Economic Response to COVID-19 Pandemic: Go Big, Go Fast – Behind the Numbers
This is the time to develop and advance a progressive vision for a massive, public-led reconstruction agenda. Parts of it already exist, in various forms:
Economic Response to COVID-19 Pandemic: Go Big, Go Fast – Behind the Numbers
This is the time to develop and advance a progressive vision for a massive, public-led reconstruction agenda. Parts of it already exist, in various forms:
Tim Hortons Workers Need Doctor’s Notes To Take Unpaid Sick Leave During Coronavirus Pandemic
“Other than that? Nothing — not anything else really.”
The supervisor confirmed workers at its location need a doctor’s note to take unpaid sick days. Workers get up to five unpaid sick days per year, each documented with a doctor’s note.
“You have five days a year and after that you’re fired,” they told PressProgress. “It’s common for minimum wage.”
David Attenborough Calls For Ban on Deep-Sea Mining
The 93-year-old conservationist spoke out in an interview with Sky News Thursday
in conjunction with a new report that warns of the potentially
devastating consequences of extracting metals and minerals from the deep
places of the ocean. The practice could harm biodiversity, limit the ocean’s ability to support life and even disrupt its ability to store carbon, worsening the climate crisis.
Six-fold increase in polar ice losses since 1990’s
“If Antarctica and Greenland continue to track the worst-case climate warming scenario, they will cause an extra 17 centimetres of sea level rise by the end of the century.
“This would mean 400 million people are at risk of annual coastal flooding by 2100.
Coronavirus work-from-home policies give climate plans a boost | CBC News
For
example, if the four-million-plus people in Canada whose jobs could be
done from home did so twice a week, it could remove the equivalent of
385,231 cars from the road and cut annual greenhouse gas emissions by
1.9 million tonnes, according to a 2011 report from the Telework Research Network commissioned by the City of Calgary.
“There’s
no quicker, easier, cheaper way to reduce your carbon footprint than
not drive,” said Kate Lister, lead author of that report and president
of Global Workplace Analytics, a U.S.-based firm that helps companies
plan for the future of work.
In the longer term, emissions
savings can be even greater, as telework policies allow companies to
reduce the amount of office space they must heat, power and equip. That
also saves money.