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Editor's Note: Are you LOHAS?

Yoel Meyers

Yoel Meyers

A reader sent an e-mail recently asking: “Why doesn’t Chronogram do more stories about environmental issues?” The note was polite, concise, and laudatory. My correspondent explained that, in her opinion, the magazine had a strong track record of environmental stories, and was the perfect media vehicle for disseminating articles on sustainability and the “green lifestyle” to a community thirsty for information. She hoped we would become more vocal on sustainability in future editions of the magazine.

This question kicked off a meditation on what “environmentalism” currently means, how its definition has shifted in recent years, and where Chronogram stands in relation to it.

Time was, when you spoke about environmentalism, the issues were fairly broad—protection of endangered species, land conservation, alternative energy, waterway remediation—but the campaigns associated with the “environmental movement” were specific: save the whales, no power plant on Storm King, clean up the Hudson.

(The semi-pejorative “environmental movement” classification always left the door open for slippage into actual marginalizing monikers like tree hugger, spotted owl coddler, and solar sissy. It had yet to penetrate the corridors of power and the media 25 years ago that the environment was not something that one group sought to build a political base upon, like say, abortion, but rather the very air, soil, and water which supports life itself.)

Today, green is the new black. Chain supermarkets have expanded their organic aisles beyond the tofu/brown rice/carrot juice continuum to a wide variety of organic fare, from food to household cleaners to personal hygiene products. Celebrities like Cameron Diaz and Will Ferrell drive hybrid cars. ExxonMobil touts its eco-friendly bona fides in expensive ads (thank you, petrodollars) on the op-ed page of the New York Times. Even the coal industry is getting in on the act, claiming that a new process, turning coal into a liquid fuel, will not only solve our dependence on foreign oil, but also reduce greenhouse gas emissions from our cars. (All we have to do is trap the massive amounts of carbon dioxide emitted by burning the coal at 1,000 degrees during the conversion process underground. Suffice to say, whether underground CO2 sequestration will work is unclear.)

Environmentalism is no longer solely equated with tempeh-eating capitalist renunciators who’ve gone back to the land. It’s also about handbags, and tourism, and radiant floor heating. It’s now part of lifestyle packaging, and goes something like this: If you like the serenity of yoga, then you’ll love the less ecosystem-destructive feeling of driving a Toyota Prius to buy grass-fed beef on your way home from the acupuncturist. Marketers have developed a term that defines this demographic of consumers: LOHAS. It’s an acronym for Lifestyles of Health and Sustainability, a market focused on sustainable living, personal development, health and fitness, the environment, and social justice. And a powerful one at that—according to the International Journal of Consumer Studies, Lohasians spent an estimated $300 billion in 2006, approximately 30 percent of the total US consumer market. This is serious money; we’re not talking about peddling Birkenstocks to longhairs.

Chronogram
was LOHAS before there was LOHAS. Since 1993, when the magazine was launched, we’ve covered issues of social justice, environmentalism, spirituality, and health in just about every edition, along with our robust local cultural reportage. It’s been part of our brand from the very beginning, though it wasn’t called LOHAS then, and what Chronogram is isn’t quite LOHAS now either. It’s a “whole is greater than the sum of the parts” equation. Yes, you’ll find articles on social justice in our pages (“Gifts That Keep Giving,” a guide to philanthropic donations this holiday season, appears on page 86); as well as pieces explicitly about environmental topics like global warming (“The Polar Bears of Dutchess County,” profiling the climate change research of the Institute for Ecosystem Studies in Millbrook, begins on page 34). But we don’t beat a drum about our coverage of these issues any more than a zebra would call attention to its stripes. It’s in our DNA and makes us what we are, and implicitly informs every story we write.

So when I’m asked a question like: “Why doesn’t Chronogram do more stories about environmental issues?” I realize that we’re not showing our stripes forcefully enough, not communicating the expanse of our vision clearly enough. (And, to take the simple answer, possibly not covering environmental issues as comprehensively as some readers would like.) For starters: Stay tuned next month for an interview with Catherine O’Reilly, a biologist at Bard College who worked on the United Nation’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which shared this year’s Nobel Peace Prize with former Vice President Al Gore. And, of course, much more.