Artwork stating 'Education Destroys Barriers', 'We Demand Treatment', and 'I Need A Chance'

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  • Europe's Noise Capital Tries to Turn Down the Volume

    In February, municipal authorities in Paris began installing sound radar devices in the city as part of a slew of measures taken since 2015 to address noise pollution, an issue which is being considered more seriously as a public health risk. Holistic measures like installing sound-barriers, low-noise asphalt, vehicle-restrictions, and housing regulations have already reduced the average noise level by two decibels and brought down the number of people living in noisy environments.

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  • Salem looks to solution-based housing for those experiencing homelessness

    Micro-shelters with on-site case managers give people experiencing homelessness a stable place to live while connecting them to medical care and job opportunities.

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  • Jukyty: Una lucha ciudadana por la memoria histórica

    Asociación Cultural Jukyty, formada principalmente por docentes e historiadores, logra reinvindicar las tierra de su comunidad que fueron testigos de una histórica y heróica batalla de más de 3000 niños en 1869. Pero además, convierten esta iniciativa inicial en una manera de revalorizar y organizar el aservo cultural de su comunidad, a pesar de la falta de apoyo político y ciudadano.

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  • Public Libraries Are Making It Easy to Check Out Seeds—and Plant a Garden

    More and more public libraries around the United States are creating seed libraries as a way to encourage gardening, combat hunger insecurity, and build community resilience. For example, the Jefferson Public Library in Georgia has seen the number of people using the seed library grow to more than 300 in 2021. It can be a lot of work to maintain the seed libraries, but some librarians see it as a way to engage the community.

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  • Brasiliens Paketdienst in den Elendsvierteln

    Millionen von Favela-Bewohnern in Brasilien sind vom Online-Shopping ausgeschlossen, da Lieferdienste Überfälle auf Transporter fürchten. Givanildo Pereira hat deshalb einen Paketdienst für sein Armutsviertel gegründet – und seine Erwartungen nach anfänglichen Schwierigkeiten bereits übertroffen.

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  • La plaza que se convirtió en un centro de cultura al aire libre

    Una comisión vecinal logra transforma una plaza abandonada en un espacio de recreo para los miembros de la comunida de todas las edades. La misma comisión y los demás miembros del barrio, asumen el mantenimiento y la organización de actividades, que va desde bibliotega para niños, festivales de arte, espacios para la recreación y el deporte. Sin embargo, las acciones aún esperan apoyo gubernamental.

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  • Puerto Rico enfrenta el reto de reducir el 60% los desechos que se depositan en vertederos para el 2030

    Aprender de los desaciertos del pasado será clave para alcanzar la nueva meta de la Ley 33 de Mitigación, Adaptación y Resiliencia al Cambio Climático en Puerto Rico. La Ley 70, la cual fue promulgada en 1992, había declarado cinco mandatos, los cuales han visto poco o ningún progreso o implementación. Bajo la Ley 33, se actualizarán estos mandatos, incluyendo el atacar los problemas a través de sus raíces.

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  • Our Rivers' Keepers: How the Ohio River's trash collectors transformed the waterway

    A nonprofit with a barge and a 10-person crew picks up trash and plastics across seven rivers in the U.S. Midwest. In one year, Living Lands and Waters collected over half a million pounds of trash. Over the years, they’ve attracted hundreds of thousands of volunteers to help their operation. “No matter who you are, where you’re from, how old, young or what political party you belong to – it doesn’t matter, because no one likes seeing garbage in the river,” said the cofounder.

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  • How Los Angeles Became the Leader of a Tree-Planting Revolution

    City Plants, an organization in Los Angeles, is partnering with other nonprofits, government agencies, scientists, and residents to create a more equitable urban forest throughout the city. By working together and using technology, they have planted more than 65,000 trees to combat climate change, systemic racism, and high temperatures that affect all Angelenos.

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  • Indigenous knowledge and science team up to triple a caribou herd

    A collaboration between two First Nations communities, scientists, private businesses, and the Canadian government are recovering caribou populations in British Columbia. Because of their work, they have been able to triple the number of caribou in their herd over the last decades. While their methods of protecting the animals are controversial, they’ve been able to protect more than 7,000 hectares of additional land for caribou habitat.

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