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Mission Statement: "To Provide Healthy and Sustainable solutions for everyday life, while still being affordable."
James Della Bella made a name for his company, Greenerways Organic, by offering only the best all-natural, environmentally friendly products to consumers. Partnering with manufacturers and distributors of natural and organic products, James Della Bella and the sales team at Greenerways Organic are creating a business that is succeeding while doing its part for the environment. In addition to the environmentally sound, affordable goods Greenerways Organic promotes, James Della Bella personally designs home and garden solutions such as Bug-it-Off, Greenerways Organic’s first completely natural insect repellant. James Della Bella selected the ingredients for Bug-it-Off based on their efficacy and purity to ensure customer satisfaction. Using triple filtered water, organic lemongrass and orange oil, as well as USDA certified organic citronella oil, James Della Bella bottled Bug-it-Off utilizing an innovative technique to preserve the formulation. Wanting to avoid neutralizing the many benefits of Bug-it-Off’s all-natural ingredients, James Della Bella did not contaminate the final product with a manufacturing process that injects each individual oil separately into the bottle. Using this technique, James Della Bella produced an insect repellant that is safe for use on the most sensitive skin. Additionally, James Della Bella formulated Bug-it-Off to be completely safe for use around young children, pets, and expectant mothers. James Della Bella is committed to supplying all organic, chemical-free solutions for shoppers who are both ecologically aware and economically conscious, offering a number of excellent tips for greener living through the Greenerways Organic’s website, www.greenerways.com. James Della Bella encourages everyone to use these tips to protect the environment. To help make the many choices for healthier living, James Della Bella discusses the environmental benefits of glass, ceramic, or stainless steel containers, cleaning carpets with natural cleansers, line-drying laundry, purchasing recycled paper products that are 30 percent post-consumer waste or higher. As well, James Della Bella warns of the dangers of microwaving plastic. There are numerous measures that educated consumers can take to protect themselves and the earth from harmful chemicals, and James Della Bella is doing his part as both a business leader and member of the global community.
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James Della Bella on Robert Caro
January, 2011
One of Mr. James Della Bella’s favorite authors is the renowned biographer Robert Caro, who earned significant acclaim for his profiles of President Lyndon B. Johnson and New York City urban planner Robert Moses. A graduate of Princeton University, Caro subsequent earned a Carnegie Fellowship at Columbia University and a Nieman Fellowship at Harvard University. A reporter before becoming a biographer, he began his career at New Brunswick Daily Home News and later spent six years with Newsday in Long Island. In 2010, President Obama awarded him The National Humanities Medal, and he was also inducted into the New York State Writers Hall of Fame a few months later. The Power Broker, Caro’s most revered work, required seven years and 522 interviews to complete, but earned the Pulitzer Prize in Biography and the Francis Parkman Prize. Caro’s book represents meticulous research skill narrated by a strong, authoritative voice. Focusing on the life and career of Robert Moses, an extremely influential city planner, The Power Broker reveals the childhood events and chance encounters that taught Moses how to influence the elected officials who were supposed to preside over him. In his career, Moses garnered considerable respect from a number of New York bureaucrats and exercised true authority over them, despite not serving as an elected official himself. Moses strongly objected to Caro’s undertaking, as he had with all previous attempted biographies, and made the process difficult for Caro. When Moses eventually agreed to meet with Caro for a series of seven interviews, he became angry and reneged on the agreement. Caro instead relied on interviews with Moses’ coworkers, family members, and contemporaries to complete the book.
by James Della Bella
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