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Photo by iStock.com/Sitthiphong
| 2020 Election |
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Three Hours of Your Time Can Make a Difference
We’re throwing our weight behind the effort to boost voter turnout on Election Day because our freedoms and our democracy depend on it. We plan to contact millions of pro-environment voters who vote only infrequently. Getting a phone call reminding them to vote could make the difference in getting them to cast a ballot.
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Volunteer today from the comfort of your home—a few hours a week can make a huge impact.
Paid for by
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Sierra Club Independent Action and not authorized by any candidate or candidate's committee.
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Photo by iStock.com/Lepusinensis
| Sierra Magazine |
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Meet the Climate Justice Influencers
Dozens of young environmental activists of color are using Instagram to uplift their stories and share their work to protect the planet.
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Find out how a new generation of climate justice influencers are using Instagram to spread their message.
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Photo by Diana Robinson Photography-Getty Images
| Sierra Club Outings |
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Canceled Sierra Club Outings Rebooked for 2021
As you may have seen, domestic trips that were scheduled to begin between now and the end of the year have been canceled to protect the safety of participants and staff. You can read about this decision on our Covid-19 Travel Update page. If you're looking ahead to next year, we have many enticing options, including international experiences and all manner of winter domestic trips. Many of our canceled 2020 trips have also been rebooked for 2021 and are now available for reservations.
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See all trips and sign up.
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Photo by iStock.com/TOA55
| Sierra Magazine |
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What It Means to Be an American Climate Emigrant
Sierra magazine's editor in chief Jason Mark reflects on why he and his family decided to decamp from California to Washington State.
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Among their reasons: Climate-exacerbated wildfires, droughts, and record-breaking heat waves.
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Photo courtesy of North Carolina Zoo
| Sierra Magazine |
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Is the Fish and Wildlife Service Slow-Walking Red Wolf Recovery?
The USFWS has taken some steps to help the wild red wolf—but not nearly enough and not quickly enough, according to advocates. Several recent lawsuits underscore their belief that USFWS, through its lack of urgent action, is essentially letting the wild species die out.
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Find out why the US Fish and Wildlife Service is moving too slowly to save the red wolf from extinction.
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Photo courtesy of Javier Sierra
| En Espanol |
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Fool Us Once, Shame on You. Fool Us Twice...
Four years of Donald Trump in the White House has left the country sick, diminished, and exhausted—a consequence of the administration’s unprecedented incompetency. Out on the hustings, in full-on (maskless) campaign mode, President Trump is promising four more years of the same. His plan to fight the pandemic is essentially to let the virus run its course, at a cost of millions of lives.
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Vote as if your life depended on it—it just might.
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Photo courtesy of Orbit Books
| Sierra Magazine |
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Staving Off Extinction
Acclaimed science fiction writer Kim Stanley Robinson terraformed the Red Planet in his award-winning Mars trilogy. With The Ministry for the Future, he breaks the near future into small pieces and reassembles them into a literary collage that maps human survival through the early 21st century.
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Sierra magazine spoke to Robinson about his mind-bending new novel.
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Listen to the latest episode!
| New Podcast |
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The End of Oil and the Latest Advice From Ms. Green
After a late-summer break, The Overstory is back with a new episode. We talk with energy reporter Antonia Juhasz, who explains why the COVID-19 pandemic may be the nail in the coffin for the global oil and gas industry. Juliet Grable, a frequent Sierra magazine contributor, talks about what it was like working as a volunteer firefighter battling the recent wildfires in Oregon. And our advice columnist Ms. Green has tips for how to recycle old underwear and socks.
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Tune in, turn on, get clean and green.
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Read the interview and watch the video!
| En Espanol |
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Invitacion del Presidente
Earlier this year, the Sierra Club welcomed Puerto Rican RamoĢn Cruz as the organization’s first Latino president. In this new video (en Espanol), he shares some of the Sierra Club’s work and accomplishments and invites us to join the Club. "There are so many ways to get involved,” Cruz says. “Become a volunteer, go on an excursion, sign a petition, make a donation, become a member.
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"!Tu eliges!"
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Photo by iStock.com/Elenathewise
| Take Action |
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100 Members of Congress Are Ready to THRIVE!
We've reached a milestone in our efforts to pass the THRIVE Resolution: In just over a month, 100 members of Congress have signed onto this Green New Deal–aligned recovery plan to put 16 million people back to work building an economy that advances climate, economic, and racial justice. But we need at least 25 more cosponsors, and chances are at least one of your members of Congress still hasn't signed on. Help us reach 125 cosponsors.
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Ask your members of Congress to support the THRIVE Resolution.
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| Take Action |
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30 x 30
From national parks to urban green spaces and all the undeveloped places in between, our public lands play a crucial role in sequestering carbon, providing wildlife habitat, and protecting us from extreme weather. While Washington, DC, is mired in gridlock, state governments are scoring important victories protecting public lands and waters and improving access to the outdoors so that everyone can enjoy them. Scientists, activists, and now governors across the country are signing on to a bold new plan to protect 30 percent of our lands and waters by 2030.
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Urge your governor to sign on to the 30 x 30 plan.
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Photo by iStock.com/OTO
| Sierra Magazine |
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Fat Bears of the Katmai
Since early summer, the 2,200+ coastal brown bears in Alaska's Katmai National Park & Preserve have been gorging on salmon, gaining more than two pounds a day to build up their fat reserves to survive hibernation. A record 800,000 salmon charged upstream to spawn this year in Katmai. “The bears are bigger than ever,” says former park ranger Mike Fitz, who now operates the bearcam at Explore.org. “The ecosystem is intact. It’s a very wild landscape with a diversity of healthy spawning and rearing habitats. It's operating at its full potential.”
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But threats abound. Read more and check out the bearcam.
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Photo courtesy of Parks Project
| Sierra Club Business Partnership |
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New Collection: Sierra Club x Parks Project
The new Sierra Club x Parks Project collection—which includes tees, loungewear, hats, and more—gives 10 percent of every purchase back to the Sierra Club. Inspired by the people fighting on behalf of our environment every day, the collection underscores the importance of voting and green energy in our efforts to mitigate the effects of climate change.
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Shop the collection.
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Photo by iStock.com/peterspiro
| Take Action |
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No Supreme Court Confirmation Until After the Election
From the time she was sworn in as Supreme Court Justice until the day she died, Ruth Bader Ginsberg was a powerful, principled voice for justice, civil rights, voting rights, and environmental justice. Her dissent in Shelby County v. Holder predicted a wave of voter suppression, and she joined the majority opinion in Massachusetts v. EPA in holding that climate change is an environmental justice issue, and therefore compels the agency to act.
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Tell your senators that our next Supreme Court Justice must be someone who will preserve Justice Ginsberg’s legacy and protect our democracy and our environment.
The
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COVID-19 crisis has not passed and continues to
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disproportionately harm Black, Indigenous, and Latinx people and other communities of color. The pandemic has revealed how the communities hardest hit are often the same communities that suffer from high levels of pollution and poor access to healthcare. The fight for environmental justice cannot be separated from the fight for racial justice.
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