-
The annual Great Ohio River Swim is scheduled for Sunday. And like the Seine in Paris, the Ohio River in Cincinnati has a combined sewer system, which is designed to send untreated sewage and stormwater into the river during heavy rain.
-
The hot summer coupled with cooler nights across the Tri-State of late may have mice and other rodents and pests seeking food, water, and shelter inside your home.
-
Climate action plans prepare governments to mitigate the effects of climate change. Just a couple cities in Southwest Ohio have them. In Milford, individuals and a local organization are trying to create the city's first one.
-
More than a million people rely on the Great Miami Watershed for drinking water. However, a majority of land in the watershed is used for agriculture, according to the Miami Conservancy District. That means when it rains, pesticides, manure and sediment from farms flow into nearby rivers.
-
Bird banders record information about individual birds to study the whole population, which has been shrinking since the 1970s.
-
The program aims to clean up Cincinnati, block by block. Keep Cincinnati Beautiful hopes upward of 1 million pounds of trash can be removed from neighborhoods over the next three years.
-
With heat waves and extreme weather becoming more and more common, one Indiana teacher wants to empower her students with information, and the creative freedom to imagine big ideas.
-
USDA crews were finding thousands of beetle-infested trees initially. This year, they’ve counted 125.
-
The Ohio River Paddlefest returns to Cincinnati for the its 23rd year.
-
Nonprofit Groundwork Ohio River Valley employs high school students, many from communities underserved by conservation movements, to work in parks and community gardens throughout the city.