Top Northwest Sustainability Headlines

June 18, 2013

1. Seattle taxi drivers stage a protest parade

Competition among taxis, for-hire cabs and ride-sharing services became more tense at Seattle City Hall on Monday as the City Council reconsidered how to regulate them all.

The Seattle Times | Car-sharing

2. Weyerhaeuser ups its timber holdings by 33%

In the third-largest forestry acquisition in North American history, timber giant Weyerhaeuser Co. will acquire Longview Timber and its 645,000 acres of timberland holdings in Oregon and Washington for $2.65 billion.

The Oregonian | Forests

3. Obama considers sweeping climate plan

The Obama administration is considering a sweeping initiative to address climate change, including the first-ever limits on carbon dioxide from power plants, the country’s biggest source of greenhouse gas emissions.

Los Angeles Times | Policy

4. For people of color, a hidden housing market

A new study has found that blacks, Latinos and Asians looking for homes were shown fewer housing options than whites who were equally qualified. And fewer options meant higher housing costs.

NPR | Housing

5. Preempting your activism

This summer, the 9th Circuit Court in California is weighing the question of whether companies have the right to take preemptive legal action against peaceful protesters for hypothetical future protests.

Grist | Rights

6. Ecopreneurs take on marine pollution

A new Victoria venture, PlasticShore, wants to transform the problem of marine plastic into a resource for use in consumer products.

Vancouver Observer | Oceans

7. PHOTOS: Your local landscaping goats

Once again the rescue goats of Rent a Ruminant are hitting the slopes under the Seattle viaduct at Lenora and Pine, munching away the weeds by order of the city’s Department of Transportation.

The Seattle Post-Intelligencer | Transportation

8. Study: Heavy pollution linked to autism risk

Researchers from the Harvard School of Public Health released a report yesterday concluding that diesel, mercury, lead, manganese and methylene chloride in the air significantly increased the risk of having a child with autism.

The Oregonian | Pollution

9. Airbnb vs hotels: A price comparison

Is it actually less expensive to stay at an Airbnb than a hotel?

Priceonomics | Housing

10. MAP: Your biking wisdom in 10 words

The New York Times is collecting riders’ shared wisdom about biking where they live.

New York Times | Biking

More News from June 18, 2013

WSU starts honeybee sperm bank

Washington State University entomologists are preserving semen extracted from the industrious insects that pollinate much of the nation’s food supply but face environmental threats.

The Oregonian | Honeybees

Drilling for (virtual) oil

An energy and shipping company has developed an online video game to help attract young people to jobs in the oil and gas industry.

Christian Science Monitor | Fossil fuels

Climate? Si se puede!

When it comes to American Latinos and climate change, the numbers are stacking up in a couple of ways.

Sightline | Public opinion

The kaleidoscope of fossil fuel abundance

If the US shale experience is supposed to forecast the world, then the evidence so far suggests a boomlet followed by frantic efforts just to keep production level.

Christian Science Monitor | Fossil fuels

Businessman tries his luck at building pot brand

For the activists who led the effort to legalize recreational marijuana in Washington state last fall, Jamen Shively was one of their biggest fears: an aspiring pot profiteer whose unabashed dreams of building a cannabis empire might attract unwanted attention from the federal government or a backlash that could slow the marijuana reform movement across the country.

The Seattle Post-Intelligencer | Marijuana