Can art, humanities, and culture save the imperiled Great Salt Lake? Our task is to bring new attention to the Great Salt Lake’s critical presence in our community and to include new voices in our discussion. Due to water policies and climate change, the Great Salt Lake is drying up fast, leaving toxic dust and an ecosystem in crisis. Through the lenses of the humanities, art, and culture, we’ll take on the problems and solutions to what The New York Times calls “Utah’s Environmental Nuclear Bomb.” We’ll examine our history and pathways for repair by hearing from leaders Indigenous to the Great Basin. From artists, storytellers, and advocates, we’ll learn how to shift the narrative and tell compelling, honest stories about the crisis to inspire needed action. The symposium is organized by the U of U Environmental Humanities Program in partnership with the Natural History Museum of Utah, the Great Salt Lake Institute at Westminster College, the Tanner Humanities Center, the U of U College of Humanities, the U of U Office of Sustainability. Event Logistics The event is free, except you must pay the admission fee to Antelope Island if you attend on Sep 24. There is free parking at the Natural History Museum, and you can also register to attend talks on September 23 virtually. On September 23, lunch and refreshments will be provided at the Natural History Museum. On September 24, Please bring your own lunch and a water bottle to Antelope Island. Questions? Contact: j.brooke.larsen@utah.edu Program September 23, 9 am-5 pm, Natural History Museum of Utah (and virtually on Zoom) 9 am: Introductions and Welcome 9:15 am: Great Salt Lake and the Great Basin Tribes: Ancestral Connection and Pathways to Repair Corrina Bow, Chairwoman of the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah Forrest Cuch, Ute Indian Tribe, former Executive Director of the Utah Division of Indian Affairs Darren Parry, Councilman, former Chairman of the Northwestern Band of the Shoshone Nation Rupert Steele, Chairman of the Confederated Tribes of the Goshute 11:00 am: Break 11:15 am: Left in the Dust: Lessons from Owens Lake, A Conversation with Karen Piper and Bonnie Baxter Karen Piper, professor of English, author of Left in the Dust: How Race and Politics Created a Human and Environmental Tragedy in L.A. Bonnie Baxter, director of the Great Salt Lake Institute at Westminster College 12:15 pm: Lunch 1:15 pm: Changing the Narrative: Underrepresented Stories and Underutilized Tools Meisei Gonzalez, HEAL Utah Communications Director Lauren Gustus, Executive Editor of The Salt Lake Tribune Victoria Meza, Embodied Ecologies Artist, Urban Indian Center Behavioral Health Coordinator Darren Parry, Councilman Northwestern Band of the Shoshone Nation 2:15 pm: Break 2:30 pm: Can Art Save Us? Amy McDonald, Director and Founder of Brolly Arts Willy Palomo, Poet, Director of the Utah Humanities Book Festival Nan Seymour, Poet and Activist Holly Simonsen, Poet, Artist, Director of the Alfred Lambourne Prize Program for FRIENDS of Great Salt Lake Douglas Tolman, Artist, MFA Candidate University of Utah 3:30 pm: Break 3:40: Eulogy and Praise: Reading of “The Obituary to the Great Salt Lake” and Irreplaceable Readings by Bonnie Baxter, Nan Seymour, Community Contributors, and Audience 5:00 pm: Close September 24, 10 am-4 pm, Antelope Island State Park, Visitor Center Amphitheater and Media Room Schedule may change slightly, please check final program week of event 10:15 am: Introductions & Check-in 10:30 am: Antelope Island and the Shoshone People: A Plant Walk and Talk Brad Parry, Vice Chairman of the Northwestern Band of the Shoshone Nation Rios Pacheco, Artist and Cultural Interpreter, Northwestern Shoshone & Kewa Pueblo 11:45 am: Break 12:00 pm: Monitoring the Great Salt Lake: Tools and Techniques from Great Salt Lake Institute Researchers Lunch Talk (pack your own lunch and water bottle!) 1:00 pm: Writing Workshop with Nan Seymour 2:30 pm: Break 2:40 pm: Dancing for the Lake: Performance and Participatory Workshop with Brolly Arts 3:40 pm: Close
We will start at 8:30 am and finish by noon. But, if you can join us for only a shorter time, please do! We will meet at the Cardiff/Donut Falls parking lot off of SR 190 in Big Cottonwood Canyon. Please bring sturdy gloves if you have them. Contact Cottonwood Canyon Foundation for more information.
The Jordan River Commission organizes #LoveYourWatershed cleanup and restoration service projects on the second Saturday of each month. The November 12 project will be at: Gadsby Trailhead 1223 W N Temple St, Salt Lake City, UT 84116 9am – 11am More information and registration is available here.
In-person attendance will be limited to BYU students, faculty, and staff but the forum will also be viewable by BYUtv.
The Jordan River Commission organizes service projects on the second Saturday of each month. The December project will be at 17th South River Park.
SAVE THE DATE and register here for the People’s Great Salt Lake Summit on Saturday, December 10th from 11 am – 2 pm at Westminster College!! This summit will provide a foundational understanding of what’s happening to Great Salt Lake, how you can get involved, and how we can all work together toward solutions. During the event, after a State of the Lake, we’ll break out into groups to dream, discuss, and co-create a People’s Plan for Great Salt Lake that we’ll use as we head into 2023 legislative session and beyond. We’ll then break for lunch and come back together to share with the larger group before closing and providing actionable next steps. It’s time for the people’s voice to be heard. It’s time for us to come together, strategize, and plan strategies to hold stakeholders and legislators accountable to the ecological disaster being perpetuated at the Great Salt Lake. Join us for a space of dreaming the possible as we gather to organize, discuss, and grieve. This is an all-hands moment. In a legislative environment that seeks to silo our voices, we’re coming together to face this crisis as organizers, as concerned citizens, as organizations, and as artists. If you’ve been looking for a way to get involved to save the lake — this is your moment. We’d love for you to join us in person but if you’re not feeling well or can’t make it, we have an online option as well. Register here and please help us spread the word! In solidarity, The SOGSL Team
The LDS Action Team announcement: This will be holding a special monthly Zoom event titled: Gratitude Night Please join us as we look back in gratitude at the momentum and progress made this past year. From the Katharine Hayhoe presentations to Presiding Bishop Gerald Causse’s wonderful General Conference message, we have much to celebrate and be grateful for. Plus, we’ll be looking forward to dates, events, opportunities, and challenges. We can change and become better stewards. Invite a friend and join us! Also, as another friendly reminder—this coming Tuesday, November 29th, at 11:05 AM, BYU will be hosting Katharine Hayhoe at their Forum Address. Thousands will be in attendance, and it will be broadcast (and recorded for later viewing) on BYU-TV. As an Evangelical Christian and world-renowned climate scientist, Katharine works tirelessly to build a bridge between faith and science through education about climate change. She also speaks about how we can learn to discuss this vital subject better and talk in kinder ways, where we first look for common ground with our family, friends, and associates. The BYU Forum addresses will be accessible at: www.byutv.org/byu-forum Here is the Zoom access to the upcoming meeting: https://citizensclimate.zoom.us/j/89072562621?pwd=b0lnenk4RERQUGhxMWU2YmwxSmptUT09 Meeting ID: 890 7256 2621 Passcode: 797406 We hope you can join us! The LDS Action Leadership Team Tom Cain, Dave Ryser, Craig Smith, Danielle Corbett, Ian Sandland, and Doug Evans
The Jordan River Commission organizes service projects on the second Saturday of each month. (Locations vary.) Details will be posted here as they become available.
The Future of the Great Salt Lake | March 16-17, 2023 The Stegner Center’s 28th annual symposium on March 16-17, 2023, will focus on the Great Salt Lake. One of the world’s largest hypersaline lakes, the Great Salt Lake is on the verge of collapse due to climate change, drought, and population pressures that have reduced inflows and shrunk the lake by more than two-thirds. The Great Salt Lake has been in the media lately, not only locally, but nationally and internationally given the unique nature of the lake and the grave risks to human health—referred to by the New York Timesas “Utah’s environmental nuclear bomb”—that would result from the toxic dust of a desiccated lakebed. Day one will consider the state of the lake and factors leading to its decline. We will then consider the risks to human health and the millions of migratory birds dependent on the lake, along with economic impacts, if this ecosystem collapses. Day two will focus on solutions to preserve the lake with presentations by scientists, water policy experts, politicians, community leaders, and others. The symposium will be hybrid, with speakers in person and attendees joining in person and online.
Featuring Darren Perry
Join with other groups to help clean up along the Jordan River. Click here for more details, and to register.