
Veronica Penney
Graphics Editor at The New York Times
Graphics editor @nytimes | Formerly, @washingtonpost and @CPRNews | Pretty okay at pies 🥧 Strong preference for outdoors over indoors 🌱
Articles
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Dec 3, 2024 |
news.nestia.com | Veronica Penney
President-elect Donald J. Trump has promised to unravel President Biden’s major legislation when he takes office next month, but Mr. Biden is hoping to salvage his most prized policies with help from an unlikely source: Republicans.
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Aug 12, 2024 |
nytimes.com | Veronica Penney |Manuela Andreoni |Bryan Denton
These forests below the Arctic Circle are designed to burn. A camera slowly rises above a large forest of light green trees extending to the horizon. A camera slowly rises above a similar landscape, but the forest from this vantage point is burned. Manuela Andreoni, a climate reporter, and Bryan Denton, a photographer, traveled with researchers to Canada’s boreal forests in the Northwest Territories. Aug.
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May 26, 2024 |
unionleader.com | Anna Phillips |Veronica Penney
Nearly 40 percent of schools in the United States were built before the 1970s, when temperatures were cooler and fewer buildings needed air conditioning. That has changed. In recent decades, heat has crept northward, increasing the number of school days with temperatures above 80 degrees Fahrenheit. Large parts of the country, where temperatures were previously cooler, now experience at least one month of school days with temperatures above 80 degrees Fahrenheit.
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May 24, 2024 |
detroitnews.com | Anna Phillips |Veronica Penney
Anna Phillips, Veronica Penney | Washington PostSchools that never needed AC are now overheating. Fixes will cost billions. Nearly 40 percent of schools in the United States were built before the 1970s, when temperatures were cooler and fewer buildings needed air conditioning. That has changed. In recent decades, heat has crept northward, increasing the number of school days with temperatures above 80 degrees Fahrenheit.
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May 24, 2024 |
sfgate.com | Anna Phillips |Veronica Penney
Nearly 40 percent of schools in the United States were built before the 1970s, when temperatures were cooler and fewer buildings needed air conditioning. That has changed. In recent decades, heat has crept northward, increasing the number of school days with temperatures above 80 degrees Fahrenheit. Large parts of the country, where temperatures were previously cooler, now experience at least one month of school days with temperatures above 80 degrees Fahrenheit.
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RT @eilperin: The saltwater wedge is coming for New Orleans. While @USACEHQ has bought more time for the city, those 60 miles south have al…

RT @eilperin: 3.3 billion now live in arid & water-stressed areas where 40% of the world's water is consumed per @WorldResources Rising tem…

RT @capitalweather: This is not just summer. The heat we're seeing in the southern U.S. and across the planet is dangerous and unlike anyth…