For the Soul: Author Vincent Kelly Approaches Diversity From a Child s Mindset | Arts & Culture | nashvillescene-com us-east-1 townnews-staging com townnews-staging.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from townnews-staging.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Glasgow City Council is funding a scheme to encourage natured-based business schemes A pilot project in Glasgow will see nature-based businesses and organisations receive council support. The scheme will be applicable for a wide range of activities including beekeeping, carbon offsetting, ‘green’ roofs, community growing schemes or tree planting enterprises. The Nature-Based Accelerator Programme is now open to applications and is a three-month fully-funded scheme - worth more than £1500 to each successful applicant. A World Economic Forum report suggested that actions to take nature-based solutions into account could create $10 trillion annually in business opportunities. According to the council the programme aims to encourage a more resilient local nature-based economy while improving and maintaining the city’s open spaces.
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Vincent Kelly is a husband, a father of two, an HR professional and a childrenâs author. His first book,
The Awesome Things I Love, won the 2020 Pinnacle Book Achievement Award, and publisher Greater You Books just released his second,
All People Are Beautiful. The book focuses on diversity, and Kelly hopes its life lessons will resonate with both youth and adults.Â
Photo: Eric England
What inspired you to become a childrenâs author?
I kind of stumbled into it. By day, I work as an HR regional manager, and by night, Iâm an author. Iâm also a husband and a father of two sons, and my life is so eventful and interesting because of them. They tend to inspire me a lot.