hall.

Join the Climate Lecture Live on YouTube

October 16 | Dr. Alida Cantor

Dr. Alida Cantor is an Assistant Professor of Geography at Portland State University exploring the intersection of geography, policy, and community development in the context of water and land stewardship. This lecture will offer insights into how thoughtful land use and resource management can contribute to broader environmental and community well-being.

November 13 | Climate Action in Local Government

  • Dr. Pamela Braff, Climate Program Manager, City of Olympia
  • Alyssa Jones-Wood, Sustainability Coordinator, City of Tumwater
  • Linsey Fields, Climate and Sustainability Coordinator, City of Lacey
  • Rebecca Harvey, Climate Mitigation Senior Program Manager, Thurston County Government 

Local governments have an important role to play in climate mitigation and adaptation, and have been able to push forward with innovative and place-based action. This panel invites local government officials, working to advance climate action in Thurston County, to share information about their work, challenges and opportunities. We will hold a moderated panel discussion with time for questions. Learn how to get involved in local climate action, policy, and climate focused careers. 

 

Local Events

View a database of local upcoming events with your Evergreen account! We compile notes on events with our off-campus partners to curate a centralized list of sustainability and climate speakers, action days, and celebrations. Searchable by topic, remote/in-person, and more!

Local Climate & Sustainability Events (MS Lists)

Past Events
Previous Topics & Speakers

2024

Winter and Spring
TitleSpeakerTopicDate
Unmaking the Bomb: Nuclear Waste and the Politics of Cleanup

Shannon Cram & Britany Kee' ya aa. Eichman-Lindley

 

Associate Professor, UW-Bothell 

This talk asks a deceptively simple question: "what does it mean to clean up nuclear waste?" In particular, Shannon Cram and Britany Kee' ya aa. Eichman-Lindley consider the politics of waste, exposure, and cleanup at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation, a former weapons complex in southeastern Washington. Once the heart of American plutonium production, Hanford is now engaged in the nation’s largest environmental remediation effort, managing toxic materials that will long outlast their regulatory containers. Cram and Eichman-Lindley examine cleanup’s administrative frames and the stories that exceed them. They detail the practical challenges that come with environmental decision-making and discuss how to engage productively in both critique and action.January 24, 2024
Indigenous Legalities, Pipeline Viscosities: Colonial Extractivism and Wet'suwet'en Resistance

Tyler McCreary

 

Associate Professor, Florida State University

This talk examines the politics of pipelines on unceded Wet’suwet’en territories in Northern British Columbia, Canada. Tyler McCreary offers historical context for the unfolding relationship between Indigenous peoples and colonialism and explores pipeline regulatory review processes. He explores corporate efforts to reconcile Indigeneity with pipeline development, alongside fundamental and enduring conflicts over territory and jurisdiction. Throughout, McCreary demonstrates how the cyclical and ongoing movements between resistance and reconciliation.February 21, 2024
The Extinction Paradox

Rosemary Collard
Associate Professor, Simon Fraser University

 

&

 

Jess Dempsey
Associate Professor, University of British Columbia 

Domestic and international laws and agreements to protect wildlife from extinction have proliferated over the past half-century. But over the same period, wild animal abundance has nosedived. What explains this extinction paradox – why are environmental policies failing to turn the tide? The clearest answer is that the policies are not slowing the extractive land-use change that causes biodiversity loss. Our research investigates what holds extraction in place. To do so, we ask two questions. The first is a (classic academic) three-parter: who benefits from extraction; who bears the costs; and what systems of power uphold these geographical distributions? Second, why does the state approve extraction that harms endangered species the state is committed to protect? We draw two main conclusions: the state is at the centre of the extinction paradox, and biodiversity loss’s root drivers are entangled with racial, colonial and patriarchal systems of power. April 24, 2024
Washington Center Visiting Scholar: Sustainable Design, Systems Thinking, and Regenerative Practices

Rachel Beth Egenhoefer

 

Design Professor of University of San Francisco, Editor of The Routledge Handbook of Sustainable Design

Throughout her visit, Rachel will be conducting a variety of workshops focused on sustainable design, systems thinking, and regenerative practices. Each session aims to empower personal and community transformation towards a more sustainable and replenishing world. Don't miss this opportunity to engage with innovative ideas and take part in shaping a regenerative future.April 24 - 25, 2024
Making Climate Justice and Environmental Justice Real: Bold Ideas, Subversive Action, and Transformative Community Building

David Pellow

 

Professor of Environmental Studies and Director, Global Environmental Justice Project, University of California, Santa Barbara

This presentation dives into the intricate worlds of environmental and climate justice within the academic realm and grassroots movements across the U.S. and globally. David N. Pellow brings his firsthand experiences from various community struggles against environmental hazards to highlight the dynamic interplay between activism and academia. The talk will explore the effective strategies and hopeful reflections from battles against environmental injustices in communities of color, ranging from toxic waste facilities to the broader impacts of climate change.May 15, 2024

2023

Winter, Spring, Summer and Fall
TitleTopicDateTimeLocation
Climate Lecture SeriesProfessor Sarah Ray will be delivering a talk focused on her newest book, A Field Guide to Climate Anxiety. We will also be having a student-centered workshop in which Professor Ray will be available for further discussion. January 25, 202311:30am - 1pmPurce Hall 1
Climate Lecture SeriesProfessor Kari Norgaard and Ron Reed will be delivering a talk that integrates work on climate emotions, denial and Indigenous climate justice building their longtime collaborative work.  February 22, 202311:30am - 1pmPurce Hall 1
Geographic Indigenous FuturesDr. Deondre Smiles seeks to briefly explore the ways in which Geography as a discipline can make a break with our colonial past as we look to the future, embracing Indigenous environmental and geographic epistemologies in pursuit of what Indigenous scholars such as Leanne Betasamosake Simpson (2017) describe as radical, resurgent Indigenous politics connected to land and environment, in an era of climate crisis.April 19, 20231 - 2:15pmPurce Hall 1
Career PanelExplore Green work in the Professional WorldMay 5, 20231 - 3pm 
Climate Coloniality: Global to Local Challenges and Potential Pathways ForwardJoshua Long and Jennifer L. Rice examine the intersections of settler colonization and the climate crisis. We discuss the historical legacies of colonization and show how these have influenced our current global system, with an emphasis on environmental and climate harms. We consider how climate coloniality plays out in the more mundane and everyday aspects of urban life. We examine political commitments that might begin to reject climate coloniality in favor of more transformative climate justice.May 12, 202312 noonSem II C 1107

Industrial Chemicals and the Problem of Too Much Food

 

Adam Romero
Associate Professor, UW-Bothell

After WWII, US agricultural output exploded, due in large part to the massive influx of industrial chemicals like pesticides and fertilizers. The consumption of farm products, however, did not keep pace and immense surpluses quickly accrued. This talk explores the role that credit played in the creation of an agricultural system of high chemical input use and chronic surplus production. It examines how the expansion of public and private credit along with the creation of new financial technologies gave farmers the ability to pay for more and more chemicals despite falling crop prices caused by too much food.October 11, 2023  
Facing the Climate: Turning Anxiety into ActionAs a part of the Olympia campus annual Return to Evergreen, join us for a captivating dialogue and workshop, where together we’ll delve into the heart of Climate Anxiety and transform it into a force for positive change. This session features a diverse lineup of esteemed Evergreen alumni, representing a spectrum of sectors from private to public, who have not just asked the question "what can I do about it?" but have taken tangible steps to make a difference. Turn Climate Anxiety into Climate Action! Together, we forge a sustainable future.October 14, 202310:30 - 11:45 amPurce Hall

Environmental Histories and Geographies of Public Recreation on Private Industrial Forests in the US South and Pacific Northwest

 

Kelly Kay
Associate Professor, University of California, Los Angeles

Since the 1990s, we have seen a major shift in who owns private industrial timberland in most forest-reliant communities in the United States, with formerly vertically integrated companies restructuring and making vast quantities of land available for purchase by institutional investors like pension funds and university endowments. One impact of this change has been that the norms of access for community members have shifted—with many communities experiencing the rise of gated forest roads, new paid permit systems, and increasingly expensive leases for hunting. In this presentation, I will draw extensively from archival materials collected from the Forest History Society in Durham, NC and the University of Washington’s special collections to trace how public recreation on private forestland has shifted. This material will be supplemented with interviews conducted in rural Oregon and Georgia to show how the changing nature of recreational access has impacted those who live, work, and play in the woods.November 8, 2023  

2022

Spring, Summer and Fall
TitleTopicDateTimeLocation
Climate Justice Teach-inEngage with Evergreen faculty and local climate leaders on important climate topics as a part of the Worldwide Climate Justice Teach-In. There will be two panel sessions followed by an interactive climate simulation game.March 30th, 20222-5:30 pm 
Climate, Sustainability, and Entrepreneurship Lunchtime Session #1Finding your way through Evergreen's curricular opportunities for climate and sustainability actionApril 15th, 202212-1 pm 
Climate, Sustainability, and Entrepreneurship Lunchtime Session #2Alternative business structures for sustainability- social enterprises, cooperatives, and beyond April 29th, 202212-1 pm 
Climate, Sustainability, and Entrepreneurship Lunchtime Session #3Sustainability and The Cooperative Ecosystem May 13th, 202212-1 pm 
Climate, Sustainability, and Entrepreneurship Lunchtime Session #4Green Climate Finance, Debt and ReparationsMay 27th, 202212-1 pm 
Climate, Sustainability, and Entrepreneurship Lunchtime Session #5Building a solidarity economyJune 3rd, 202212-1 pm 
Climate Lecture SeriesProfessor Jennifer Atkinson will deliver a talk entitled "Beyond Climate Despair: Reclaiming Hope in a Warming World." (Lecture Zoom Recording)October 12th, 202211:30am-1:00pm 
Food Justice and Climate Change SymposiumThe Political Economy,Global Studies & Environmental Justice (PEGSEJ)and the Food and Agriculture Paths of Study are collaborating with many partners on a two-day symposium that uses as a central theme Arundhati Roy’s phrase, “The Pandemic as Portal" as a lens to analyze contemporary political economy with a focus on the food system. Symposium Flier (PDF)October 19-20th, 2022All day 
Native Cases ConferenceClimate-focused conference focused on Native Nations and Indigenous climate leadership and education. Register by completing this form.  November 8-9th, 2022All day (9 am-5 pm)Little Creek Casino and Resort