
Nick Engelfried
Articles
-
Jan 9, 2025 |
resilience.org | Nick Engelfried
This article was originally published on Waging Nonviolence. When the University of Toronto’s School of the Environment announced in October that it will no longer accept donations from the fossil fuel industry, the news sent waves through the growing movement to get coal, oil and gas companies off campuses. Among other things, that means banning fossil fuel corporations from financing academic research.
-
Dec 12, 2024 |
columbiainsight.org | Nick Engelfried
PUBLISHER’S NOTE: Columbia Insight relies on reader donations to exist. From now until December 31, NewsMatch and a local supporter will match your new monthly donation 12 times, or double your one-time gift, up to $1,000. Through these matches, you can help us earn up to $22,000. We hope you can help us take advantage of this great opportunity to strengthen our nonprofit newsroom by supporting our work. By Nick Engelfried. December 12, 2024.
-
Dec 4, 2024 |
nationofchange.org | Nick Engelfried
When the University of Toronto’s School of the Environment announced in October that it will no longer accept donations from the fossil fuel industry, the news sent waves through the growing movement to get coal, oil and gas companies off campuses. Among other things, that means banning fossil fuel corporations from financing academic research.
-
Dec 3, 2024 |
wagingnonviolence.org | Nick Engelfried
When the University of Toronto’s School of the Environment announced in October that it will no longer accept donations from the fossil fuel industry, the news sent waves through the growing movement to get coal, oil and gas companies off campuses. Among other things, that means banning fossil fuel corporations from financing academic research.
-
Oct 17, 2024 |
columbiainsight.org | Nick Engelfried
By Nick Engelfried. October 17, 2024. On Sept. 22, volunteers with the Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement Group caught and released the 11,917th chum salmon the organization counted in the Union River this fall. It was a moment to celebrate—this year set a new record for the most returning summer chum since 1974, as far back as reliable records go. “It’s a really good example of how habitat restoration has impacted salmon in a positive way,” says Mendy Harlow, executive director of HCSEG.
Try JournoFinder For Free
Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.
Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →