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Nominations Being Accepted For Tomorrow Sustainability Awards

Some architects and design firms in San Antonio are leading the way in energy efficiency. The city’s Office of Sustainability wants to hear who they are. The office is now accepting nominations for its second annual Tomorrow Sustainability Awards. 

The city is looking for practitioners across the local sustainability field to apply. Categories include: buildings in the built environment such as single family new construction, retrofits construction and commercial construction projects, green practitioners, and organizations that excel in green building. Outside of the building categories, awards will be given for natural resources, energy, food system and transportation.

The deadline for nominations is Aug. 5. To make a nomination, contact the City of San Antonio Office of Sustainability. Winners will be announced at the city’s Sustainability Summit in November.

Louisa Jonas is an independent public radio producer, environmental writer, and radio production teacher based in Baltimore. She is thrilled to have been a PRX STEM Story Project recipient for which she produced a piece about periodical cicadas. Her work includes documentaries about spawning horseshoe crabs and migratory shorebirds aired on NPR's Weekend All Things Considered. Louisa previously worked as the podcast producer at WYPR 88.1FM in Baltimore. There she created and produced two documentary podcast series: Natural Maryland and Ascending: Baltimore School for the Arts. The Nature Conservancy selected her documentaries for their podcast Nature Stories. She has also produced for the Chemical Heritage Foundation’s Distillations Podcast. Louisa is editor of the book Backyard Carolina: Two Decades of Public Radio Commentary. She holds an M.F.A. in Creative Writing from University of North Carolina Wilmington. Her training also includes journalism fellowships from the Science Literacy Project and the Knight Digital Media Center, both in Berkeley, CA. Most recently she received a journalism fellowship through Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution where she traveled to Toolik Field Station in Arctic Alaska to study climate change. In addition to her work as an independent producer, she teaches radio production classes at Howard Community College to a great group of budding journalists. She has worked as an environmental educator and canoe instructor but has yet to convince a great blue heron to squawk for her microphone…she remains undeterred.