Great stuff, great cause. The products you sell are great quality and very comfortable. Even the 100% recycled stuff is great. Couldn't tell the difference, which surprised me. You guys have some great products and are helping to clean up communities. Keep it up!
I bought the Volunteer Cleanup Kit as a gift for my boyfriend who is passionate about cleaning up the litter in his rural town. He loves it and cannot wait to use it. We are strong supporters of local businesses, so it was great to help out for the cause and the business during COVID.
The Environment + Energy Leader Awards recognize excellence in products and services that provide companies with energy and environmental benefits, and in projects implemented by companies that improved environmental or energy management and the bottom line.
Use dozens of weapons, relic items, and drones to help Bernard purge the mutants for clean earth! Combine melee, drones, and AoE weapons with your unique strategy to destroy the mutant creatures. Grow stronger and fight harder!
With our Roll-Off Dumpster Service, you can easily and responsibly dispose of a wide range of materials, from construction debris to household waste. Our sturdy and durable dumpsters are available in various sizes, ensuring that you have the perfect solution for any project, big or small.
The Darcy J. Foundation and Clean the World Foundation are joining hands to raise money to provide underserved communities with the most basic necessities: health education, access to clean water, sanitation and personal hygiene.
Hydro Excavation, or daylighting, is an effective alternative for digging where heavy machinery is not practical or even unsafe. Conventional methods such as backhoes and bulldozers can damage underground utilities, cause potential injury to operators , delays to construction or industrial projects, and costly fines for contractors.
The project, Oden said, is a scaled-back version of another Clean Earth project that would create a village where people who had lost their jobs or homes or both could come and live and learn new trades, such as carpentry, plumbing and farming.
Oden asked WCDA for $9,800 to purchase lumber and hardware. The funding also will help the project meet the required 50 percent match to apply for a Tax Increment Financing grant from the Washington County commissioners.
Oden said she already has donations of $26,000 in in-kind contributions to the project. Although the TIF funding requires a 50 percent match to be in cash, Oden said, she will seek an exemption from the county commissioners. She is expected to present the proposal to the county on April 8.
Although all WCDA members present voted in support of the project and will provide a letter stating so, many wanted more details before approving the actual funding. In particular, they were interested in knowing how many UT residents would take advantage of the gardens.
Machias town manager and county manager Betsy Fitzgerald updated the committee about a separate project, a Machias skateboard park off Grove Street. She said there has been progress toward creating a park design but there are no final figures on costs.
Pure Earth is partnering with Environment Africa and the Kabwe Municipal Council to cover yards and gardens in the Chowa neighborhood of Kabwe with clean soil to reduce exposures to lead dust, particularly for the youngest children.
A class of ESF students launched a weather balloon carrying cameras that were set to take photos and shoot video footage as the balloon flew up to 100,000 feet above the earth and traveled some 150 miles, part of a class project in remote sensing.
Jonathan Losos, William H. Danforth Distinguished University Professor in the Department of Biology, was awarded $1,103,212 from the National Science Foundation for a project titled "Convergent evolution across time and space: Evolutionary diversity and contemporary adaptation in new and old world lizards."
Meredith Jackrel, assistant professor of chemistry, received a $300,000 grant from the ALS Association to support a project titled "Countering the aggregation of TDP-43, FUS, DPRS, and Matrin 3 with engineered protein disaggregases."
The National Science Foundation has awarded a grant of $146,551 to a group of interdepartmental collaborators to support the Center for Quantum Sensors. The project is under the direction of Kater Murch, associate professor of physics in Arts & Sciences; Ron K. Cytron, professor and associate department chair of computer science and engineering in the McKelvey School of Engineering; Sophia E. Hayes, professor of chemistry in Arts & Sciences; James H. Buckley, professor of physics in Arts & Sciences; and Erik A. Henriksen, assistant professor of physics in Arts & Sciences.
Jeffrey Catalano, professor of Earth and planetary sciences, and Kaushik Mitra, graduate student in Earth and planetary sciences, received $123,950 from NASA-FINESST for a project titled "Chlorate as an Fe and Mn oxidant on the Martian surface."
Savannah Martin, graduate student of biological anthropology, was awarded $25,200 from the National Science Foundation for her doctoral dissertation research project titled "Cultural identity as a moderator of stress physiology." Martin is under the direction of EA Quinn, associate professor of physical anthropology.
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