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Keeping food out of landfill in South Korea, and nursing Haiti’s forests

1. United States

All-terrain wheelchairs are making parks across the country more accessible. Bumpy environments are too often off-limits for visitors with mobility issues. At least five states, including Colorado, Michigan, Minnesota, and South Dakota, have invested in wheelchairs with tanklike tracks that navigate rocky terrain. In turn, some parks are creating maps that highlight trails designated for the chairs.

Aimee Copeland Mercier began to use a wheelchair in 2012 after a zip lining accident. She recently spearheaded an initiative in partnership with Georgia’s Department of Natural Resources to try out Action Trackchairs. The new fleet was announced last month and will be available to rent at 11 state parks and outdoor destinations.

Why We Wrote This

In our progress roundup, problem-solving ranges from the nationwide policies that led South Korea to keep food waste out of landfills, to the taxes and laws that are helping to reduce smoking worldwide.

Users should book in advance and must complete an hourlong certification course for safety, but Ms. Copeland Mercier says the experience is worth it. “I can go over a whole tree trunk, up a steep incline and through snow, swamps and wetlands,” said Ms. Copeland Mercier, whose foundation raised $200,000 to buy 16 of the chairs for use across Georgia. “If I took my regular wheelchair, I’d get stuck in five minutes.”

Jamie Lusch/The Medford Mail Tribune/AP/File

Casey Moore tests an all-terrain wheelchair at TouVelle State Park in Jackson County, Oregon, in 2018.

Source: The Washington Post

2. Haiti

Amid political crisis and economic insecurity, Haitians are restoring much-needed forests. An estimated 99% of the country’s primary forests have disappeared since Spanish colonization, with a third of the land now covered in secondary forests. High levels of poverty mean trees are often felled for fuel, agriculture, and building. While most people in Haiti have needed to focus on other priorities, conservation efforts have quietly and steadily pushed forward.

Conservationists are nurturing a seedling nursery in the Grand Bois National Park through the nonprofit organization Haiti National Trust and its international partners. The project has hired dozens of locals to plant, weed, and care for the seedlings and is working with nearby communities to find alternative sources of income that do not involve tree felling. So far, around 50,000 seedlings have been planted. “What’s important is that these ideas have to come from [the people,] based on what they can do, and what they want to do,” said HNT executive director Anne-Isabelle Bonifassi.

Ariana Cubillos/AP/File

Mountains near Jacmel, in southern Haiti, are sparsely vegetated in 2008. Without trees to anchor the soil, erosion has reduced Haiti’s scarce agricultural land.

Since the national park was established in 2015, scientists have recorded 24 species of frog and even rediscovered a magnolia species not seen in 97 years. The trees also provide a buffer from hurricanes, erosion, and landslides and protect freshwater quality.
Source: Mongabay

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