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R e c y c l e r e v e r e n d l e a d s f i g h t f o r E a r t h By SIOBHAN ATKEY Special to The Advocate INNISFAIL — A local minister is preaching the gospel of saving the planet. Anglican pastor Rev. Michael Ston-house spices his Sunday sermons with messages about taking care of the Earth. " One of the first commandments by God is that we are here to care for the Earth. That's basically our job description," Rev. Stonhouse said. And Rev. Stonhouse practices what he preaches. He is co- chairman of the town's new environmental group — the Green Team. For 18 months he has worked with Concerned Citizens of Pine Lake in their efforts to find an alternative to a proposed regional landfill. And Rev. Stonhouse was an active contributor to Innisfail's 1990 toxic roundup, which had a threefold increase in participation last year. He has completed Alberta Special Waste Management Corp.' s Our Backyard study sessions and now sets up workshops for interested local groups. An extensive library of environmental books, magazines and clippings fill his office. He came by his environmental concern naturally, growing up on the family farm near Pine Lake that he and his brother took over two years ago, and in Southern Alberta. " I don't think it's possible to be a farmer and not have an appreciation for the environment," he says. As a boy he searched for fossils near Medicine Hat, where he spent the latter half of his childhood, and hiked and camped at Waterton. These early experiences helped shape Rev. Stonhouse spiritually. He remembers, as an 11 year old, the " nauseating side effects" that lasted for days brought on by inhaling toxic fumes leaked by a transport truck he and his family followed on the highway. Years later he witnessed how a mild chemical poisoning caused a series of physical symptoms. The victim was a farmer who had completed the task of spraying his crop. " I couldn't help wondering that if it had that impact on him, what were the chemicals doing to the rest of the family, the soil?" Rev. Stonhouse says he questions " the delayed impact of technology. " We know now about the effects . . . the atomic bomb. But it took years later to see the cumulative effect," he contends. " The posing question is how much else has an cumulative effect? We have no idea what we are doing." With technological revolution came rampant consumerism, waste and saturated agriculture markets, he says. " The question is, is there such a thing as unlimited growth? Unlimited growth promotes ( exploitation). It causes us to treat the soil as a commodity." The type of waste Rev. Stonhouse saw at the Elnora dump years ago causes great : oncern. " I was disgusted, not only with the garbage, but with the waste. There were so - nany things that could have been recy- : led. I knew we had to look for alternates." That means making " the local people REV. MICHAEL STONHOUSE AND SON PHILIP, 3, OF INNISFAIL . sort pressed tin cans destined ( or recycling Photo by JOHN BICKNELL part of the solutions, involving them in the decision making." And he has seen this ideal achieved. Apart from the prescribed commitments of his chosen professions — nine years as a reverend and three as a social worker — he has dealt with the public extensively through a multitude of volunteer positions. Recently he wrote a play for the Ten Days for World Development committee on the farm debt crisis. He has worked with elderly, teenagers and women's groups and addressed issues relating to them. The common thread is his humanitarian concern. Becoming involved in the environment was a natural progression. " Colleen ( his wife) and I are both people people. If they are hurting, we are hurting. Our concerns for the environment is an extension of that. On one hand, I recognize the human ability of getting ourselves in a mess. On the other, we have the ability to rise above it with a little) help from the Boss ( Lord)." At the local level there are many work able solutions, he insists. In a notebook hel has them neatly identified, from recycling] programs to town policy. For the ideal regional landfill, he sug-| gests safeguards like: in site and perimeter monitoring, plastic line, a local monitoring group and an emergency response number, full consultation and approval of] local citizens. " I'd like to see an environment agenda — a common vision of where we would like to be in five or 10 years. It starts with living it, practicing at home, being model," says the father of three. " Recycling and composting are the easy things. The bigger issues will mean a change in lifestyle." It may be a tall order, but Rev. Stonhouse says he is an eternal optimist. Siobhan Atkey is a freelance Inniziail writer.
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Pine Lake History - 1990-1999 |
Subject | AWI: Pine Lake Branch |
Description | Branch History |
Language | en |
Format | application/pdf |
Type | text |
Source | Alberta Women's Institutes |
Identifier | awi0811091 |
Date | 2007 |
Collection | Alberta Women's Institutes - Collective Memory |
Repository | AU Digital Library |
Copyright | For Private Study and Research Use Only |
Description
Title | Page 11 |
Format | application/pdf |
Source | AWI Collection |
Collection | Alberta Women's Institutes - Collective Memory |
Repository | AU Digital Library |
Copyright | For Private Study and Research Use Only |
Transcript | R e c y c l e r e v e r e n d l e a d s f i g h t f o r E a r t h By SIOBHAN ATKEY Special to The Advocate INNISFAIL — A local minister is preaching the gospel of saving the planet. Anglican pastor Rev. Michael Ston-house spices his Sunday sermons with messages about taking care of the Earth. " One of the first commandments by God is that we are here to care for the Earth. That's basically our job description," Rev. Stonhouse said. And Rev. Stonhouse practices what he preaches. He is co- chairman of the town's new environmental group — the Green Team. For 18 months he has worked with Concerned Citizens of Pine Lake in their efforts to find an alternative to a proposed regional landfill. And Rev. Stonhouse was an active contributor to Innisfail's 1990 toxic roundup, which had a threefold increase in participation last year. He has completed Alberta Special Waste Management Corp.' s Our Backyard study sessions and now sets up workshops for interested local groups. An extensive library of environmental books, magazines and clippings fill his office. He came by his environmental concern naturally, growing up on the family farm near Pine Lake that he and his brother took over two years ago, and in Southern Alberta. " I don't think it's possible to be a farmer and not have an appreciation for the environment," he says. As a boy he searched for fossils near Medicine Hat, where he spent the latter half of his childhood, and hiked and camped at Waterton. These early experiences helped shape Rev. Stonhouse spiritually. He remembers, as an 11 year old, the " nauseating side effects" that lasted for days brought on by inhaling toxic fumes leaked by a transport truck he and his family followed on the highway. Years later he witnessed how a mild chemical poisoning caused a series of physical symptoms. The victim was a farmer who had completed the task of spraying his crop. " I couldn't help wondering that if it had that impact on him, what were the chemicals doing to the rest of the family, the soil?" Rev. Stonhouse says he questions " the delayed impact of technology. " We know now about the effects . . . the atomic bomb. But it took years later to see the cumulative effect," he contends. " The posing question is how much else has an cumulative effect? We have no idea what we are doing." With technological revolution came rampant consumerism, waste and saturated agriculture markets, he says. " The question is, is there such a thing as unlimited growth? Unlimited growth promotes ( exploitation). It causes us to treat the soil as a commodity." The type of waste Rev. Stonhouse saw at the Elnora dump years ago causes great : oncern. " I was disgusted, not only with the garbage, but with the waste. There were so - nany things that could have been recy- : led. I knew we had to look for alternates." That means making " the local people REV. MICHAEL STONHOUSE AND SON PHILIP, 3, OF INNISFAIL . sort pressed tin cans destined ( or recycling Photo by JOHN BICKNELL part of the solutions, involving them in the decision making." And he has seen this ideal achieved. Apart from the prescribed commitments of his chosen professions — nine years as a reverend and three as a social worker — he has dealt with the public extensively through a multitude of volunteer positions. Recently he wrote a play for the Ten Days for World Development committee on the farm debt crisis. He has worked with elderly, teenagers and women's groups and addressed issues relating to them. The common thread is his humanitarian concern. Becoming involved in the environment was a natural progression. " Colleen ( his wife) and I are both people people. If they are hurting, we are hurting. Our concerns for the environment is an extension of that. On one hand, I recognize the human ability of getting ourselves in a mess. On the other, we have the ability to rise above it with a little) help from the Boss ( Lord)." At the local level there are many work able solutions, he insists. In a notebook hel has them neatly identified, from recycling] programs to town policy. For the ideal regional landfill, he sug-| gests safeguards like: in site and perimeter monitoring, plastic line, a local monitoring group and an emergency response number, full consultation and approval of] local citizens. " I'd like to see an environment agenda — a common vision of where we would like to be in five or 10 years. It starts with living it, practicing at home, being model," says the father of three. " Recycling and composting are the easy things. The bigger issues will mean a change in lifestyle." It may be a tall order, but Rev. Stonhouse says he is an eternal optimist. Siobhan Atkey is a freelance Inniziail writer. |
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