Uber drivers disgruntled with Bloomington
The community of Indiana Uber drivers is not a fan of Bloomington.
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The community of Indiana Uber drivers is not a fan of Bloomington.
Six years ago, James Bradley hated power tools.
As talk of climate change picks up, IU is working on plans to increase sustainability within its Bicentennial Strategic Plan.
Mother Hubbard’s Cupboard will no longer run the Crestmont Community Garden and the Banneker Green Thumbs Garden after this winter. Instead, the organization will place more focus on its onsite programming.
On street corners throughout Bloomington stand sturdy wooden boxes. Behind Plexiglass windows are shelves stocked with colorful spines that hold children’s stories, romance novels, memoirs and mysteries. These Little Free Libraries have been popping up in neighborhoods across Bloomington since 2013.
The city is getting ready for curbside leaf pickup next month, but Bloomington’s Public Works Department wants people to compost instead.
A partnership between Sycamore Land Trust, the IU School of Education and several Monroe County elementary schools aims to get kids out of their science classrooms and into the environment.
Oliver Tillman said he is going to be a chef someday. Spooning homemade applesauce sprinkled with cashews into his mouth, he said he’ll have his own restaurant once he turns 21.
An AmeriCorps team is trying to help Monroe County win $5 million by reducing energy consumption in Bloomington homes and businesses.
After considering sustainability as a goal in its 2015 Dietary Guidelines for Americans, the U.S. Department of Agriculture reported last week it will not focus on the issue in its finalized guidelines.
On Monday they plant seeds. On Tuesday they transplant. On Thursday they harvest. But every morning a group of adults with varying disabilities meets at a greenhouse behind Stone Belt to develop their work skills.
With Saturday morning came a bite in the 46-degree air, but despite the cold, an estimated 500 people got tastes of 30 different varieties of Indiana apples at the Bloomington Community Farmers’ Market’s annual apple tasting. They ranged from green and tart to soft, sweet and red.
The Bloomington Community Bike Project’s Ladies Night offers women a chance to learn about bicycle repair and how to fix their bikes in a relaxed all-female environment.
Congress had until midnight last night to reauthorize the federal budget. Environmentalists were concerned that one program, which provides funding for nature conservancy, would no longer be supported.
IU senior Hannah Marriott is the kind of person who hunts around for cans to recycle at parties.
Climate change has been both justified and dismissed by religious groups.
About three weeks ago, Alison Zook decided to close the doors of AZ Vintage. She has been running the store, located on Morton Street, for almost four years and working with antiques and vintage clothing for ten. She said she needs a break.
Shoppers at Marsh will soon have access to more products grown and produced in Indiana thanks to a partnership between the grocery store and the Indiana Grown Initiative.
Making lunch for thousands of students is hard enough for Hattie Johnson, the director of nutrition services for Monroe County School Corporation, and as Congress looks to reauthorize school lunch programs this month, she said she hopes they won’t take away her already-empty salt shaker.
Genetically modified produce sold at the Bloomington Community Farmers’ Market may have to be labeled in the future in response to customer interest, market manager Marcia Veldman said Monday.