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Environment, Health And Safety - It’s our responsibility
What is our world becoming today? I remember back 30 years ago in my country, Malaysia, the temperature in the towns are much much cooler. Water can be drank off the taps and water tasted so refreshingly cool and good then. Years after, when small towns became bigger towns and bigger towns became cities, more forest disappeared, trees are lesser to be found. More roads and highways have been built. “Industrialization” stands for development, progress and better lifestyle. Is that so? Think deeply. Are gaseous emission and chemical discharge contribute to the contamination, pollution of the air, water, and almost everything else we need breathe, drink, eat, touch, enjoy worth sacrificing in the name of such so called “development”? Oceans that we depend on so much for food are being contaminated with oil discharge from tankers, poisoned rivers leading into the sea, carelessness and totally disregard in the name of profits to shareholders. Diseases seem to be increasing and uncontrollable. Our environment has becoming increasingly unsafe, sick and depressed contributing to environmental, health and safety risks.
Is this just happening only in Malaysia? No, I don’t think so at all. Generally, the entire surface of our Mother Earth is moving towards dilapidation, warmer climate, trees being cut down unethically, animals driven from their homes and having less of their own territories, ice-caps melting away, slowly but surely. Give it another 50 years, who is going take the blunt of all our abusive behavior and wrong-doings? Yes, indeed our future generations, our children, our children’s children are all going to be faced with the abuses we batter on our Mother Earth with.
US A’s ex-president, Al Gore, has start a movement and a documentary has just been produced. More certainly has to be done and fortunately, there are organizations that have been promoting a better future for our eenvironment, health and safety (EHS).
One such organization that started up in 1998 is striving to creating a better tomorrow for all of us living today and the future by working and helping corporations to implemented transformation in managing EHS compliance and voluntary programs. This company is EDGS (Environment Data Solutions Group). EDSG has unrivaled experience in leveraging technology to support sustainable EHS solutions. With offices located in California, Pennsylvania and Texas, EDSG has extensive experience across a wide variety of industries in North America and worldwide. EDSG has an impressive list of clients; “raving” clients as EDSG names them.
It is an excellent corporate taking EHS seriously and helping its customers to tackle such issues that are so importantly for keep environment, health and safety impacts relevant to individuals and corporations to fight against the deteriorating conditions of the living atmosphere and practices that we led our lives and leaving a legacy for our future children to enjoy. EDSG assists organizations to comply and maintain environmental law and concerns. If only increasingly more corporations, big and small, recognize the importance of the EHS issues and employ EDSG to help them address their EHS concerns and compliance, our planet would be so much more healthier and safe to live in. EDSC provides integrated information technology innovations to optimize Environmental, Health and Safety performance for companies.
EDSG’s innovative efforts in providing softwares including Sarbanes Oxley Compliance Software and waste management software in resolving EHS impact is truly is a commendable one. It is hope that in time to come, much more companies, manufacturers and industries will adopt conscientious programs such as those solutions promoted by EDSG to nurse our Mother Earth hack into a healthy and safe state for everyone to enjoy.
I hope all governments and companies across the span of the world would work together very quickly before it becomes too late for anyone of us to be able to do anything at all. Let’s transform out behavior and habits into positive ones to better the health of the place that we depend so much for our daily and future lives.
DVDs On Environmental Impact
Short Video - Climatic Changes Impacting Our World
An Inspiration To Start The Day Off
A wise man once said every society is judged by how it treats it’s least fortunate amongst them.
Two Choices
What would you do?….you make the choice. Don’t look for a punch line, there isn’t one. Read it anyway. My question is: “Would you have made the same choice?“
At a fundraising dinner for a school that serves learning-disabled children, the father o f one of the students delivered a speech that would never be forgotten by all who attended. After extolling the school and its dedicated staff, he offered a question: “When not interfered with by outside influences, everything nature does is done with perfection. Yet my son, Shay, cannot learn things as other children do. He cannot understand things as other children do. Where is the natural order of things in my son?“
The audience was stilled by the query.
The father continued. “I believe that when a child like Shay, physically and mentally handicapped comes into the world, an opportunity to realize true human nature presents itself, and it comes in the way other people treat that child.“
Then he told the following story:
Shay and his father had walked past a park where some boys Shay knew were playing baseball. Shay asked, “Do you think they’ll let me play?” Shay’s father knew that most of the boys would not want someone like Shay on their team, but the father also understood that if his son were allowed to play, it would give him a much-needed sense of belonging and some confidence to be accepted by others in spite of his handicaps.
Shay’s father approached one of the boys on the field and asked (not expecting much) if Shay could play. The boy looked around for guidance and said, “We’re losing by six runs and the game is in the eighth inning. I guess he can be on our team and we’ll try to put him in to bat in the ninth inning.“
Shay struggled over to the team’s bench and, with a broad smile, put on a team shirt. His Father watched with a small tear in his eye and warmth in his heart. The boys saw the father’s joy at his son being accepted. In the bottom of the eighth inning, Shay’s team scored a few runs but was still behind by three. In the top of the ninth inning, Shay put on a glove and played in the right field. Even though no hits came his way, he was obviously ecstatic just to be in the game and on the field, grinning from ear to ear as his father waved to him from the stands. In the bottom of the ninth inning, Shay’s team scored again. Now, with two outs and the bases loaded, the potential winning run was on base and Shay was scheduled to be next at bat.
At this juncture, do they let Shay bat and give away their chance to win the game? Surprisingly, Shay was given the bat. Everyone knew that a hit was all but impossible because Shay didn’t even know how to hold the bat properly, much less connect with the ball.
However, as Shay stepped up to the plate, the pitcher, recognizing that the other team was putting winning aside for this moment in Shay’s life, moved in a few steps to lob the ball in softly so Shay could at least make contact. The first pitch came and Shay swung clumsily and missed. The pitcher again took a few steps forward to toss the ball softly towards Shay. As the pitch came in, Shay swung at the ball and hit a slow ground ball right back to the pitcher.
The game would now be over. The pitcher picked up the soft grounder and could have easily thrown the ball to the first baseman. Shay would have been out and that would have been the end of the game.
Instead, the pitcher threw the ball right over the first baseman’s head, out of reach of all team mates. Everyone from the stands and both teams started yelling, “Shay, run to first! Run to first!” Never in his life had Shay ever run that far, but he made it to first base. He scampered down the baseline, wide-eyed and startled.
Everyone yelled, “Run to second, run to second!” Catching his breath, Shay awkwardly ran towards second, gleaming and struggling to make it to the base. By the time Shay rounded towards second base, the right fielder had the ball … the smallest guy on their team who now had his first chance to be the hero for his team. He could have thrown the ball to the second-baseman for the tag, but he understood the pitcher’s intentions so he, too, intentionally threw the ball high and far over the third-baseman’s head. Shay ran toward third base deliriously as the runners ahead of him circled the bases toward home.
All were screaming, “Shay, Shay, Shay, all the Way Shay“
Shay reached third base because the opposing shortstop ran to help him by turning him in the direction of third base, and shouted, “Run to third! Shay, run to third!“
As Shay rounded third, the boys from both teams, and the spectators, were on their feet screaming, “Shay, run home! Run home!” Shay ran to home, stepped on the plate, and was cheered as the hero who hit the grand slam and won the game for his team.
“That day“, said the father softly with tears now rolling down his face, “the boys from both teams helped bring a piece of true love and humanity into this world“.
Shay didn’t make it to another summer. He died that winter, having never forgotten being the hero and making his father so happy, and coming home and seeing his Mother tearfully embrace her little hero of the day!
AND NOW A LITTLE FOOTNOTE TO THIS STORY: We all send thousands of jokes through the e-mail without a second thought, but when it comes to sending messages about life choices, people hesitate. The crude, vulgar, and often obscene pass freely through cyberspace, but public discussion about decency is too often suppressed in our schools and workplaces.
If you’re thinking about sharing this message, chances are that you’re probably sorting out the people in your address book who aren’t the “appropriate” ones to receive this type of message. Well, the person who you would like to share this believes that we all can make a difference. We all have thousands of opportunities every single day to help realize the “natural order of things.” So many seemingly trivial interactions between two people present us with a choice: Do we pass along a little spark of love and humanity or do we pass up those opportunities and leave the world a little bit colder in the process?
You now have two choices: Either
1. Forget this message; or
2. Share this message and warm someone’s heart.
May your day, be a Shay Day.
