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Why Investing In High-Quality Automobile Floor Mats is Essential

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Did you know the average driver spends about 293 hours a year in their car? That’s a significant amount of time, and during those hours, your vehicle’s interior is exposed to all sorts of dirt, spills, and wear and tear. Think about the coffee spills during your morning commute, the muddy shoes after a weekend…

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Most Important SaaS Performance Metrics To Track The Growth Of Your Business

The #1 source in the world for all things Harlem.

As a SaaS business owner, you always want to increase your customer base and generate big revenues. To do so, you adopt different strategies. Now, the main concern is how these strategies are working. Are they driving any results or are you wasting money on implementing them? To figure this out, you need to track…

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* This article was originally published here

Adams Administration Secures $260 Million To Green Brooklyn Terminal And Inwood

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New York City Mayor Eric Adams today kicked off Climate Week by announcing his administration has won another $260 million in grants. These grants were won from the Biden-Harris administration’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, continuing the Adams administration’s unprecedented success in securing federal infrastructure funding. The grants — issued by the U.S. Department of Transportation —…

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* This article was originally published here

How To Unclog A Kitchen Sink In Harlem And Beyond

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A clogged kitchen sink is something most homeowners encounter at some point. It’s frustrating when water won’t drain properly, especially when you’re in the middle of cooking or cleaning. Fortunately, there are several simple methods you can try at home to clear the clog before calling in a professional. Using tools like plungers and drain…

The post How To Unclog A Kitchen Sink In Harlem And Beyond appeared first on Harlem World Magazine.

* This article was originally published here

Revamping Your Boat: Essential Tips For Upgrading Marine Interiors

The #1 source in the world for all things Harlem.

Owning a marine is like having a ticket to unlock the sea horizon. However, to make your journey comfortable, marine maintenance is crucial. By renovating the boat’s interior, you can create your living space functional and aesthetically pleasing.  So, if you’re ready to transform the interior of your marine and wonder if marine vinyl fabric…

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* This article was originally published here

How Work Injuries Disrupt Lives And What You Can Do To Recover

The #1 source in the world for all things Harlem.

How does a work injury affect not only your physical health, but also your financial stability, career, and relationships? Workplace injuries can have far-reaching consequences beyond the initial pain or disability. From medical bills and lost income, to strained family dynamics and legal hurdles, the aftermath of an injury can be overwhelming. Let’s take a…

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* This article was originally published here

The Role Of Tattoo Removal In Job Prospects: Is It Worth It?

The #1 source in the world for all things Harlem.

Tattoos have become mainstream, embraced by millions as a form of self-expression. However, while society is more open to body art, the professional world hasn’t entirely caught up. In some industries, visible tattoos can still create obstacles, particularly during job interviews. This leads to the question: is tattoo removal a smart move to improve your…

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* This article was originally published here

GoVoteNYC grantees launch week of events to engage underrepresented voters

GoVoteNYC grantees launch week of events to engage underrepresented voters
GoVoteNYC grantees launch week of events to engage underrepresented voters
GoVoteNYC grantees launch week of events to engage underrepresented voters

In honor of National Voter Registration Day this year, GoVoteNYC grantees organized a week of civic engagement events across the city, aimed at mobilizing underrepresented voters.

The New York-based donor collaboration awards millions of dollars in grants to nonprofits across the five boroughs to aid their grassroots efforts. 

“We have 8 million people [in NYC], and a lot of them are eligible to vote, and a lot of them need help.” said Eve Stotland, Senior Program Officer at The New York Community Trust, one of the oldest and largest community foundations in the U.S. “We hope that we’re getting at a lot of different voting populations and that we’re funding groups that are trusted messengers in their community, and that know how to get their message across in a persuasive way to people who are often left out of the political process — always in a nonpartisan way.”

Faith in New York, a network of multifaith communities, is one of those funded organizations/grantees. Earlier this week, they held a voter registration event outside Harlem Hospital on 137th Street, later moving over to the Schomburg Center on Malcolm X Blvd. 

“We just come out and put [out] hard copies of the applications to make them available,” said Marilyn Joseph, Director of Organizing at Faith in New York. “We also use technology [to ensure] that if we need to check someone’s registration, we can do that as well. It’s our goal to make it as easy as possible for folks to register.”

Leah Mallory photos

With a table full of registration materials set up and determined mindsets, the Faith in New York members approached people on the street, informing them of the upcoming election and inviting them to update their information and even register for the first time. 

Drew Smith, 62, approached the table. He said he hadn’t voted in almost a decade.

“It was easier this time because they were right there,” he said, referring to the process of registering as he updated his information.

Joseph spoke on the long-term goals of faith in New York as a recipient of GoVoteNYC funding.

“We want to tap into our Black and Brown communities, particularly because we know that we’ve seen low propensity turnout,” she said. “And so we want to change that paradigm. We want to make sure that our community is informed.” 

GoVoteNYC Director Neill Coleman reiterated that message, explaining that by funding trusted messengers within communities with traditionally low voter turnout, those who are typically not engaged become involved, thereby increasing voter turnout.

“Political campaigns tend to ignore those voters; they tend to concentrate on voters who are regular voters in the sense that they regularly vote,” he said. “But it’s important to also engage people who maybe don’t vote so often because they usually have their reasons why they’re not voting. And so, the grantees that GoVoteNYC is supporting are able to really engage in these sorts of relational conversations about voting.”

The post GoVoteNYC grantees launch week of events to engage underrepresented voters appeared first on New York Amsterdam News.

* This article was originally published here

School districts race to invest in cooling solutions as classrooms and playgrounds heat up

people playing on basketball court

Ylenia Aguilar raised her two sons in Arizona — first in Tucson and later Phoenix, so they’re no strangers to scorching heat. Just recently, Phoenix hit its 100th straight day at or above 100 F (37.8 C), shattering the record set in 1993.

She remembers scary moments “seeing soccer kids and my own children pass out and faint from, you know, heat-related illnesses,” she said. “It was seeing my sons dehydrated.”

Scores of U.S. schoolyards like hers are carpeted in heat-absorbing asphalt, with no shade even for play areas. The buildings were often made with wall and roofing materials that radiate heat into indoor spaces. Kids are also more vulnerable to heat illness than adults. Their bodies have a harder time self-regulating in extreme heat in part because they sweat less, so they can become dehydrated faster. Climate change is heightening the risks. School closures related to heat are becoming more frequent, according to a report by the Center for Climate Integrity and the firm Resilient Analytics.

There is also accumulating data on temperature inequality and the effects of heat. Low-income neighborhoods and communities of color, which describes Aguilar’s, can be as much as 7 F (3.9 C) hotter than richer and whiter neighborhoods, leaving students and educators to swelter in a warming world. Extreme temperatures also affect learning, performance and concentration.

Yet there are well-known ways to cool down schools and neighborhoods. “When the solutions are so at hand and readily available,” said Joe Allen, associate professor and director of the Healthy Buildings program at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, these conditions are “unacceptable.”

In Phoenix, Aguilar became a leader, joining the school board and helping to pass a $50 million bond that funded a number of solutions in her Osborn Elementary School District.

Other schools like Aguilar’s are also starting to spend on these fixes.

Cool ground surfaces

On a hot day in 2022, students at a school near Atlanta pointed thermometers onto their basketball court and got a reading of 105 F (about 40.5 C).

A roofing manufacturer donated a bright blue, solar-reflective coating and helped them paint it on. They took another reading, this time it was 95 F (35 C).

As students of the private school learned, paved surfaces get really hot in the sun. They absorb solar energy and slowly re-radiate it out as heat, increasing air temperatures by as much as 7 F (3.9 C).

Cooling playgrounds and roads by making them more reflective is not new, but interest has been growing along with more understanding of the way the accumulation can affect entire neighborhoods, known as urban heat islands, said Daniel Metzger, a fellow at Columbia Law School who studies these passive climate adaptation technologies.

“And as climate change gets worse… I think adaptation measures like this are only going to become more and more important,” he said.

Workers recently rolled that same cool surface on the parking lot at the Science, Arts and Entrepreneurship School as part of the school’s sustainability goals and efforts to minimize heat. Both times, the roofing manufacturer GAF donated the coatings and labor. Without that, the school would have had to raise funds, said Scott Starowicz, the school’s co-founder and chief financial officer.

With the new, cool surfaces, Starowicz said he feels “like we’re doing our part” to mitigate heat.

Cool roofs and window films

East of Los Angeles, roofs across the Chaffey Joint Union High School District used to reach 140 F (60 C), officials said. Hot roofs can make upper-floor classrooms unbearable.

This affected a lot of kids. Chaffey is the second-largest high school district in California with 24,000 students. Nearly 65% are Latino or Hispanic.

Chaffey has now spent $11.4 million in bond money and maintenance funds to convert asphalt shingle roofs to white cool roofing since 2017 — part of district-wide conservation and sustainability efforts. It’s important as California heats up; this past July was its hottest on record.

These roofs — as well as window films, paints and other technologies — reflect a portion of the incoming solar radiation away from a building, rather than allowing it to transfer into the building as heat. These are some of the easiest and least costly actions a district can take.

Experts agree cool roofing does bring down the indoor temperature and reduce the need for AC. Chaffey’s roofs now sit at around 90 F (32 C).

The district has also invested in steel shade structures, trees and thermometers that consider things like temperature and humidity to monitor heat stress. “There’s a high level of urgency,” said Rick Wiersma, assistant superintendent of business services.

Cooler, greener schoolyards

On hot days in Berkeley, Calif., Sharon Gamson Danks remembers seeing her kids and their peers sitting in slivers of shade along the edges of their school building. They’d huddle under play structures, too.

“When they’re outside, they’re kind of getting overheated from two directions, both from direct sun exposure but also from really hot surfaces,” said V. Kelly Turner, an associate professor at UCLA.

Now more schools are tearing out hot asphalt or turf or rubber mats in favor of green schoolyards, which can include grass, gardens, mulch and trees. Between 2022 and 2023, California alone granted more than $121 million for these efforts. Experts say trees are one of the best ways to cool things down — they lower air and surface temperatures, and research has found that shade from trees alone can reduce the heat children experience by as much as 70 F (38.9 C).

At Parkway Elementary in Sacramento, a city that has led the urban tree planting movement for years, about 50 heat and drought-tolerant trees — including coast live oaks, Chinese elms and ginkgos — replaced an old, rusty backstop and one of three underused, turf soccer fields this summer thanks to a $400,000 grant. The project is part of a California schoolyard forests effort to increase tree canopy in public schools, especially in underserved communities.

Chamberlain Segrest, environmental sustainability manager at Sacramento City Unified School District, said the trees will take years to mature, but “we want to think more long term about what our students and families need, and so planting these trees, even though it’s going to take time for them to mature and provide the full host of benefits, there’s a slew of benefits they provide immediately.”

Paying for the needed changes

For the hottest schools, these solutions are often out of reach.

The Department of Energy offers Renew America’s Schools grants and the Environmental Protection Agency has the Climate Resilient Schools program, for example, but they often don’t cover the full costs, and schools sometimes don’t have the staff to apply for and manage grants. Increased maintenance costs are also a concern.

Relying on grant money “can completely exacerbate the haves and the have-nots” when it comes to reducing climate change and adapting to its harms, said UCLA’s Turner, “because it’s going to be the schools that have more resources” that can go after these grants.

Many believe schools shouldn’t be left on their own. Each of these individual solutions makes a difference, said Greg Kats, founder of the Smart Surfaces Coalition. But combining efforts with a local government or neighborhood means “you can add about ten degrees of comfort to a school, which means that the kids can be outside playing. It means that the windows can be open. It means you don’t have the loud grinding of an air conditioning,” he said.

“It’s just sort of integration, right, of different strategies over a larger geographic area,” he added. “You’re really sort of transforming the school environment.”

In Phoenix, Aguilar’s efforts improved the district’s air conditioning and installed shading structures at playgrounds, bus stops and courtyards. The work is ongoing; Osborn district recently got the money to plant 100 more trees and add more shade.

“I think for me, that was like, it’s only going to get hotter,” Aguilar said of her experience. “I knew that we needed to take action.”

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This story was first published on Sep. 8, 2024. It was updated on Sep. 9, 2024 to correct a conversion of temperature difference from Fahrenheit to Celsius. It is 38.9 degrees Celsius, not 21 degrees Celsius.

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The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.

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The Associated Press receives support from the Walton Family Foundation for coverage of water and environmental policy. The AP is solely responsible for all content. For all of AP’s environmental coverage, visit https://apnews.com/hub/climate-and-environment.

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* This article was originally published here