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March 22, 2006: Thomas Bolioli, President of Terra Novum, LLC is being featured in a Computerworld feature article entitled Sustainable Computing: It's Not Easy Being Green: Eco-friendly computing is a concept whose payback is slowly catching on. Mr. Bolioli was quoted as saying:

"There's always a company out there doing something to be eco-friendly, but for most companies, it has to make money sense," says Thomas Bolioli, president of Terra Novum LLC, a consulting company in Watertown, Mass., that advises IT departments on energy efficiency.

Bolioli says companies are starting to better balance their computing requirements with the desire to reduce energy consumption and the corresponding costs. They're employing power management software to power down PCs when not in use, and they're opting for more energy-efficient components, such as LCDs rather than CRT monitors, when refreshing hardware.

Mr. Bolioli is a professional IT Consultant with expertise in the energy efficiency of electronic devices, among other things, and who works as part of a EPA sponsored team which approaches organizations in order to advocate more energy efficient means of managing enterprise computing.

February 11, 2006: Terra Novum will be sponsoring the February Environmental Business Council forum, Leadership towards a Sustainable Future: Premier Examples of Smart Growth on February 17th, 2006 with Keynote Speaker Secretary Foy of the Massachusetts Office of Commonwealth Development.

There are key competitive challenges and opportunities facing the Commonwealth in the areas of sustaining innovation, education, housing supply and affordability, and transited oriented development. In the area of housing, the Commonwealth, under the leadership of Office of Commonwealth Development Secretary Foy, has developed and implemented policies that are having an impact resulting in the encouraging development of smart growth projects. Join the EBC to hear Secretary Foy talk about his vision for what must continue to happen in the Commonwealth and hear how forward thinking real estate developers and municipalities are actively responding to the challenge.

Keynote Speaker:
Douglas I. Foy, Secretary
Office of Commonwealth Development
Commonwealth of Massachusetts

Date: Friday, February 17, 2006
Time: 7:30 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
Registration and continental breakfast: 7:30 a.m.
Program: 8:00 a.m. - 12:00 p. m.
Location: Hyatt Regency Boston
One Avenue de Lafayette, Boston, Massachusetts
Phone: 617-912-1234

Panel I:

WESTWOOD STATION: New Smart Growth Community

The area surrounding the MBTA/Amtrak terminal near the junction of Route 128 and I-95 has long been viewed as an underperforming area. Cabot, Cabot & Forbes (CC&F) is now collaborating with the Town of Westwood to shape over 100 acres around Westwood Station into a mixed-use Smart Growth Community. Project partners include Steven Karp of New England Development, The Commonwealth Fund, and Rizzo Associates. A recent Boston Globe article lauded the Westwood Station project for its antidote to sprawl theme and practicality, and it is expected that the area will become a new regional hub.

Panel Members:

John J. ''Jay" Doherty - President, Cabot, Cabot & Forbes of New England
Stephen R. Karp - Chief Executive of New England Development Nancy Hyde - Selectman, Town of Westwood
Patricia Singer, Esq. - Project Director, Massachusetts Office of Business Development

Panel Moderator: Rick Moore - President, Rizzo Associates - A Tetra Tech Company

Panel II:

NORTH POINT: An Urban Transit-Oriented Development

The North Point development project spans three Massachusetts cities and truly redefines connections between communities. This former 48-acre industrial site is being transformed into a dynamic, mixed-use, transit-oriented neighborhood, with over 10 acres of new green space and a brand new transportation and utility infrastructure. The development's incorporation of transit including bus and rapid transit access, constrained parking, pedestrian/bike routes, vehicular access management, highway reconstruction, and transit station relocation is a cornerstone of the project's ultimate success. Through careful design and permitting, it is sensitive to the character of historic neighborhoods, and has resulted in a project that joins multiple urban centers in ways never achieved before.

Panel Members:

Lisa S. Serafin - Vice President, Spaulding & Slye -A member of the Jones Lang LaSalle group
Beth Rubenstein - Assistant City Manager for Community, Development City of Cambridge
Susan Sloan-Rossiter - Principal, VHB
Anthony Flint - Smart Growth Education Director, Office of Commonwealth Development, Commonwealth of Massachusetts

Moderator: Leo Pierre Roy - Director, Environmental Services, VHB

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