The organizers of the Democratic National Convention
this week in Charlotte have put in place a number of efforts to make the event
as green as possible.
Theo LeCompte, CEO of the Democratic National
Convention Committee told
The Hill, “We are doing a lot, on a number of fronts, to
maximize the sustainable elements of everything we are doing.”
But sustainability is more than just about the
environment. It’s also about the
economy.
Tomorrow I will moderate the first panel of the
American Sustainable Business Council’s (ASBC) “Summit for a Sustainable
Economy” in Charlotte. The ASBC, of
which I am vice chair, and its fifty plus partner organizations represent over
150,000 businesses and more than 300,000 individual entrepreneurs, owners,
executives, investors and business professionals who can speak firsthand to the
value of “triple bottom line” sustainable, socially responsible and
environmentally sound policy initiatives.The ASBC summit is a two-day event that will feature business leaders sharing how their businesses are helping achieve a sustainable economy—one that doesn’t borrow from the future to achieve artificially high levels of consumption today to the detriment of the next generation of businesses and citizens.
A similar summit was planned for the Republican
National Convention in Tampa but was cancelled due to the hurricane threat.
Below is ASBC summit scheduled for tomorrow and
Thursday. If you are going to be in
Charlotte, come join us.
American Sustainable Business Council“SUMMIT FOR A SUSTAINABLE ECONOMY"Democratic National ConventionCharlotte, North CarolinaK&L Gates LLP, Hearst Tower214 North Tryon Street, 47th Floor, Charlotte
September 5, 2012 –
8:30 am to 1:00 pmBuilding a Sustainable
EconomyJoin us in an interactive discussion with business leaders and elected officials exploring how public policy and business engagement can help build a more sustainable economy.
Photo Identification required for access to building. (Media is welcome)
The Summit will explore:
How public policies can help promote a more sustainable economy
Strategies for using financial capital for responsible, transparent and tangible investments
Initiatives for building vibrant local economies
Developing economic metrics that reach beyond GDP and factor in environmental and social factors
Best practices by leading socially responsible companies, and,
The transition that American market-based capitalism is undergoing in which new values and new business coalitions are emerging to ensure future prosperity.
The Summit will tell a consistent story: Business prospers when the larger economy resets its priorities to ensure a robust middle class, transparent financial markets, affordable healthcare, clean energy, fair tax system, reliable infrastructure, a campaign finance system not controlled by the wealthiest companies.
8:30 am
Coffee, Tea, Registration
9:00 am Welcoming
9:15 – 10:15 SESSION ONE: RESPONSIBLE CAPITAL: INVESTING IN A PROSPEROUS AMERICA
Financial capital can be deployed to create new jobs, stabilize communities, catalyze new productive technology and services and increase overall societal well-being. It can also to be used to reduce competition and enable a relatively few to consolidate market and political power. This session explores ways to use capital to have a broader societal impact. We’ll also explore how tax policies can encourage more of what the economy needs. And finally, we’ll look at how ‘responsible capital’ can foster local economic development where the metrics of success account for externalities and hidden costs.
Speakers:
Roger Smith, President, American Income Life
Bonny Moellenbrock, Executive Director, Investors Circle
Brian Schneiderman, Self Help Credit Union
Shivani Siroya, CEO and Founder of InVenture
Moderator
Frank Knapp, President, South Carolina Small Business Chamber of Commerce
10:15 – 10:30 Congressman James Clyburn,
D-SC ‘The Importance of Hearing from Sustainable Businesses
10:45 – 11:45 SESSION TWO: BUILDING SUSTAINABLE COMMUNITIES
Healthy economies; rural, suburban, urban – require the same ingredients: clean and affordable energy, jobs with a future, quality products and services, affordable health care, a robust food system, a sense of place and leadership from responsible businesses. This discussion looks at the degree to which government factors in such sustainability issues as: the value of a diversified local economy, quality of life, good infrastructure, TOD, education and strong environmental standards when seeking to attract new business.
Speakers:
Jeffrey Hollender, Co-Founder, Seventh Generation
Betsy Blaisdell, Environmental Stewardship, Timberland
Nikhil Arora, President, Back to the Roots
John C. Komisin, AIA, Little Architects
Moderator:
Bryan Howard, USBGC
11:45 – 12:45 SESSION THREE: BUSINESS
MODELS & ACCOUNTING FOR A SUSTAINABLE ECONOMY A key to creating a more
sustainable resilient economy is changing what we measure and value, balancing
financial success with social impact and introducing full cost accounting.
We’ll also explore trends that require businesses to measure financial, social
and environmental impact and efforts to move beyond GDP as our sole measure of
success.
Speakers: Kim Jordan, CEO, New Belgium Brewing
Lew Daly, Senior Fellow, Demos
Beth Richardson, B Lab
Kathrin Winkler, Chief Sustainability Officer, EMC Corporation
Elected Official (TBA)
Moderator:
Richard Eidlin, Public Policy Director, American Sustainable Business Council
September 5, 2012 – 4:00 pm
to 6:00 pmRECEPTION, Harvey Gantt Center, 551 South Tryon Street
September 6, 2012 – 9:00 am to 1:00 pm, K&L Gates LLP, Hearst Tower, 214 North Tryon Street, 47th Floor, Charlotte
WOMEN, BUSINESS & THE NEW ECONOMY
SCALING POLICY – PROMOTING EQUITY
9:00 am Welcoming
Roundtable/Q&A
9:30 – 10:00
A Conversation on The New Economy with Natalia Oberti Nogurera of Pipeline Fellowship featuring women innovators across the corporate, business, social enterprise, and economic development sectors; including Congresswoman Jan Schakowsky (D-IL), Kim Jordan of New Belgium Brewery, Denise Boyer of American Income Life, and Kathleen Rose of Rose Associates.
Break/Networking
10/30-11
10/30-11
Keynote/Q&A
11-11:30
Fran Dresher, CancerSchmancer’s Trash Cancer Campaign
Modeling advocacy, policy and action
Dialogue/Q&A11-11:30
Fran Dresher, CancerSchmancer’s Trash Cancer Campaign
Modeling advocacy, policy and action
11:30-Noon
A Conversation on Climate Change, Corporate Social Responsibility and Sustainability with Danielle Deane of the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies and Faith Taylor, Director of Sustainability Wyndam Group Worldwide.
Human Rights Learning
“Actors “ with ASBC
12:15-1:00
A Holistic Framework – Scaling for Impact with Melissa Fizgerald, The West Wing and Chasing the Hill, and April DeSimone, Access the Change in an exploration of the human right to a sustainable environment; and the role of women in promoting a just economy driven by responsible business, economic engagement and policy reform.
“Actors “ with ASBC
12:15-1:00
A Holistic Framework – Scaling for Impact with Melissa Fizgerald, The West Wing and Chasing the Hill, and April DeSimone, Access the Change in an exploration of the human right to a sustainable environment; and the role of women in promoting a just economy driven by responsible business, economic engagement and policy reform.
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