February 7, 2012

Melbourne Citizens to Weigh in on America’s “Oil Addiction”

email

by By Rachel Anderson
Florida Institute of Technology Newsroom
March 23, 2006

MELBOURNE, FLA. – Florida Tech students will host a town hall meeting to discuss “U.S. security and the global environment and to specifically consider how communities like Melbourne can help improve the environment locally and globally,” said event organizer Jennifer Bucheit. The meeting is on March 23 at 3 p.m. in the Denius Student Center’s Hartley Room. The center is located in the heart of the Florida Tech campus, off Country Club Rd. The event is free and open to the public. Refreshments will be served.

The town hall will feature an opening presentation from Deron Lovaas, director of the Oil Security Campaign with the Natural Resources Defense Council in Washington, D.C. Lovaas will present “Securing America: Solving Our Oil Dependence through Innovation.” A question and answer period will follow.

The town hall meeting is part of a national series of town hall discussions on the same topic, sponsored by Americans for Informed Democracy. The initiative, called Securing the Future: Think Global, Act Local, seeks to give communities an overview of oil dependence, which President Bush in his State of the Union address called our country’s “addiction.”

Americans for Informed Democracy is a non-partisan educational organization that seeks to engage Americans in discussion about the future of the U.S. role in the world. Visit www.aidemocracy.org for more information. Florida Tech’s Alpha Phi Fraternity and Gamma Phi Beta Sorority are hosting the Florida Tech meeting. For more information, contact: Jennifer Bucheit at jbucheit@yahoo.com, or Seth Green, chair, Americans for Informed Democracy, at seth@aidemocracy.org.

About AIDemocracy

Americans for Informed Democracy (AIDemocracy) is a 501 (c)(3) organization that relies on public donations to help our organization and keep our student-led programming focused on pressing global issues with timely events and activities. We'd love to see you make a donation or join out student network, and thank you in advance for doing so.

We encourage constructive, thoughtful, and relevant comments. We moderate all comments, so there may be a delay before your comment is approved. See our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy for more details.