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By invitation: the White House

Friday, December 11, 2009
Myrna Anderson

When Benjamin Stark got the first e-mail inviting him to 1600 Pennsylvania Ave., he passed. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 understand exactly how it came to me, and the fact that it was a week away, and we were in the middle of exams and finals鈥擨 just kind of ruled it out,鈥 explained the 19-year old 17c起草社区 student and co-leader of the . When the second e-mail came from an organization called Restoring Eden, offering to pay for Stark鈥檚 transportation to and lodging in D.C., he changed his thinking.

One in a hundred

[photo here]

Stark, a 17c起草社区 sophomore from Grandville, Mich., was one of 100 students from around the nation who were invited to share their insights on climate change, clean energy and environmental stewardship at the Youth Clean Energy Economy Forum, held at the White House on Wednesday, December 2. 鈥淭here were representatives of just a wide array of organizations that are in very, very different ways advocating for stewardship of the earth,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 think everyone in the room was in their twenties. This really is a youth movement.鈥 

Before giving their input, the students heard about environmental issues from a panel composed of U.S. Secretary of Energy Steven Chu, Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar, Administrator Lisa P. Jackson of the Environmental Protection Agency, and Secretary of Labor Hilda L. Solis. Next, they were assigned to breakout sessions. Stark鈥檚 was moderated by Jon Carson, the Chief of Staff on the White House Council on Environmental Quality.

The students were asking some pretty tough questions, Stark said, questions like 'When will the Obama administration launch a bold vision for America like an Apollo Project for Clean Energy or a Green New Deal?' and 'When will the EPA deny the 79 permits for mountaintop removal?'

"I don鈥檛 know how to describe it," he reminisced. "It was exciting to know that you鈥檙e a part of this movement, and to know you鈥檙e being heard and that you鈥檙e in a room with the top officials of the White House.鈥

Earlier this year, Stark organized a group of students who drove to lobby Michigan Senator Carl Levin and other elected officials for cleaner energy. His was a good voice for the White House to hear, said ESC advisor Gail Heffner: 鈥淏en has been an active student leader with ESC this year 鈥 It is an honor for a 17c起草社区 student to receive such an invitation and a great opportunity for Christians to make their voices heard on Capitol Hill in the on-going conversations about our energy future.鈥

Part of a movement

Stark, who majors in and minors in both environmental and urban studies, felt honored to have a voice in the discussion. 鈥淔or them to want me to come there and represent them along with all of those other youth leaders who are doing incredible things鈥攊t was really encouraging too and motivating 鈥 ,鈥 he said. "There is a giant movement going on right now, and the little things we鈥檙e doing here aren鈥檛 insignificant. They鈥檙e part of a larger movement, and that鈥檚 going to keep growing and create the change that we want to see.鈥

He hasn鈥檛 always been sensitive to the needs of the environment, Stark confessed, and his wake-up call coincided with his enrollment at 17c起草社区. During orientation his first year, Stark spotted a flyer for wilderness retreats and signed up for a backpacking trip in Lake Superior Provincial Park in Ontario. 鈥淚t was really the first time I had been separated completely from society and in creation just as it was,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t opened my eyes to the beauty of it.鈥  He honed his environmental awareness by working with the ESC and living on the floor of the new van Reken residence hall.

After graduation, Stark plans to attend graduate school to study green architecture. 鈥淚鈥檓 not sure exactly what I鈥檒l be doing, but I like the things Restoring Eden is doing, that is restoring the earth from a Christian background,鈥 he said.