Star Tribune:
Jed Kolko: Growth of Suburbs Exceeds Urban Areas→
/FiveThirtyEight:
An inefficient development pattern keeps chugging along... until it doesn't make sense economically to individual homeowners.
Isaac Davison: A First -- A River is Given Legal Status→
/New Zealand Herald:
Dave Orrick: Minnesota Lakehome Owner Demographics→
/Pioneer Press:
Walker Angell: Bicycles Benefits→
/Streets.mn
David Brooks: Dignity and Sadness in the Working Class→
/New York Times:
Suburbia may have made sense when families were larger, one parent stayed home, and energy was cheap. Now this form a development leaves kids in basements with video games and parents more isolated from their community.
Lee Bergquist: Water Wars on the Sand Counties of Wisconsin→
/Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: Two articles on groundwater and lakes
Governor Dayton Moves to Protect Bees
/We now await the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's review of the neonicotinoids, which is anticipated to be completed by 2018.
Justin Fox: Zoning Overuse - 100 Year Review→
/Bloomberg News:
Ron Meador: Minnesota Buffer Map→
/MinnPost:
Mondale and Roosevelt: Protect the Boundary Waters→
/New York Times:
Smart people calling for action to protect a national asset.
France Diep: Water Use per Crop→
/ScienceLine (via street.mn chart of the day):
Matt Steele: Zoning Contributes to Unaffordability→
/streets.mn:
The reader comments to this article are worth reading as well.
Tom Neil: Minneapolis Parks -- Priority for Repair→
/MinnPost:
Good organization of the data on the city parks.
J. Patrick Coolican: Buffer Bill Passes→
/Star Tribune:
The politics of shoreline buffers is hard.
Lee Bergquist: Little Plover River Groundwater Study→
/Journal Sentinel:
Good groundwater science was done years ago by Dr. Kraft, who was quoted in this article. However, farmers and civic leaders apparently did not want to hear about how farm irrigation was the main reason for lower river flows. So the science and the predictions are now better and yet some farmers and civic leaders apparently still will not be convinced. When you start with a given pre-set belief or dogma and then search for any argument to rationalize, defend or justify the overexploiting of a pubic resource, then you are corrupt and your actions self-servicing.
Wisconsin Public Radio's Route 51 broadcast a program discussing the newly released scientific study of the effects of high capacity wells on groundwater and the Little Plover River in the central sands region of Wisconsin. It included a panel discussion with George Kraft, hydrologist with UW Extension in Stevens Point; Tamas Houlihan, executive director of the Wisconsin Potato and Vegetable Growers Association; Scott Krug, Republican Party Assemblyman from the Town of Rome; and Katrina Shankland, Democratic Party Assemblywoman from Stevens Point.
If you would like to listen to the podcast of this program, click this link
Beth Mole: Antibacterial Soaps Do More Harm Than Good→
/Ars Technica: