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    <loc>https://amybgreen.com/contact</loc>
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    <lastmod>2021-05-13</lastmod>
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      <image:title>Contact</image:title>
      <image:caption>Email agreen@wmfe.org Or call 407-388-4131 Follow Amy on Twitter @amybgreen For publicity and media queries regarding MOVING WATER, please contact Rebecca Rozenberg at Johns Hopkins University Press: Email rrozenberg@jhu.edu Or call 410-516-6908 Nature photography courtesy Everglades National Park and the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. Headshots courtesy Jim Hobart of Macbeth Studio and Tony Pernas of Big Cypress National Preserve.</image:caption>
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    <lastmod>2021-02-13</lastmod>
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      <image:title>Home - Sound - Other audio work</image:title>
      <image:caption>Florida tries to prepare for increasingly intense hurricanes, NPR, 3/14/23 Weeks after Ian, floodwaters are still leaving some Florida communities stranded, NPR, 10/15/22 Florida grasshopper sparrows have wowed researchers with their resilience, NPR, 9/14/22 Meet the young people behind Florida’s new renewable energy goals, NPR and Inside Climate News, 8/8/22 Saving starving manatees will mean saving this crucial lagoon habitat, NPR and Inside Climate News, 3/21/22 The Biden administration says it has a plan to clean up toxic coal ash, NPR and Inside Climate News, 1/11/22 Four Years Ago Manatees Were Declared No Longer Endangered. Now They Are Dying At A Record Pace, WMFE and Inside Climate News, 9/12/21 Your Trash Is Emitting Methane In The Landfill. Here's Why It Matters For The Climate, NPR and Inside Climate News, 7/13/2021 Ron DeSantis Pushes Coastal 'Resilience' While Doing Little To Tackle Climate Change, NPR and Inside Climate News, 5/5/2021 ‘The Slide Is Real’: Many Online Learners Have The Most To Lose, Florida Public Media, 2/8/2021 Hurricane Season Collides With Pandemic As Communities Plan For Dual Emergencies, NPR and Inside Climate News, 6/1/2020 Endangered Florida Grasshopper Sparrows Released Into The Wild Despite Concerns, NPR, 11/23/2019 With Governor and Legislators in Denial, This Tiny Florida Town Tries to Adapt to Climate Change, WMFE and Florida Center for Investigative Reporting, 7/8/2018 Wife Of Orlando Nightclub Gunman Acquitted Of All Charges, NPR, 3/30/2018 Trial Begins For Widow Of Pulse Shooter, NPR, 3/1/2018 On Florida Coasts, Ghost Forests Serve As Stark Sign Of Sea Level Rise, WMFE, 11/29/2017 Plans Begin For Memorial At Site Of Pulse Nightclub Shooting, NPR, 6/11/2017 Six Months Later, Pulse Owner Reflects On Mass Shooting In First In-Depth Interview, WMFE, 12/12/2016 Historians Preserve Memorials After Mass Shootings, NPR, 9/4/2016</image:caption>
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      <image:title>Home - Sound</image:title>
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      <image:title>Home - Sound</image:title>
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      <image:title>Home - Sound - In the final days of his administration, with the eyes of the world on Florida where the epic 2000 election recount was underway, President Bill Clinton quietly signed into law a plan to restore the Everglades. Twenty years and $17 billion later, the grandiose vision of reversing decades of environmental damage remains stuck in the swamp. In DRAINED, a podcast from WMFE and the Florida Center for Investigative Reporting, Amy Green wades into the controversy around one of the most ambitious environmental restoration efforts ever undertaken. From rivers of toxic slime to a mind-boggling plan to inject a giant bubble of freshwater a thousand feet underground, DRAINED examines the massive plan to restore the river of grass and poses the big question about the future of this natural wonder: Can it be saved? Listen at WMFE.org, FCIR.org or wherever you get your podcasts.</image:title>
      <image:caption>In DRAINED, a podcast from WMFE and the Florida Center for Investigative Reporting, Amy Green wades into the controversy around one of the most ambitious environmental restoration efforts ever undertaken. From rivers of toxic slime to a mind-boggling plan to inject a giant bubble of freshwater a thousand feet underground, DRAINED examines the massive plan to restore the river of grass and poses the big question about the future of this natural wonder: Can it be saved? Subscribe:</image:caption>
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    <lastmod>2021-02-13</lastmod>
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      <image:caption>Nursing Florida’s Ailing Manatees Back to Health, Inside Climate News, 2/17/23 Florida Commits $1 Billion to Climate Resilience. But After Hurricane Ian, Some Question the State’s Development Practices, Inside Climate News, 10/8/22 A Teenage Floridian Has Spent Half His Life Involved in Climate Litigation. He’s Not Giving Up, Inside Climate News, 8/9/22 Saving starving manatees will mean saving this crucial lagoon habitat, NPR and Inside Climate News, 3/21/22 Biden’s Infrastructure Bill Includes an Unprecedented $1.1 Billion for Everglades Revitalization, Inside Climate News, 2/11/22 In Orlando, a mountain of coal ash evades EPA rules. It's not the only one, NPR and Inside Climate News, 1/11/22 Four Years Ago Manatees Were Declared No Longer Endangered. Now They Are Dying At A Record Pace, WMFE and Inside Climate News, 9/12/21 Your Trash Is Emitting Methane In The Landfill. Here's Why It Matters For The Climate, NPR and Inside Climate News, 7/13/2021 Ron DeSantis Pushes Coastal 'Resilience' While Doing Little To Tackle Climate Change, NPR and Inside Climate New, 5/5/2021 ‘The Slide Is Real’: Many Online Learners Have The Most To Lose, Florida Public Media, 2/8/2021 Hurricane Season Collides With Pandemic As Communities Plan For Dual Emergencies, NPR and Inside Climate News, 6/1/2020 With Governor and Legislators in Denial, This Tiny Florida Town Tries to Adapt to Climate Change, WMFE and Florida Center for Investigative Reporting, 7/8/2018 In Sugar Price Supports, Sour Tastes For Consumers, Florida Center for Investigative Reporting, 9/9/2012 The Stories Under The Sea, American Archeology, 4/1/2011 Cassadaga: America's Oldest Spiritualist Community, Smithsonian.com, 9/9/2010 Cayley’s Family Secrets, PEOPLE, 2/9/2009 Mary Barley crusades behind the scenes for the Everglades, The Christian Science Monitor, 11/5/2008 A Mom's Web Of Lies, PEOPLE, 10/27/2008 Saving the Everglades, Newsweek.com, 8/19/2008 What Happened To Cayley?, PEOPLE, 8/11/2008 Attacks on the Homeless Rise, With Youths Mostly to Blame, The New York Times, 2/15/2008</image:caption>
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    <loc>https://amybgreen.com/work/book-mnbcp</loc>
    <changefreq>monthly</changefreq>
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    <lastmod>2021-02-27</lastmod>
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      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/6017315e5d14073e224a668c/1613259199090-KGVRTQDIPBRH59QP449E/MOVING+WATER+cover.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Home - Book - A riveting story of environmental disaster and political intrigue, Moving Water exposes how Florida's clean water is threatened by dirty power players and the sugar cane industry.</image:title>
      <image:caption>“Moving Water is so well-written, so compelling, that I read the entire book in one sitting. Exploring current efforts to undo more than a century of damage, Amy Green does an excellent job of telling the story of recent water management policies that have adversely affected the Kissimmee–Okeechobee–Everglades–Florida Bay ecosystem." — Gary Goforth, Chief Consulting Engineer, Everglades Construction Project, 1994-2005 "Moving Water promises to be a fascinating and urgently necessary read for every Floridian, with a much larger story to tell about politics, ecology, and the interdependency of individuals like Everglades activists George and Mary Barley and their environment." — Karen Russell, Pulitzer Prize finalist and best-selling author of Swamplandia! Press Interview: Author and journalist Amy Green, Environment Journal, 6/8/2021 A New Book From a Sarasota Native Tells the Story of the Fight to Save the Everglades, Sarasota Magazine, 4/19/2021 Books in brief, Nature, 3/24/21 At Center Of Political Clash Over Ailing Everglades: Water, WMFE, 3/12/21 Orlando radio reporter Amy Green publishes Everglades book, Orlando Sentinel, 3/11/2021</image:caption>
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    <loc>https://amybgreen.com/work/about-2swhc-sjnl9</loc>
    <changefreq>monthly</changefreq>
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    <lastmod>2021-05-13</lastmod>
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      <image:title>Home - About - Amy Green covers the environment and climate at Inside Climate News. She is a mid-career journalist and author whose extensive reporting on the Everglades is featured in the book MOVING WATER, published by Johns Hopkins University Press, and podcast DRAINED, available wherever you get your podcasts. Amy’s work has been recognized with many awards, including a prestigious Edward R. Murrow Award and Public Media Journalists Association award. Her work has been heard on NPR and seen in PEOPLE, Newsweek, The New York Times, The Christian Science Monitor, among many other publications. She began her career at The Associated Press in Nashville, Tenn. Amy grew up in Florida and lives in Orlando with her 9-year-old daughter.</image:title>
      <image:caption>Speaking Bookstore1Sarasota, 4/22/2021 League of Women Voters of Central Florida, 3/17/2021 Oxford Exchange, 3/4/2021 An Evening With The Everglades, WMFE, 2/26/2021 Functionally Literate, Burrow Press, 5/27/2017</image:caption>
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