Ken Olsen
@oceansken
Working on behalf of marine critters and healthy oceans as communications officer with Pew U.S. Oceans conservation program. Tweets are my own.
ID: 851944863495073796
11-04-2017 23:47:38
1,1K Tweet
300 Followers
1,1K Following
Wildlife crossings—bridges and underpasses for animals—have reduced collisions with large animals by 92% in the state, per Colorado Department of Transportation (CDOT). Continual funding for this infrastructure helps make roads safer for people and animals. pewtrsts.org/4kVSent 📸 Steven Coffey/Unsplash
5 Reasons for Colorado to Build More Wildlife Crossings pewtrsts.org/3JftAkr via The Pew Trusts
How Oregon Can Leverage Its Nature for a Brighter Future pewtrsts.org/4gnFDZz via The Pew Trusts
Pew Commends Oregon Governor’s Executive Order Advancing More Resilient Lands and Waters pewtrsts.org/4nntsOj via The Pew Trusts
Gov. Kotek's new order aims to protect Oregon's climate resilience kezi.com/news/regional/… via KEZI 9 NEWS
|Pew Environment is working with 10+ Colorado orgs to urge Colorado Department of Public Health & Environment's Water Quality Control Commission to robustly implement #Reg87 to restore some protections lost in SCOTUS' #SackettvEPA. What's at stake and how you can weigh in: pew.org/en/research-an…
Oregon Coastal Communities Seek Solutions Amid Worsening Storms, Sea-Level Rise pewtrsts.org/4bnHT2y via The Pew Trusts
“Research has found that one wildlife crossing can prevent about 1,400 accidents over accidents over a 70-year lifespan, which translates into billions of dollars in savings” pewtrsts.org/4k2RTQO via The Pew Trusts
Peatlands Are Central to Minnesota’s Climate Strategy —The Time to Act Is Now pewtrsts.org/46JTENy via The Pew Trusts