90.3 WCPN ideastream®: Environment
Environment
Recent Coverage
Akron Reaches Settlement With EPA On Sewer Renovations
Regional News Stories: Friday, October 16, 2009
The city of Akron has reached a tentative deal with the U.S Environmental Protection Agency ...establishing a timeline for stopping raw sewage from getting into the Cuyahoga River, and other waterways. The agreement would settle a lawsuit brought by the EPA against the city earlier this year. Ideastream's Bill Rice reports.
National Mall Hosts Twenty Student-Built Homes in Solar Decathlon
NewsDepth: Wednesday, October 14, 2009
The National Mall in Washington DC is the site of another U.S. Department of Energy Solar Decathlon. Students from twenty universities around the world have designed and built high-efficiency solar-powered homes. Now the teams are competing in ten contests on the mall that simulate real world use of their houses. They do laundry, cook, and watch TV - just like in any other family home - but all of the electricity and hot water is generated by the sun. The event runs through October 18th.
Science Cafe: Hurricanes, Climate Change, and Columbus
The Sound of Ideas: Monday, October 12, 2009
A lake bottom is more than rock and muck. Lakes change water temperature and chemistry seasonally. Organisms like snails and crustaceans and the sediment they die in record changing conditions and reveal a lot about the hypothetical connections between hurricanes and climate change. Monday morning at 9:00, join ideastream® host Dan Moulthrop to find out how geologists and paleontologists can predict the weather around the world from reading a lake bottom in paradise.
Ashtabula Covered Bridges, The Bridge Project, Filmmaker Alexander Boxerbaum and Don Prusha
Applause: Thursday, October 8, 2009
Bridges conjure up many things: romance, troubled waters, fear of heights, transportation, and even waste - with a bridge to nowhere. Coming up on the next Applause we’ll take a toll of some of the beautiful bridges in our area, visit the covered bridge capital of Ohio, plus we’ll meet a man who got the bridge of his dreams by building it himself…all this and more on the next round of Applause.
AG Joins Environmentalists in Dispute Over Lake Erie Shore Property
Regional News Stories: Wednesday, October 7, 2009
Ohio's attorney general is siding with environmentalists in their long-running fight with landowners along Lake Erie. And he's going to the Ohio Supreme Court to make his case. Statehouse correspondent Bill Cohen reports.
Air Quality Improves in NE Ohio
Regional News Stories: Wednesday, October 7, 2009
The cool summer and slow economy are being credited for a dramatic reduction in ozone pollution this year. Ideastream®'s Bill Rice reports.
Study Says Carbon Reduction Plan Could Cost Ohio Thousands of Jobs
Regional News Stories: Thursday, October 1, 2009
A new report on the impact of carbon emission regulations claims millions of American jobs are threatned -- thousands of them in Ohio. That's according to one think tank's analysis and it's giving Ohio Senator Sherrod Brown, usually on the liberal side of environmental issues, more cover in his opposition to the plan. ideastream®'s Rick Jackson filed this report.
Cape Coral, Florida Protects Thousands of Burrowing Owls
NewsDepth: Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Cape Coral, Florida is home to that state’s largest population of burrowing owls. Fans of the little owls are asking for help to keep the feathered residents safe. As their name implies, burrowing owls live in burrows in the sandy ground, and you can see them either peeping out of their burrow or standing just outside of it. The Cape Coral Friends of Wildlife volunteers are asking residents to watch for nests - in their yards or in vacant lots - and mark them off with tape so no one goes near it with a lawn mower, and to keep the vegetation around the burrows neat and trimmed.
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Resources
The Return of the Cuyahoga On-Line Curriculum
The Return of the Cuyahoga On-Line Curriculum answers questions about how a river could burn and why it happened here. Included is an entire unit plan containing several cross-curricular lessons correlated to State of Ohio Science Standards in the areas of environmental history, environmental investigation, and eliciting social action. Interactive features include animated maps, streaming video, and a glossary which is linked to new words throughout the site. A database allows teachers to enter and compare water testing data gathered from local tributaries.
The Life Depends on Water web site was created in cooperation with Cuyahoga Soil and Water Conservation District to inform and inspire students and the general public into environmental conservation action. In addition to a wealth of information, links to supplementary resources, a glossary, and an animated map, you will find: Lessons, correlated to State of Ohio Science Standards, Web quests, and Service learning projects that will encourage your students to take action and get involved in real world solutions.
Making Connections to the Natural World
You've recently moved to Northeast Ohio or else you're a longtime resident. Either way, you're someone who wants to know more about the world around you and how we interact with it. Here are some quick links to help you get involved in making the region a better place to live, work and raise a family.
Webliography: Wind Power
Funding
Funding for the coverage of environment topics comes from The Cleveland Foundation and The George Gund Foundation.
Series
The Return of the Cuyahoga
The Return of the Cuyahoga is a fascinating look at the life, death and rebirth of one of America’s most polluted rivers. Perhaps best known as “the river that burned,” the Cuyahoga is, in fact, an emblematic waterway. Its history is the history of the American frontier, the rise of industry, and the scourge of pollution. In 1969, when the river caught on fire, the blaze ignited a political movement that not only saved the Cuyahoga and its communities, but continues today with the current environmental movement. More information about the movie, which premiered April 22, 2008 on WVIZ/PBS, is available here.
Climate Connections
NPR and the National Geographic Society embark on a new, long-term, multi-platform initiative focusing on how the environment changes people and vice versa. Its centerpiece is a yearlong news series, “Climate Connections,” focusing on climate-related issues. The initiative spans all NPR News programs and NPR.org, as well as National Geographic’s many media platforms, including National Geographic magazine and nationalgeographic.com.
National Headlines
Gore Urges Obama To Take Lead On Climate Change
Can Oceans Survive The Human Appetite For Seafood?
A Trip To Sumatra To Hear a Gibbon's Call
Radar Reveals Dynamic World Under Antarctica's Ice
Kilimanjaro Glaciers May Vanish In A Few Decades
GOP Boycotts Senate Panel On Climate Change
Rocky Mountain Activist Carole King
The Perils Of Overfishing, Part 2
Upcoming Workshops
“The Future of Life” Online Book Discussion Group
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
Discuss with fellow teachers the implications of environmental change and how to positively impact it.












