Innovative Approach Provides Wilmington Teens with Educational Opportunities in Sustainability
Vehicle-to-Grid (V2G) bus unveiled June 14 at The Warehouse. An eletric zero emissions bus that is the The Warehouse’s new cleaner transportation option for visitors of The WRK Group, including The Warehouse, REACH Riverside and Kingswood Community Center.
Community leaders gathered today at The Warehouse, a service partner of The WRK Group, to welcome three new clean energy technologies as part of the
Energize The Warehouse initiative a collaboration between Delmarva Power, the Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control (DNREC) and many other community partners. The initiative is helping The Warehouse further its mission to revolutionize teen engagement by serving as a place for local teens to learn about clean energy, electric transportation, and sustainable farming and agriculture.
The Warehouse marks launch of clean energy, vertical farming education initiative
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Community Leaders Unveil All-Electric Bus, Ag Pod and Solar + Battery Storage Technology at The Warehouse
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Delaware News Journal
About 100 people marched through the streets of Wilmington Sunday to protest police brutality and the police shooting of 30-year-old Lymond Moses.
Residents came out of their houses to watch, cheer and raise their fists in solidarity as the marchers passed by.
The march began at Kingswood Community Center in Riverside, a few blocks from where Moses was fatally shot by New Castle County police in January.
Amanda Spence, Moses’ wife, led the march alongside the rest of Moses’ family, including his mother and sisters.
“At the other side of a bullet is a family,” said Emeka Igwe, the attorney representing the family.
WHYY
By
Protesters in Rodney Square also called for justice for Lymond Moses. Two white officers fatally shot the 30-year-old Black man in January. (Aaron Moselle/WHYY)
Updated: 5:30 p.m.
Days after a jury convicted former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin of murder and manslaughter in the death of George Floyd, roughly 100 protesters gathered at Rodney Square in Wilmington Sunday afternoon to demand justice for another Black man killed by law enforcement.
In January, New Castle County Police fatally shot 30-year-old Lymond Moses in Wilmington, shortly after officers found him asleep in a running car parked near his mother’s home.