The leadership and members of San Francisco Zen Center have issued the following letter to California Governor Jerry Brown, in advance of March 7th’s planned March for Real Climate Leadership, an anti-fracking protest which will take place in Oakland.
An Open Letter from San Francisco Zen Center Leadership and Members: Governor Brown, End Fracking
February 5, 2015
Dear Governor Brown,
We write to urge you to ban hydraulic fracturing—fracking– in California and, more generally, move away from making our state a major producer as well as a consumer of fossil fuels. We celebrate that you have, in your inaugural address, made a renewed commitment to addressing climate change.
We know—you, and us, and many in California and elsewhere–that hydraulic fracturing is destructive of so many things. It has a long, deep, devastating impact on many species, as well as human beings. It is a theft the present makes from the future, compromising for the sake of the few who profit in the present, longterm well-being for the many to come. It commits us to continue pursuing fossil fuel and with it climate-change emissions when we know, as you said in your inaugural, we need to take “significant amounts of carbon out of our economy.” This should mean not only what we consume here in the state, but what we produce to be consumed anywhere.
That carbon goes into the upper atmosphere, wherever it is burned. Too, fracking devastates water, both in the huge amounts used in the process, and in the lasting contamination of groundwater, a terrible waste in a dry state. We can leave that oil in the soil. And we must. We ask that you sign a bill banning fracking and help turn us away from the age of fossil fuels with its immeasurable and lasting damage to the biosphere. California, with its extraordinary implementation of energy-efficiency standards during your first term as governor, with Assemblywoman Fran Pavley’s emissions legislation in 2002 that set nationwide standards under the Obama administration, with the California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006, has often led the way for the rest of the country. What happens here matters everywhere.
For the well-being of all life now and to come,
Eijun Linda Cutts, Central Abbess
Zenkei Blanche Hartman, former Central Abbess, senior Dharma teacher
Kiku Christina Lehnherr, former Central Abbess
Ryushin Paul Haller, former central Abbot
Furyu Nancy Schroeder, abiding Abbess, Green Gulch Farm Zen Center
from Beginners Mind Temple/City Center
Shundo David Haye, City Center Director
Reverend Jisan Tova Green, vice president, SFZC
Maria Lindao
Lee Lipp
Kyoshin Wendy Lewis
Barbara Machtinger
Knzan David Zimmerman
Shokan Jordan Thorn, cfo and treasurer, SFZC
Nancy Petrin
Judith Randall
Djinn Gallagher
Lauren Bouyea
Jay Pennington
Rev. Daigan Gaither
Judith Keenan
Amy Parker
Marcia Lieberman
Lydia Linker
Sandy Lamerson
Juan Angel
Sioen Roux
Ken Collins
Heather Gardner
Paul Jamtgaard
Cynthia Ziegler
Samantha McWilliams
Susan Millman
Joe Wicht
Katherine Shields
Cecelia Barnard
Erin T. Merk
from Green Gulch Zen Center
Peter Coyote
Anna Thorn
Steven Weintraub, also guiding teacher at Presidio Hill Zen Group
Dr. Grace Dammann
Arlene Lueck
David Lueck
Sukey Parmalee
Kathleen Early
Hakusho Ostlund
Quayyum Johnson
Aubrey Inman
Antonio Pares
Stephen Hale
from Tassajara Zen Center
Dr. Shinchi Linda Galijian
Gentoku Mike Smith
from temples in the lineage
Rev. Alan Senauke, vice Abbott, Berkeley Zen Center, founder Clear View Project
Rev. Michaela O’Connor Bono, Midcity Zendo, New Orleans
Rev. Taigen Dan Leighton, Dharma Teacher, Ancient Dragon Zen Gate, Chicago