Editor's Take: September 03, 2010
joguldi, Flickr.
Green Revolution Goes Urban
Low-income communities and urban neighborhoods that have been skipped over by the environmental movement and green-employment opportunities are at last feeling the love, says a story in the Los Angeles Times. The article's focus is on California, but also cites the spread of green roofs and urban gardens across the US, and the lessons and experiences from LA certainly apply to cities through out the Northwest.
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Your editor today is Lisa Stiffler | View All Today's News
New plan coming for spotted owls
Seaside plan a tale of two cities
Fight against mine could be a bloody affair
Employers push health care costs onto workers
The future of Columbia River water
Whale watching rules to change
Cedar Grove has spent $1.73 million to solve stink
Seeking sage grouse solutions
Bike lane good for business?
Editor's Take: September 02, 2010
Scrunchleface, flickr
Miles To Go
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Your editor today is Jennifer Langston | View All Today's News
A national look at tax fairness
Lives of black Oregonians no better this year
The dirt on organic produce
"Free" parking costs Eugene $220,000
A dishonor to be nominated
Environmentalists stunned by failures in CA
First OR solar program up and running
BC urged to get tough on urban wildlife
Rage against the machines
Editor's Take: September 01, 2010
michaelrighi, flickr
Skyline for Sale?
Clearly, times are tough. Portland's transit agency is raising bus fares while cutting service, and school lunches may cost Puget Sound students more. But a proposal to lure businesses to downtown Seattle will most certainly be challenged: the city's planning department wants to let corporations put their logos on top of downtown skyscrapers.
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Your editor today is Jennifer Langston | View All Today's News
Spare change? Portland bus riders need it
LA mayor, Latino activists take on oil companies
CA rejects ban on plastic bags
Frogs and felons
Ziplining past the 'war in the woods'
Lunch to cost more at some WA schools
What if the bottled water tax and repeal both pass?
Slideshow: Taking bike activism to the streets
Views: Income-tax initiative's math adds up
Editor's Take: August 31, 2010
Photo courtesy: MorgueFile, dzz
Environomics
Personal, environmental, and economic health are knit together in today's news. The ugly: air pollution in Fairbanks causing more hospital visits, the national costs of car accidents and cancer-causing toxics from tar sands operations; and the optimistic: stickers on cars that give climate scores and banks getting smart about green business. It's not freakonomics, it's environomics.
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Your editor today is Anna Fahey | View All Today's News
Unhealthy air in Fairbanks boosts hospital visits
Agriculture fuels the Fraser Valley's white smog
Puget Sound Partnership devises progress indicators
Banks move away from dirty fuel business
Don't overfish salmon, warns BC native leader
Assessing the national bill for car accidents
Grades for car fuel economy
Nuclear industry takes new path for new plants
Whole Foods CEO: Healthy food is affordable necessity
Views: What will the Indian health system look like?
Editor's Take: August 30, 2010
David Lieberman, Flickr.
Invisible Families
The Seattle Times is running an impressive package of stories delving into the growing problems and emerging solutions for Northwest homelessness. Homeless families are the fastest-growing segment of folks who are without a stable abode. The answer is more affordable housing, experts are saying, and they make the case for government to foot the bill.
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Your editor today is Lisa Stiffler | View All Today's News

