Vegan: Eating For Ethics at CNM

March 6, 2017.  by Heather Hay

To learn about how food choices affect health, the environment, and animals an information presentation with a question and answer session is scheduled for March 23rd at 10:30 am in the Richard Barr Room on Main Campus, according to Anna Rose Daigle.

Daigle is a Humane Educator from the Ethical Choices Program , and said the educational organization’s goal is, through school presentations, to stimulate critical thinking while giving people the information and tools they need to make informed food choices.

She said “We often don’t realize what a profound impact our choices may have on others. If one person decides to change the course of their health and their footprint on the planet, a dialogue begins with family and friends, and with that dialogue, a chance to share the science behind all those seemingly harmless decisions we make so many times a day.”

Daigle advises students interested in getting involved in environmental issues politically to “start meet up groups, engage in friendly dialogue, ask questions, share your research with friends, family, and strangers, engage with your community, meet like-minded individuals, and be kind!”

She recommends that those interested in ethical choices education take courses in environmental sciences and nutrition.

Daigle said “I love my job. I remember the exact moment I was made aware of the impacts of animal agriculture. I felt betrayed and alone in my hurt and anger. My goal is to make sure my audience knows that they are not alone in any of the feelings that come up in the presentation.”

Daigle elaborated on what students may see as obstacles to transitioning to a plant based diet.

“At first, switching to a plant based diet may feel inconvenient; asking if this has cheese or if that is made with milk. Like any lifestyle change, there is a period of adjustment, but luckily our complex and intelligent bodies make those changes a little easier for us,” she said.

She also said that friends and family “may find your decision strange or difficult to comprehend, but often those initial feelings of apprehension dissipate once your healthy choices become the new normal.”

Eating foods low in cholesterol and saturated fat will give you more energy, make you feel better and even reverse the process of disease and inflammation, she said.

Colleges across the country have been adding more plant-based options to their regular menus and a great example is The University of Northern Texas which has just opened a fully-plant based dining hall, she said.

According to the Vegan Report Card Ranking the University of Northern Texas received an A+ ranking with a student satisfaction rating of 94% of the availability of vegan food on college campuses by creating the Mean Greens Cafe, an entirely plant based cafe.

As a comparison, the only college in New Mexico to receive an A rating is New Mexico State University, although none of the colleges in New Mexico responded to their request to be surveyed.

Daigle now lives in South Carolina as a result of participating in the National Student Exchange through the University of New Mexico, where she majored in University Studies.

When asked what led to her decision to move after graduating she explained that because of her love for the show True Blood she said that everyone the show “looked so glistening and beautiful in that small Louisiana town. I had never been to the deep South, so I figured I’d give it a shot. I picked the dot (the school on the exchange map I was shown) closest to the ocean on the other side of the country and before I knew it I was standing in Charleston, SC on a particularly balmy August day. I sweat through two shirts that day and have never once mastered glistening.”

Promotional photograph at the top of the story was provided by Anna Rose Daigle.

Bringing community back to the front yard

By: Daniel Montaño

A construction project taking place behind CNM’s main campus on Buena Vista Drive and St. Cyr Avenue is intended to create friendships, com­munity, sustainability and a super-adobe eco-dome, said Mitchell Olson, former CNM Art major.

Olson is one of the many volunteers partici­pating in the construc­tion. He said that the dome is part of a larger project within the apart­ment complex that will include many sustainable, eco-friendly aspects.

“We’re talking about beekeeping, gardens on the roof, water cisterns, community gardens, solar energy and integration with the public,” he said.

The dome itself is the hands-on portion of a work­shop taught by Biko Casini, a guest instructor at Cal-Earth Institute, who said that he has built similar structures in Australia, West Africa, India and Europe.

Casini’s workshops focus on sustainable, green building practices and advanced energy solutions, and he said that the project also emphasizes the changes that can be made when people join together as a community in friendship.

“It’s very much an exer­cise in corrective synergy and what happens when you get a group of people who are motivated together. You can actually physically change and move the earth around,” Casini said.

Jesse Kalapa, owner of the building where construction is taking place, purchased the 10-unit rental property six years ago and said that at that time the building had a poor reputation for vagrancy and drug use.

Kalapa said he has been working to change this stigma ever since he purchased the property, and this commu­nity project is just one among many steps to build a self -sustaining eco-village in the University Heights area.

“Well, my primary inten­tion for the property is that it’s the world’s most renowned model of sustainability. That’s a big goal but it’s coming to fruition through steps like this,” he said.

Kalapa also hopes to open his property up to the uni­versity community by estab­lishing an accredited course in partnership with UNM or CNM that will focus on sus­tainable building practices, he said.

If Kalapa’s proposed part­nership works out, he plans on turning one of the apart­ments into a live-in labora­tory, he said.

“Someone could live there for a week or a month and learn the basic techniques of sustainability,” he said.

Most community envi­ronments similar to theS one Kalapa is building tend to focus on growing and selling vegetables to bring an income to the community, but Kalapa said he wants to use waste products within the urban environment as a major con­tributor to his project.

Kalapa gained experi­ence with building solar panels from scrap materi­als during a trip he took to Ghana, and said that he plans on using waste mate­rials like glass to build the solar panels that will be included in the final project.

“So I’m looking at resources a little bit differ­ently than some hippy com­mune that’s growing corn and selling tomatoes at the grow­ers market. I think that’s great and wonderful but I also have an element of permaculture, taking advantage of the resources at hand,” Kalapa said.

All of the struc­ture’s components exceed building requirements. Kalapa met with city planners and zoning committee, and he said the super-adobe structure is con­sidered a flexible form of a stabilized rammed earth structure under building codes, and that he is pur­posely leaving a five-foot opening in the top of the dome in order to meet building requirements.

“So it’s not considered a structure, it’s a garden wall,” Kalapa said.

Those looking to be a part of the community are more than welcome to simply walk up and speak to anyone at the construction site, Kalapa said

For more information on super-adobe construction, visit calearth.org, or to vol­unteer check out the proj­ect’s facebook page at face­book.com/2105stcyr. For information on renting an apartment, e-mail jesseka­lapa@gmail.com.