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NJ School of Conservation, Sussex County Community College partner up

New Jersey Herald SANDYSTON The New Jersey School of Conservation is on course to reopen and will include a partnership with Sussex County Community College and courses to be taught by college personnel. The school will offer several programs starting next month. Some will be free and others will have a $20 admission fee. The courses will cover a variety of environmental topics throughout the property in Stokes State Forest, including fishing, hiking, tree biology and even how to not get lost in the woods. For a full listing of the summer schedule, including times and course details, visit www.friendsofnjsoc.org/events. 

Home means no path forward | Nevada Current

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A better Border? : CSA exploring options to improve secondary water source

A better Border? : CSA exploring options to improve secondary water source
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City Commission gets to work on utilities

Guest Opinion: PA can do right by laid off fossil fuel workers

By Mandy Warner and Wesley Look Your Turn This month, Homer City Generating Station, a coal-fired power plant in Indiana County, will lay off 43 of its employees to “preserve as many jobs as possible while continuing viable and safe operation of the plant,” according to an NRG energy spokesperson. This has been a familiar refrain in Pennsylvania over the past decade, where over 60 coal electricity generating units have retired since 2002. And yet, while we often hear about plans to keep these companies afloat, we rarely hear about the plans to support the workers who have been let go or the communities that depend on these jobs to sustain families and keep towns running.

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