The environmental history of the Great Lakes includes cycles of pollution, regulation, clean up, and economic successes and failures, says Kari Lydersen, a writer with Ensia.
See her work -- and more about climate change -- at [ Ссылка ]
This Great Lakes Now segment is part of “From Rust to Resilience: What climate change means for Great Lakes cities,” a collaborative reporting project that includes six members of the Institute for Nonprofit News (Belt Magazine, The Conversation, Ensia, Great Lakes Now at Detroit Public Television, MinnPost and Side Effects Public Media) as well as WUWM-FM Milwaukee, Indiana Public Broadcasting and The Water Main from American Public Media.
This project is part of the Pulitzer Center's nationwide Connected Coastlines reporting initiative. For more information, go to [ Ссылка ]-....
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SUPPORT for Great Lakes Now comes from the Fred A. and Barbara M. Erb Family Foundation, Laurie & Tim Wadhams, Consumers Energy Foundation, Eve & Jerry Jung, the Polk Family Fund, the Richard C. Devereaux Foundation Fund for Energy and Environmental Programming at Detroit Public Television, Americana Foundation and the Brookby Foundation as well as from viewers and readers like you.
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