Why We're Engaging on Climate Change
Blogging is a great way to stay engaged with site visitors and keep your site content relevant and fresh. Here are 7 reasons to start blogging today.
I don’t have any human children yet, but I do have a fur baby, and nieces, and nephews whom I want to protect. And I don’t want to just protect them from the day-to-day dangers they may encounter, like passing cars or bullying (respectively), but also from the larger, sometimes harder to grasp threats: like the damage we are doing to our planet. I want them to enjoy the outdoors — running, camping, chasing squirrels — in air that isn’t actively harming them while they breathe it in. And, selfishly, I would like to live in a city in which I am never advised to stay indoors by the weather app on my cell phone because of “poor air quality.”
I do little things to do my part —I use reusable shopping bags, I try to walk or bike instead of driving, try to limit buying anything plastic, and my meat consumption. But it’s just not enough. It feels as if I’m throwing toothpicks at the Night King (that’s a Game of Thrones reference for the four of you who don’t watch the show). To make large-scale change, we all know we have to do more than make these gestures on an individual basis. We have to come together as a community to advocate for policy that puts the health and climate of our state first. And there is a crucial coalition of people who could help us mitigate the effects of climate change, but who are often left out of our efforts.
This is why I’m happy that Healthier Colorado has launched a new project: Healthy Air and Water Colorado. The intent of this campaign is to ensure that the health effects of climate change are at the forefront when discussing related policies, to elevate the voices of health professionals and their firsthand experience in the debate, and to expose the healthcare costs associated with our carbon-dependency. We want to galvanize our voters around the health effects caused by our changing climate, and give them the resources to advocate and persuade our elected officials to take action.
Health is often looked over in discussions surrounding climate change. And we want to fix that. Many Coloradans who are not ardent environmental activists at the moment do care about health policy, and have seen how the changing climate is negatively affecting our health. HAWC will put health officials at the forefront, prioritizing medical research and the voices of trusted health professionals. We are nonpartisan, and research-based. And at the end of the day, we are a health advocacy organization, first and foremost.
Climate change is a public health crisis and we must do everything we can to combat it. And it’s time that medical professionals, public health advocates, and consumers come together to work for a solution—for ourselves, and for future generations (both human and canine).
If you too are passionate about health, and see the effects climate change is already has on the health of our communities, share this story with the hashtag #ClimateChangeIsHealth


Press Release: Colorado Takes Important Step in Cutting Methane Pollution, But More Action is Needed
