Studies and surveys examine whether workers enjoy working from home, and whether it s environmentally beneficial. Author: Clarissa Guy (Rocky Mountain PBS) Published: 4:44 PM MST February 5, 2021 Updated: 4:44 PM MST February 5, 2021
DENVER March 2020 marked the first stay-at-home order for Colorado. Since that time, the number of people working from home across the nation and the state has increased with the COVID-19 pandemic. This has pushed sustainability leaders to look at how telecommuting could decrease overall emissions.
Jerry Tinianow served as Denver’s first chief sustainability officer from 2012 to 2019, and now runs his own sustainability business. Tinianow began looking into this concept in the spring of 2020. Talking with local and global experts, he began to unveil some of the sustainability mysteries of working from home.
DELAWARE William Ralph Thurston, 91, of Delaware, OH, went home to be with his Lord and Savior, early Wednesday morning, February 3, 2021 at his home surrounded by his loving family. He was born Dec
Photos: The Virgin Hyperloop Now Seems a Little More Real
Feb 04, 2021
Virgin Hyperloop has unveiled detailed renderings for its hyperloop experience only a few months after a pod carried its first passengers safely.
The videos and images show a vision of high-speed tubes crossing landscapes, connecting cities and transporting commuters to their destinations in a mere matter of minutes all with an eye for passenger comfort.
Whether through tunnels or elevated tracks, the system promises speeds well over 600 miles an hour.
“Virgin Hyperloop can accelerate the future of mobility on land. The new mode of travel at supersonic speed rethinks transportation and the perception of space, landscape, time, and distance,” Bjarke Ingels, founder and creative director of BIG-Bjarke Ingels Group, a partner in the project, said in a statement. “In this day and age, Virgin Hyperloop taking off from our portals provides holistic, intelligent transportation for a globalized community to
Amtrak passenger railway could be coming to Columbus
The Mid-Ohio Regional Planning Commission confirms Amtrak is looking at five different routes throughout the state of Ohio. Author: Olivia Ugino (WBNS) Updated: 1:14 AM EST February 3, 2021
COLUMBUS, Ohio A new passenger train line could be coming soon to central Ohio. The Mid-Ohio Regional Planning Commission (MORPC) says Amtrak approached them last week about the project.
“We haven t had a [passenger] train through Columbus since 1979. and the last time they were trains running in the 3-C corridor between Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati was 1971,” said Stu Nicholson, Executive Director of All Aboard Ohio.
Nicholson has been pushing for passenger trains in the region for years.
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Scott Gerfen
ThisWeek
An ordinance to increase fees Groveport residents pay for motor vehicle registrations is expected to receive its third and final reading Feb. 8, but some on Groveport City Council believe now – with family finances affected by the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic – is not the time to seek higher taxes.
Members may decide to table the measure or “put it off until Jan. 1,” Councilman Scott Lockett said Jan. 26.
“It’s been a tough time for many people,” he said. “It’s not that it’s that much money, but when they go to pay the license fee, then they’re going to add another $5. It just sounds like a money grab.”