admin

In her new book “Waste: One Woman’s Fight Against America’s Dirty Secret,” Catherine Coleman Flowers refuses to conceal the toxic reality of environmental injustice in the U.S. She experienced it first-hand in her home of Lowndes County— just down the road from Selma, Alabama—where families’ health and safety is endangered by inadequate sanitation infrastructure. It’s a problem felt in America’s “Black Belt” as well as other rural communities around the country.
A warming climate may put a damper on St. Patrick's day celebrations in the near future.
A new study coming out of Atlanta finds that your allergies might get a whole...
Soaring gas prices since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine have laid bare the dilemma of relying...
As crude prices surge, oil companies are raking in money — enormous profits gained from...
Scientists are already virtually certain that 2022 will be among the 10 hottest years on...