My time here at the Iowa Global Warming Campaign is winding down as I get ready to travel back to Illinois for the summer. I’ve been given so many opportunities while working here, from engaging with the community to meeting representatives from other environmental organizations to actually getting to write about issues, which is what I’ve always wanted to do. Still, I think just being involved in our work to get passenger rail in Iowa and to get clean energy and energy efficiency legislation passed has been invaluably beneficial for me. It’s allowed me to really understand how everything fits together. Though Drake does an excellent job in showing students how their education applies to the real world, it’s easy as a student to become absorbed in what we are learning in the classroom and forget about the connectedness of things. I feel like I’ll leave here for the summer understanding this better than ever.
Whether their issue is global warming or anything else, those who work to help the environment have so much to take into account. Though it would be nice to focus solely on the environment, this simply isn’t possible. Environmental issues cannot be separated from issues concerning such things as the economy and human health, just to name a couple. What I’ve learned, though, is that this doesn’t have to be a bad thing. Making changes to benefit the environment can have a rippling effect and benefit so many other areas.
Where I learned this best was through our work to get a passenger rail line from Chicago to Des Moines. When I heard about this project, the first though that came to my mind were the environmental benefits that would accompany it. Trains are much more energy efficient than other modes of transportation and allow large groups of people to travel together, rather than each person burning gas in his or her own car. What I learned when I began to work with the Iowa Global Warming Campaign to get funding to make this project a reality was that passenger rail is not just good for the environment but benefits everyone.
Rail is vital in our fight against global warming, but it is also vital in stimulating our economy. It creates jobs and brings young professionals to Iowa. It is also more convenient than traveling by car or airplane and by creating a link between Illinois and Iowa, we are working to create an entire Midwest economic network.
What I realized after seeing how rail could benefit much more than just the environment was that environmental issues do not have to, and should not, be separated from other issues. Those who claim that too much attention paid to the environment is harmful to economic growth are simply not thinking broadly enough. The issue of global warming can be overwhelming, but we already know what steps we can take to fix it. Increased energy efficiency and the development of renewable energy will cut down on heat trapping gases. These technologies are also a step into a new global economy for the twenty-first century, one that is grounded in efficiency.
Understanding this relationship between the environment and other areas will be vital for me as I continue my work here next fall and in whatever work I do after graduation. This understanding, though, is important for everyone. We automatically separate our world into categories (environment, economy, human rights, etc.) but being able to see how they are all unavoidably tied is vital.
One of the best parts about working on the rail project was that we were able to attain the needed state funding for it before I left. This just shows me that more and more people are beginning to understand how that which benefits the environment benefits us all. I’m happy that by informing people about rail, I had a small part to play in bringing about this realization. I hope to work in the future to inform more people about the broad reaching benefits of environmental legislation.

