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Potsdam groups tackle food waste ahead of law change in 2022


The law will only apply to facilites that generate over 2 tons of food waste a week, places like prisons, large grocery stores, universities, or some farms.
Susan Powers, Director of the Institute of Sustainable Environment at Clarkson University, says a good food waste system requires coordination. 
“You need to have the composting or digester business going. You need to have the business that picks up and delivers the waste to the food waste recycling facility,” she said. When all of those pieces are in place, Powers said, “that food waste has become great quality and sifted composted soil or it might be biogas from an anaerobic digester that’s an energy resource.” ....

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Charlottesville Confederate monuments coming down: Where America went wrong after the Civil War and what we can learn from Germany.


Charlottesville, Virginia, has finally received the green light to remove our spurned Confederate statues. After enduring years of legal delay and violent white supremacist attacks, on April 1 the Supreme Court of Virginia decided in favor of the city’s effort to rid its downtown parks of Jim Crow–era propaganda art. It is a fitting time for this ruling: April is Confederate History Month in many Southern states, although increasingly progressive Virginia ended the observance some years ago.
Early April also marks the anniversaries of two pivotal wartime events that spelled the end of inhumane practices: the Union Army’s 1865 victory at Appomattox, Virginia, which catalyzed the end of the U.S. Civil War and the abolition of the institution of chattel slavery; and American forces’ 1945 liberation of the Buchenwald concentration camp in Germany, which revealed the evils of the Holocaust. After both wars, these societies faced a crucial question: How was the brutality of ....

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