This story was originally published by Reasons to be Cheerful
Welcome back to our weekly behind-the-scenes glimpse at what’s getting our team talking. Let us know what you think at [email protected].
Giving back
RTBC founding editor Christine McLaren calls Vancouver home, and this week she sent along an intriguing story from her neck of the woods: On Vancouver Island, residents are paying rent to First Nations, The Narwhal reports. The first batch of “voluntary rent” checks was distributed in March through the South Island Reciprocity Trust, which was established last year. One hundred and forty-two residents contributed. Similar programs have been successful elsewhere, including Australia’s Pay the Rent program, which dates back to the 1970s.
“We’re living with the ramifications of all these explicitly racist and genocidal decisions,” Simon Owen, a resident who contributed to the South Island trust, told The Narwal. “If we’re serious about detoxifying that, land has to be part of that conversation.”
Outdoor ventures
California’s first Black-led land conservancy, the 40 Acre Conservation League, has both an environmental and a social mission, according to a story Editorial Director Rebecca Worby shared from the Los Angeles Times this week. The trust recently purchased a 650-acre parcel near Lake Tahoe.
Becca says:
The idea is to help the state meet its conservation goals while also “helping humans who don’t see themselves as nature or wildlife lovers develop a new appreciation for California’s fragile ecosystem.” The name comes from the 40 acres that Union General William T. Sherman promised to grant to emancipated slaves after the Civil War.
What else we’re reading
This Scientist Has an Antidote to Our Climate Delusions — shared by RTBC founder David Byrne from the New York Times
Central Park introduces new pizza box recycling bin to curb rats — shared by Rebecca Worby from NBC New York
The Dream of a Texas Bullet Train Lives On — shared by Audience Engagement Editor Mariel Lozada from Bloomberg CityLab
Elsewhere in our channels…
A few months back, Contributing Editor Peter Yeung wrote for us about Medellín’s green corridors. It’s an astonishing success story: Thanks to a program that added cooling green spaces, temperatures in the Colombian city have fallen by 2°C, with a further decrease of 4 to 5°C expected over the next few decades.
This week, we were delighted to see that the French magazine Courrier international translated and republished the story. Read the original here.
The post What We’re Reading: ‘Voluntary Rent,’ Outdoor Inclusivity and more appeared first on Reasons to be Cheerful.