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Mary Catherine O'Connor

Independent Journalist

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All Aboard Orlando’s Bid to Be a Transit Hub

June 28, 2017 by mcoc

A new terminal, designed by Fentress Architects, is coinciding with a new rail service to Miami. What can Orlando show other cities about multimodal integration and high-touch terminal design? Architect  June 28, 2017 Larger than John F. Kennedy International Airport, Los Angeles International Airport, and Miami International Airport combined, the Orlando International Airport (MCO) is the country’s […]

Categories: Energy, Technology, Transportation • Tags: Briteline, Curtis Fentress, Fentress Architect, MCO, Miami, multimodal, Orlando, Orlando International Airport

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As Trump moves to privatize America’s national parks, visitor costs may rise

June 25, 2017 by mcoc

Some are concerned that the proposed privatization of some public park services would drive up costs for visitors and fail to raise enough for repairs The Guardian June 25, 2017 America’s national parks need a staggering $11.5bn worth of overdue road and infrastructure repairs. But with the proposed National Park Service budget slashed by almost […]

Categories: Policy, Recreation, Wilderness • Tags: campground, concessionaires, Delaware, Department of Interior, national park service, NPS, Secretary Zinke, Xanterra

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Your Fleece Jacket Pollutes the Ocean. Here’s the Possible Fix.

May 25, 2017 by mcoc

A large Canadian gear retailer is working on a project to trace the microplastics that come off its apparel in the wash and prevent them from entering local waterways. Outside Online May 25, 2017 By now you’ve probably heard the news: your favorite fleece sheds hundreds of thousands of tiny synthetic fibers every time it’s washed. Those […]

Categories: Action Sports, Gear, Lifecycle, Oceans, Recreation, Technology, Wilderness • Tags: MEC, microbeads, microfibers, Mountain Equipment Coop, synthetic apparel, synthetic microfibers

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Sea-level rise, but no mention of ‘climate change’

May 17, 2017 by mcoc

A film maker documents sea-level rise risks facing Virginia’s Hampton Roads region, and avoids the baggage of the terms ‘climate change’ or ‘global warming.’ Yale Climate Connections In Hampton Roads, a moniker for both a massive natural harbor in southeast Virginia and a metropolitan region comprising 17 small cities and municipalities, tidal flooding is as […]

Categories: Climate Change, Energy, Oceans, Policy • Tags: cliamte change, documentary, hampton roads, roger sorkin, sea level rise, Tidewater, US military, US Navy, virginia

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Guardian: Will clothes companies do the right thing to reduce microfiber pollution?

May 13, 2017 by mcoc

Over the past few years, evidence has been mounting that synthetic textiles such as polyester and acrylic, which make up much of our clothing, are a major source of pollution in the world’s oceans. That’s because washing those clothes causes tiny plastic fibers to shed and travel through wastewater treatment plants into public waterways. These […]

Categories: Gear, Lifecycle, Oceans, Policy, Technology • Tags: apparel, food chain, marine pollution, mermaids, microfiber pollution, Patagonia, plastic soup foundation, polymers, synthetic fabirc, textile science

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How to Reason with the Climate Denier in Your Life

April 26, 2017 by mcoc

A new book by two philosophy scholars imagines conversations with skeptics and deniers. Here are four lessons we learned from it. Outside Online April 26, 2017 Everyone working to address climate change, from activists to scientists, knows that success depends in large part on their ability to convert climate change skeptics (or even straight-up deniers) […]

Categories: Climate Change, Energy, Food and Agriculture, Lifecycle, Oceans, Policy, Transportation • Tags: climate change, climate change denier, climate skeptic, Evelyn Fox Keller, Philip Kitcher, The Seasons Alter

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Guardian: Only 14% of plastics are recycled – can tech innovation tackle the rest?

February 22, 2017 by mcoc

The world recycles just 14% of the plastic packaging it uses. Even worse: 8m tons of plastic, much of it packaging, ends up in the oceans each year, where sea life and birds die from eating it or getting entangled in it. Some of the plastics will also bind with industrial chemicals that have polluted […]

Categories: Energy, Food and Agriculture, Lifecycle, Oceans, Technology • Tags: Agylix, biocellection, Cadel Deinking, Ellen MacArthur Foundation, hdpe, ldpe, plastic, plastics recycling, recycling

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Guardian: Microfibers are polluting our food chain. This laundry bag can stop that

February 12, 2017 by mcoc

For the past three years, Alexander Nolte and Oliver Spies, surfing buddies and co-owners of Langbrett, a German retailer with four stores that sells surf gear and outdoor apparel, have been haunted by news reports connecting many of the products they sell to an emerging but serious environmental threat: microfiber pollution. Synthetic textiles, such as […]

Categories: Action Sports, Gear, Oceans, Policy, Recreation • Tags: Alexander Nolte and Oliver Spies, Guppy Friend, microfiber, microfiber pollution, Patagonia

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Guardian: Peter Metcalf, Patagonia take on Utah officials over public land rights

January 14, 2017 by mcoc

Utah, a state rich in epic landscapes and national parks, is becoming ground zero for a fight between the $646bn outdoor industry and state lawmakers over public land management. At a trade show for outdoor clothing and gear makers in Salt Lake City this week, two prominent figures from the industry called on their peers […]

Categories: Action Sports, Energy, Gear, Policy, Recreation, Wilderness • Tags: Black Diamond, outdoor industry association, Outdoor Retailer, Patagonia, Peter Metcalf, Utah, Utah Governor Herbert

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Home at Last: The Kashia Band of Pomo Indians Returns to the California Coast

December 15, 2016 by mcoc

Partnering with local agencies, The Trust for Public Land devised a plan that would return the land to the Kashia while allowing for an addition to the California Coast Trail. Land+People (The Trust for Public Land’s magazine: Go to Page 30) “Close your eyes,” instructs Reno Franklin. Chairman of the Kashia band of Pomo Indians, Franklin […]

Categories: Climate Change, Food and Agriculture, Oceans, Policy, Recreation, Wilderness • Tags: Kashia band of Pomo Indians, Kashia Coastal Reserve, Reno Franklin, Trust for Public Land

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Fun Fact

I interviewed Shaun White in 1999, when he was just a grom at age 13. He told me his parents were roller derby stars back in the day. Explains a lot. The interview, for long-gone MountainZone.com, still lives in the Way Back Machine.

I’m All Ears

Got an idea for a story or know someone—a scientist, an adventurous spirit, a survivor—who would be a great subject for a profile? Let me know! Email me: mc at mcoconnor dot com

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