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  • California's new vote-by-mail system is a big win for marginalized groups

    A new California law makes universal mail-in voting permanent after it was temporarily adopted for the 2020 election in response to the coronavirus pandemic. Expansion of mail-in voting in 2020 resulted in higher voter turnout, especially among low-income and communities of color. Moving forward, all voters will receive a ballot in the mail 29 days before each election. Voters can fill out their ballot, return it using a prepaid envelope or drop it in a secure drop box, and track in transit online. They also still have the choice to vote in person.

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  • California outlawed the all-white-male boardroom. That move is reshaping corporate America

    A 2018 law requires all publicly traded companies headquartered in California have at least one woman on their board, and as many as three women by the end of 2021 depending on the company’s size. The law, inspired by those in Europe, caused a ripple effect nationwide where women now occupy 50% more corporate board seats than before California’s law. The Nasdaq exchange became an influential force recently by requiring that nearly all of its listed companies’ boards have one woman and one person of color or a person who identifies as LGBTQ. Despite challenges, federal regulators approved the requirement.

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  • Mradi wa ‘Elimu Ni Sasa Initiative' Wasaidia Wanafunzi Kwale

    Mradi wa serikali ya Kaunti ya Kwale iitwayo "Elimu ni Sasa" imewawezesha zaidi ya watoto 32,000 wanaofanya vyema na hawawezi kulipa karo kupata elimu. Kupitia kwa bajeti ya kaunti, watoto werevu ambao ni mayatima ama wanatoka kwa familia maskini wanahifadhiwa kujiunga na shule ya upili na kulingana na jinsi wanavyotia bidii wanasomesha hadi chuo kikuu.

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  • Paris shows how to make public housing greener and more habitable at the same time

    Old and neglected housing contributes to climate change because it runs on fossil fuels. In New York, outdated heating systems waste two-thirds of energy. The New York City Housing Authority is not only trying to create better, safer, more livable affordable housing, but also cleaner and more sustainable housing. While the city is just beginning to explore how to do that, other cities, like Paris, have already begun the work of updating old buildings that are used for affordable housing and can offer a model for American cities.

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  • Leistbares Wohnen: Sind 3D-gedruckte und faltbare Häuser die Zukunft?

    Mit Hilfe neuer Technologien ist es möglich, innerhalb kürzester Zeit günstige und klimaresistente Häuser zu bauen. Allerdings ist der Ansatz eher eine Nischenlösung für bestimmte Bevölkerungsgruppen an bestimmten Orten.

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  • Heat dome hit these Vancouver neighbourhoods hardest — could planting more trees save lives?

    The “Greenest City Action Plan” aimed to reduce the effects of extreme heat by planting 100,000 trees. Shade from trees acts as a thermal buffer during extreme heat and cold and a lack of trees disproportionately impacts low-income communities. The program surpassed its goal by planting trees in parks and along streets, as well as by buying small plots of land to create “pocket parks” with trees providing shade. The city subsidized trees for homeowners, who were banned from cutting down mature, healthy trees on their properties, and ran education programs to increase resident buy-in.

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  • Parson acknowledges new gun law needs to be revisited after police say it ties their hands

    A new Missouri law, the Second Amendment Preservation Act, restricts the ability of local law enforcement officials to collaborate with federal officials in enforcing gun laws and investigating gun crimes. The law, which legislators meant as a statement of gun-rights principles, would fine police officers who violate it. Many local law enforcement officers withdrew from federal-local gun crime task forces and have otherwise stopped working with their federal counterparts. One department stopped submitting data to the federal ballistics database. Police say the law interferes with legitimate police work.

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  • Costa Rica's answer to range anxiety

    Even though Costa Rica is leading the fight against climate change, the country lags behind in one area: electric vehicles. In one town, Monteverde, activists, and business owners got together to create a charging network, they called it Ruta Eléctrica. The goal is to stave off recharge anxiety, or the fear that an electric car won't make it to its destination without re-charging. To address the issue organizers got businesses to offer free-charging stations, have clear signage and maintain plug points.

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  • Du bio et du local à moindre prix : la solution Vrac pour sortir les quartiers de la malbouffe

    Dans nombre de quartiers populaires français, les commerces alimentaires se limitent très souvent à la grande distribution et aux fast-food. Comment y rendre les produits bio accessibles à tous ? L’association Vrac, implantée dans les quartiers prioritaires de la politique de la ville, propose des produits bio et (ou) locaux à prix coûtant grâce à des achats groupés en circuit-court. Fondé en 2014, Vrac est présent dans une dizaine de villes de France. Le réseau compte plus de 3500 adhérents et estime toucher 7000 à 10 000 foyers.

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  • How one woman shed $350,000 in student loans — without a lawyer

    People who cannot afford their student loan payments are filing discharges themselves and proving to the court why paying back the loans would create undue hardship to have their loans forgiven.

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