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Hold That Soil, Please

by admin | Aug 13, 2016 | Agriculture, Environment, Public health, Public policy, Science, Water

  Ours has often been a profligate society in using the vast natural resources with which it was originally endowed. We’ve improved our attitudes about conservation, but we have a long way to go. Among those resources we have been prone to waste in the interest...

In the Valley of the Crooked River

by admin | Jun 25, 2016 | Environment, Floodplain management, History, Parks, Public health, Recreation, Travel, Water

Two weeks ago, I wrote about Cleveland’s Flats Entertainment District, where restaurants and bars now line the sides of the once filthy Cuyahoga River that now hosts boats and rowers. The Flats is but the last reach of a river that extends south into the Akron area....

Riverwalk: A New Chicago Magnet

by admin | Jun 5, 2016 | Chicago, History, Infrastructure, Recreation, Restaurants, Transportation, Urban Planning, Water

Chicago is already quite rich in parks and tourist attractions. What can it add downtown? In the past, I have written about the 606 Trail in Chicago, which is experiencing its first anniversary after opening a year ago. Despite some of its well-known challenges and...

Regional Green Infrastructure

by admin | May 30, 2016 | Climate, Disaster, Disaster policy, Environment, Government, Infrastructure, Public policy, Public safety, Urban forest, Urban Planning, Water, Wildfire

The subtitle to this headline for many people might be: Who Cares? As a term of art, green infrastructure may be popular with landscape architects, civil engineers, and urban planners, among a few other allied professions, but it does not often mean much to the...

Engaging Preparedness for Drought

by admin | May 1, 2016 | Climate, Disaster, Drought, Government, Public policy, Resilience, Science, Water

Drought has historically been the disaster that fails to focus our attention on its consequences until it is too late to take effective action. While other disasters like earthquakes, hurricanes, tornadoes, and most floods have a quick onset that signals trouble, and...

NOAA Provides Online Resources on Water

by admin | Mar 29, 2016 | Blogging, Blogging, Climate, Disaster, Drought, Water

Occasionally, I have used this blog to link to American Planning Association blog posts that I think some readers may find important. That is the case here: At the APA blog, I provide a brief introduction to a wonderful new resource for communities on a variety of...
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