No bike lanes, less parking, but plenty of frustration over Northeast Seattle street plan There’s something for everyone to hate about Seattle’s "compromise" over bike lanes on 35th Avenue Northeast. Gil Aegerter
Undercover Investigators Find Northwest Link To Illegal Rainforest Logging An environmental watchdog's four-year investigation into illegal logging in west-Central Africa leads a report that's critical of the role Northwest businesses have played in the global supply chain. Tony Schick, Conrad Wilson, David Steves
For A Healthier Planet, Eat These 50 Foods, Campaign Urges Global reliance on just a handful of crops for calories is hurting the environment — and wildlife, a new report says. It urges the world to diversify its diet to save plant and animal species alike. Eleanor Beardsley
How Climate Change Is Affecting Residents' Health In Miami We visit Miami to talk with Dr. Cheryl Holder of Florida Clinicians For Climate Action, and Jorge, a fruit vendor who is feeling the effects of increasingly hot days firsthand. Lulu Garcia-Navarro
Inslee Visits Portland Electrical Workers Union To Talk Green Jobs Presidential hopeful and Washington Gov. Jay Inslee's visit to the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 48's training center was part of his Climate Mission Tour. Meerah Powell
What Recent Destructive Cyclones Tell Us About Climate A cyclone hit Southern Africa and a "bomb cyclone" hit Nebraska causing massive flooding. NPR's Michel Martin talks to climate scientist Katharine Hayhoe about the climate implications of these events
Lesson from Oso: What makes Washington beautiful also makes it vulnerable Five years ago today, a major landslide killed 43 people and destroyed 49 homes in Oso, Washington. Ruby de Luna
Scientists Getting New Tools To Monitor The Northwest's Volcanoes A new early warning system for the Northwest's volcanoes will equip geoscientists to get an earlier reading on eruptions and other geological activity. Erin Ross
King County’s landfill wants to expand, but neighbors are saying no At a County Council meeting Wednesday dozens of local residents spoke against the proposal. Anna Boiko-Weyrauch
Ohio Regulators Say Fish From Cuyahoga River Are Safe To Eat The Cuyahoga River flows through Cleveland. In the 1960s, the old industrial city was so polluted that the river repeatedly caught fire. Decades of environmental regulation has made a difference.