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Paying Farmers to Welcome Birds

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bird_shore_Greater_Yellowlegs-Flickr-Bill_Gracey

The BirdReturns program, financed by the Nature Conservancy, pays rice farmers in the flight path of migratory shore birds to keep their fields flooded with irrigation water from the Sacramento River as migrating flocks arrive. Because the program pays for only several weeks of water instead of buying the habitat, the sums are modest.

Eventually, using this and other approaches, the conservationists at BirdReturns hope to increase the number of shorebirds that stop in the Central Valley to 400,000, from current levels of 170,000.

(READ the story in the New York Times)

Thanks to C. Michael McGinley for sending the link! – Photo of greater yellowlegs by Bill Gracey via CC license
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CEO Proves Fun Workplaces Can Produce Big Profits

CEO_Henry_EngelhardtHenry Engelhardt is proving you don’t need a strict, no-nonsense management style to successfully lead a multinational company.

The American founder and CEO has led his UK insurance group Admiral to become one of only two companies on the FTSE to report 10 straight years of higher profits.

No other companies on the London stock exchange have a “Ministry of Fun” team dedicated to organizing weekly social activities for staff.

(READ the story from the BBC)

Thanks to Andrew N. for sending the link!

Paralyzed Pit Bull Brings Message Of Perseverance To Patients

 

therapy_pit_bull_at_hospital_GlobalNewsvidWhen Elsa was only one year old she suffered a major spinal cord stroke, leaving her unable to walk.

Kelly Dann had only recently adopted the pit bull from the BC SPCA. She had been mistreated and had been through four homes before ending up with Dann.

Despite the bleak prognosis about her new dog, Dann said she was not going to just put her down.

After 16 months of rehab, the dog is fulfilling a higher purpose — giving back to others who are undergoing treatment, just like she did.

(READ the story at Global News)


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EU Passes Historic Law Requiring Large Companies to Report on Sustainability

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EU flagThe European Parliament has passed a historic law that makes it mandatory for the largest companies in Europe to include sustainability factors as an integral part of their annual financial reporting. The law, which was passed with a thumping majority vote of 599-55, will apply to publicly traded companies employing more than 500 workers.

The law, first proposed in 1999, will require these companies to report on policies, risks and results with regard to social, environmental and human rights impact, diversity and anti-corruption policies in their annual reports.

The fact is that companies will be more responsible for the enironment and society if their practices are transparent.

(READ the report at JustMeans.com)

Boy Trips Over 10,000 Year Old Mastodon Tooth

 

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While walking in a creek last summer, a nine-year-old Michigan boy stepped on something interesting and bent down to pick it up.

The peculiar brown object, about eight inches long, turned out to be the tooth of a mastodon — an elephant-like creature that roamed across North America more than 10,000 years ago.

Philip Stoll, known around his Lansing neighborhood as “Huckleberry Phil” because of his love for exploring the outdoors, took the lump home and washed it in the kitchen sink.

(WATCH the video from Newsy below, or READ the story at CNN)

Humble Ad From Thailand Grabs Internet With its Beautiful Message

unsung-hero-thai-life-insuranceThe Thai Life Insurance company made a short film for its new website, ThaiGoodStories.com and posted it on April 7.

The video, with the sweet message that kindness can lead to GREAT things, received millions of views and replays on social media.

It is entitled, Unsung Hero. Please take a few moments to see this… You will be glad you did.

 

Love Never Dies for Widow Touring Country in Pink Armor

 

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Alison Miller’s 24-year marriage was so passionate and fulfilling that after her husband’s sudden death, last spring from cancer, she felt so much grief that it spurred her to do things that few, even she, could have imagined. It spawned a courage to face challenges that previously she flatly ruled out. She felt compelled to leap out of her comfort zone in an effort to get as far away from the pain as she could, and there, on the road alone, she continues to feel the love and companionship of her “Handsome Husband”.

Her love-affair marriage with Chuck Dearing took an adventurous turn in 2009 when they sold their New Jersey home and everything in it and decided to travel the country. For four years they stayed at inexpensive hotels and military bases, because Chuck was retired from the Air Force, and loved being on the road. Escapees from “the rat race,” they called themselves “Happily Homeless”.

Then, on March 27, 2013, they were in southern California and discovered that Chuck’s cancer, which had been treated in 2011, had returned. It killed him four weeks later.

”Before he died,” Miller told the Good News Network, “I told him I would continue traveling on my own, and he asked me to revisit our favorite places and scatter his ‘cremains’.”

“Don’t mourn for me in black,” he told her in the end. “It isn’t your color: Mourn for me in pink.”

She suggested, “I’ll paint my car pink so you can find me out on the road.” (He smiled and said he’d be looking for her.)

After his death she drove to Arizona to be with two of their kids. She got a new car, fresh without memories and looked for someone to paint it.

“I told him our story of Happily Homeless and when I picked the car up, he’d created a beautiful shade of pink for me and named it, ‘Chuck’s Watching Over Me’, and it gave me courage to go back out on the road.”

She drove that pink car across the country to New Jersey where her beloved received a fitting memorial service, dignified with full military honors.

“The pink car did what I hoped it would do all along the way,” she told the Good News Network. “It brought people over to talk to me and kept me from being isolated. . .  People smiled at me, waved, honked their horns — its’ been amazing.”

The grief was still so raw she didn’t dare travel like they used to. Being in the hotels and bases where they used to stay would have delivered a million cuts to her already aching heart. But she needed to stay on the road to fulfill his last wish: “The PinkMagic Odyssey of scattering Handsome Husband ‘s cremains in our favorite spots around the country.”

Here’s where the courage came in

Chuck had always wanted to travel in an RV or stay at campsites, to be out in the natural world, but Alison wanted no part of it. The only rough living she was going to accept was a hotel bed that sagged toward one side. She liked good books in comfy chairs. and writing in her travel blog, Happily Homeless.

Maybe while seated in a comfy chair, she hatched a survival plan because she knew she would go insane waking up in those same places every morning with him not there.

She bought a T@b trailer in October that she would tow with her car, and had it detailed in the same custom pink. She waded into a sea of new anxieties: How would she know which bridges the trailer would fit under, how do you hook up electricity, what if I need to back up the car, how do you empty the toilet, are there wild animals in these campsites? With so may internal challenges needing navigation, did she need a whole set of new issues? The logistics were keeping her awake and she hadn’t even picked up the trailer yet.

But she confirmed, “I needed to find a different way of being on the road, other than what Chuck and I had done.”

Alison_Miller_Chuck_DearingOn December 1, she began her new life with her T@b teardrop trailer in tow, driving south with her fireman son, Nick from Connecticut along for the first leg. Key West was her first destination, where they found a secluded area of the beach and had a small ritual. Each of their kids would accompany her on different routes of The Pink Odyssey.

She started writing a book that her blog followers know — because they are familiar with her powerful and fluid writing style — will be difficult to put down.

“I’m notifying each military base wherever I am, letting them know of my Odyssey of Love and that a veteran is passing through on his final travels,” she wrote in her blog. “I’m meeting so many loving, friendly, helpful people and hearing their stories as much as they hear mine.”

“So many tell me that I’m inspiring them to find a life after loss, but everyone along the road gives me that same inspiration.”

The pink clothing has a purpose on her travels.

“It is armor that reminds me to keep my heart open to the love coming my way. It reminds me that Handsome Husband loved me deeply and that the love he and I shared is still with me, carrying me through this devastation.”

During Chuck’s illness the family found a motto to live by, “Nothin’ But Love.” They answered anyone who asked how he was doing the same way. Mother and daughter decided on “Nothin’ But Love” for matching tattoos.

But, in the past weeks, as the 1-year anniversary of Chuck’s goodbye loomed, the author sheathed in pink knew that life for her was about one thing — choosing to allow that beefy love to coexist with the oily grief that stains her days.

“This me, who is living in a world without color (yes, in spite of all the pink), is not a me I recognize. I’m doing all these things, these huge things, because I have to make a life.” -October 22, 2013

“Let me drive this car, let me pull this T@b, let me learn how to be out there in life without him. Let me find some kind, any kind, of confidence in myself again. Let some of the pain ease just a little so that I can take a breath and not feel cut by glass each time.” – February 26, 2014

“I’m doing everything in my power to do what I need to do to get through this. I swear I am. I’m getting up and showing up. I haven’t broken.”

She hasn’t broken, that is obvious. Readers of Happily Homeless can sense the confident life returning. And on April 21, on the terrible anniversary of Happily Homeless being cut in two, she and her family and friends are planning a moving celebration to honor his beefy love on a big old mountain in Arizona.

 

An American Home or Business Goes Solar Every Four Minutes

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solarcity-residential-panels.jpgBuried at the very bottom of a fact sheet released at yesterday’s White House Solar Summit is a striking statistic: “Every four minutes, another American home or business goes solar, supporting workers whose jobs can’t be outsourced.”

Since President Obama was first elected in 2008, installed solar power capacity in the United States has risen rapidly from 1.2 gigawatts (GW) to an estimated 13 GW in 2014 — a nearly eleven fold increase, which is enough renewable electricity to power more than 2.2 million American homes.

(READ the story from Inhabitat)

 

Second Wind Cottages Give Second Chances to Homeless Men

cottages_built_for_homeless-Second_WindA few years ago, Carmen Guidi read a book that changed his life and, in turn, the lives of many others—from homeless men, women, and children to university students and professors.

The book and its author challenged Carmen, as a Christian, to fully live his faith in the world.

Like many people, he was unaware of a homeless problem closer to home. When he began volunteering at a local shelter, however, he heard about “the jungle”—a tent-city settlement of sorts on Ithaca’s west end, just five miles from his home.

Carmen didn’t initially set out to end homelessness in Ithaca, New York. He simply set out to befriend a few men. As for helping them, his approach was unconventional. Believing that everyone wants to do something useful, Carmen invited the men to do volunteer work for others. Many responded, eventually contributing hundreds of hours.

Eventually Carmen helped every person in the encampmet to find a place to live. He parked six campers on his own property so the men could live in dignity.

In 2013, he took another leap in faith, and organizing a huge effort that would construct six cottages and named the enclave of homes built behind his auto painting business “Second Wind Cottages.”

(READ the story in Chesterton House)

Internet Use Helps Ward Off Depression Among Older Adults

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It’s estimated that as many as 10 million older Americans suffer from depression, often brought on by feelings of loneliness and isolation.

However, new research – a project that followed the lives of thousands of retired older Americans for six years – found that Internet use among the elderly can reduce the chances of depression by more than 30 percent.

“That’s a very strong effect,” said Shelia Cotten, a Michigan State University professor of telecommunication, information studies and media who led the project. “And it all has to do with older persons being able to communicate, to stay in contact with their social networks, and just not feel lonely.”

Cotten and her colleagues analyzed the data collected by the Health and Retirement Survey, a survey collecting information from more than 22,000 older Americans every two years. This particular sample included more than 3,000 respondents.

“This is one of the largest and most comprehensive surveys of its kind,” Cotten said.

Other smaller studies have been inconclusive about the roles Internet use and technology, in general, play in helping people overcome depression.

One way in which this study was different is it took into consideration the subjects’ depression levels before they began using the Internet. The researchers wanted to know if past depression affected current depression.

What they found is yes, some people did remain depressed despite Internet use, although it wasn’t substantial.

“Internet use continues to reduce depression, even when controlling for that prior depressive state,” Cotten said.

The researchers also confirmed what was found in other studies that for older people who live alone, Internet use had a greater impact on their levels of depression.

“This study makes significant contributions to the study of Internet use and depression in the older, retired population,” Cotten said.

 

Electric Car Blazes a 12,000 Mile Trail Across US

recargo-amercan-electric-road-trip-tesla-model-s-537x308

In the tradition of American travelers piling into their gas-guzzling cars and road tripping across the country, Norman Hajjar is setting out to prove that electric cars can go the distance by driving a Tesla Model S on a record-breaking 12,000-mile trip across the USA.

Sponsored by an electric vehicle software and information services company Recargo Inc., where Hajjar is the Managing Director of its driver research division, the trip will  span the four corners of the lower 48 states: Washington, Maine, Florida, and California.

As of Monday, the car had charged its way to Florida.

(READ the story from Inhabitat)

 

Iran Keeps Commitments, U.S. Releases Frozen Funds

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iran-reading-statementThe United States has taken steps to release a $450 million installment of frozen Iranian funds following a report from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) verifying that Iran is living up to its part of a landmark nuclear pact with world powers, the U.S. State Department said on Thursday.

“All sides have kept the commitments made” under the agreement, said a State Department spokesperson. “As Iran remains in line with its commitments, the United States, France, Germany, Britain, China, Russia and the European Union ‘will continue to uphold our commitments as well.”

(READ the story from Reuters)

Arab Women Edge into Boardrooms as Economies, Societies Shift

Arab_woman_in_boardroom-Amina_al-Rustamani-Telcom-Investments

Amina al-Rustamani, a member of a prominent UAE family, raised eyebrows among friends and relatives when she started her career in Dubai 13 years ago as an electrical engineer, becoming one of few females in the Middle East to enter the profession.

Almost unimaginable just a generation ago, Rustamani’s rise to the highest level of business in a Gulf Arab country underlines a shift in the business environment that is allowing the gradual entry of women into boardrooms and other positions of economic power in the region.

(READ the story from Reuters)

Photo via Tecom Investments

 

Indianapolis Man “Pays it Forward” in School Cafeteria

Indianapolis_Ryan_Cox_pays_school_lunch_balancesRyan Cox has been paying for the order behind him in the drive-thru line at Starbucks for some time now. A few dollars here. A few dollars there. Each time to secretly make someone’s day a little bit better.

This time he came out of hiding to pay it forward for children at a local elementary school whose parents were delinquent on their lunch payments.

Inspired by a friend, Ryan went to Lakeside Elementary with a plan to pay off overdue lunch accounts for families who’d fallen on hard times — not just a few, but for the entire school. He reached out on social media asking people to join him to cover the full amount of $1200. He collected a thousand dollars in a few days.

(WATCH the video below or READ the story from WTHR Indianapolis)

Thanks to Megan Huffman for submitting the link on our Facebook Page!

New Study Shows Exercise Gives You Younger Skin

elderly_couples_on_boat-SunStarExercise not only appears to keep skin younger, it may also even reverse skin aging in people who start exercising late in life, according to surprising new research.

Researchers at McMaster University in Ontario found that after age 40, the men and women in their study who exercised frequently had markedly thicker dermis layers in their skin and other improvements, over those in the study who were sedentary.

Even more amazing, after the formerly sedentary adults in the group started doing cardio for 30 minutes, twice a week, their skin improved markedly.

The results, which were presented this month to the American Medical Society for Sports Medicine, caused the professor who oversaw the study,  Dr. Tarnopolsky, to gush, “I don’t want to over-hype the results, but, really, it was pretty remarkable to see.”

“Their skin was much closer in composition to that of the 20- and 30-year-olds than to that of others of their age, even if they were past age 65.”

(READ the story in the New York Times)

Photo by Sun Star – Thanks to Harley Hahn for sending the link!

 

Boy Inspires His Family to Give Away Money on Each Birthday

Eric Thompson from video in the Daily News

An 11-year-old boy from Ontario collects a lot of money for his birthday each year, but he doesn’t run to the shopping mall to spend it. He gives it all away to those who need it more. His actions have inspired his family, including his two sisters, to do the same.

Eric Thompson first displayed his altruism in 2010 when, after learning about the devastating earthquake that had shaken Haiti, offered what money he had to his mother, Laura, who was working in support of relief efforts.

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Touched by the gesture, Laura suggested he use his birthday as a means of collecting money from friends. That started a new family tradition that has grown for five years.

This year, Eric’s birthday money – which totals $500 – will help a fellow youth who wouldn’t otherwise be able to attend a sports summer camp organized by McMaster University.

(READ the story in the McMaster Daily News)

Beloved Atlanta Traffic Reporter Dies While Helping Accident Victims

Captain_Herb_Emory_traffic_reporter-WSB-fileCaptain Herb Emory, the radio personality relied upon for Atlanta traffic updates, is being remembered this week as a caring, cheerful voice.

Emory stopped to help victims at a car accident on Saturday when he suffered a heart attack.

The traffic reporter at WSB-750 AM for 23 years, Captain Herb died doing what he did every day, helping people.

“I didn’t know the man, I just heard him on the radio,” said listener Ray Jackson, who telephoned the Good News Network with the story tip. “You don’t run into good people like him all the time: He was one of a kind.”

Colleagues remembered that he made people feel good even went he traffic was bad.

“Atlanta’s got terrible traffic, so everyone listens to him,” added Jackson, who lives in the East Point suburb of Atlanta. “He impacted a lot of people’s lives.”

Georgia lawmakers are already moving to name the new highway 85 interchange in memory of the longtime traffic reporter, who died over the weekend.

(READ the remembrance in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution)

Rich in Valuable Organics, Seaweed Brings Jobs to Poor Women

seaweed on Cal beach at sunrise pier

Indian_women_tie_seaweed_AquAgri_Processing-photoGrowing seaweed rich in valuable chemicals — predicted to be worth $7 billion by 2018 — is emerging as a source of employment for rural women in India.

Women fasten the young seaweed plants to rope in preparation for growing seaweed in water. The practice provides a steady income for rural women in India, who can only be away from their families for a short time.

The chemicals extracted from the seaweed can be used in products such as skin care lotions, fertilizers, toothpastes, and ice cream.

(READ the story in the CS Monitor)

High Tech Luggage Tags Eliminate Lost Bags

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Fewer bags are being lost by airlines these days, but a new electronic tracking device might ensure that you never lose a bag again.

At the end of this year, Air France and KLM are releasing a pair of tools that passengers can use to track their suitcases using a smartphone app.

Working with FastTrack Company, Samsonite and KPN, they began looking for a solution that caters to the needs of all passengers, airlines and airports.

The result is eTag and eTrack, two devices that can work together to take away the uncertainty of checking luggage while traveling by air.

The electronic baggage label, eTag, and the eTrack, which syncs with a homing device placed in your luggage, both work use Bluetooth technology.

It has been talked about for a long time, replacing the paper luggage tags with permanent bag tags, but this latest development makes it clear that this revolution is not far away at all.

(READ the story via NPR)

Thanks to Harley Hahn for sending the link!

 

Diabetic Health Risks Drop Sharply in the US

Photo by Sun Star

Photo by Sun StarStartling progress was discovered by federal researchers in the numbers of American diabetics avoiding serious complications due to their disease over the 20 years from 1990-2010.

Heart attacks dropped by more than 60 percent, while strokes, kidney failure and amputations fell sharply.

“This is the first really credible, reliable data that demonstrates that all of the efforts at reducing risk have paid off,” said Dr. David M. Nathan, director of the Diabetes Center at Massachusetts General Hospital.

(READ the story in the New York Times)

Thanks to Harley Hahn for sending the link!