Survive and Thrive

Survive and Thrive

  • Summer 2017
    • Aging in Boston
    • Boston Hair Care: Diversity & Choice
    • Climate Change in New York City
    • Listening for a Cure
    • Helping Homeless Stay Healthy
    • Study & Deliver
    • The Tech Divide: Teachers vs. Students
    • Together to Stop Youth Violence
    • Pretty hurts: Behind the clean beauty revolution
  • Spring 2017
    • Psychology of feminism
    • Ready to Lead
    • Running in Heels
    • Single Moms: Struggles and Hopes
    • Trips and Treatment
    • Unspoken and Untreated
    • Working at 50+
    • Zero Waste, Infinite Impact
  • Spring 2016
    • Accommodating Transgender
    • All in: Indian Gaming
    • Alone with Food Allergies
    • A Way to Innocence
    • Facing Anti-Muslim Hatred
    • Millennials Move In
    • Our Bodies, Our Struggle
    • Robotics: On a Limb
    • Service Dogs: Fact & Fiction
    • Staying on Pointe
    • Surviving Intimate Trauma
    • Two Homelands, One Love
  • Spring 2015
    • Back to Basics: Holistic Health
    • Beauty Expectations of Black Women
    • Boston 2024 Olympics
    • #BostonFitnessFads
    • Boston Mindfulness
    • Ca$hing in on Cyber$ecurity
    • Exposing Local Anti-Semitism
    • Families Serving Time
    • Fueling the Future
    • Helping the Homeless
    • Heroin: Beyond the Addiction
    • Mobile Language Learning
    • Overdose Oversight
    • Regrowing NE’s Country Roots
    • Robots Among Us
    • Self-image: Beyond the Scale
    • Styling Beantown
    • Tackling Combat Sports
    • The Algorithm Revolution
    • Through Boston Teachers’ Eyes
    • Toxic Nails
    • Wanted: More Women Leaders
    • World-Class Boston?
  • Spring 2014
    • Big Effect of Small-time Football
    • Bike Friendly Boston
    • Birth: Au Naturale
    • Bottle Bill Battle
    • Coastal Conversion
    • Deportation: Brink of Separation
    • Gay, Young and Homeless
    • Girls, STEM and Startups
    • HIV Positive Outlook
    • Immigrant Women & Domestic Abuse
    • Lost at 18
    • Nutrition Literacy
    • Recycling: 1 Bin or 2?
    • Reviving the Written Word
    • Treating Sexual Assault Remotely
    • Vinyl’s Comeback?
  • Archive
    • Fall 2013
      • Big Data in Health Care
      • Helping the Hungry
      • Lost at 18
      • Rehabbing Urban Wildlife
      • Startup Beauties
      • Sustainable Action
    • Spring 2013
      • Asperger’s in Adulthood
      • Chinese Grad Student Boom
      • Community in CrossFit
      • Death by Rx
      • Degreed and Underemployed
      • Geek is Chic
      • Growing Up Muslim
      • Nitrogen Nightmare?
      • Pit Bull Perception
      • Preservin’ the Classics
      • Right to Learn?
      • U.S. Women Made in China
      • Unsolved Gun Violence
      • Young & Homeless
    • Fall 2012
      • Better Workspaces
      • Black Beauty?
      • Broke Not Broken
      • Cheering Challenges
      • Going Social
      • Rainbow Religion
      • Style in Boston
      • The Play State
      • The Sporting Epidemic

Fueling the Future

Breaking down the barriers

May 4, 2015 Jess Aloe 0

Renewable energy is surging, and Massachusetts is leading the innovation charge–including in trying to solve its biggest problem.

The “Green Collar” economy gains momentum

May 4, 2015 Jess Aloe 0

Renewable energy is booming in Massachusetts and with it comes money and jobs.

Bringing offshore wind to New England

May 4, 2015 Jess Aloe 0

After 14 years, Cape Wind seems dead in water. But New England may still play host to America’s first offshore wind farm.

About the Author

  • Jess Aloe




    Jess Aloe graduated from Johns Hopkins University in 2009, with a degree in Writing Seminars. She worked several jobs after leaving college: high school English teacher, editor at a public policy nonprofit, business development at an adtech startup and nanny.


    Since beginning at Emerson, she's worked at the New England Center for Investigative Reporting. While there, she played a vital role in a major investigation into private mortgage insurance. She also worked on stories about wetlands management, flood insurance, and helped develop multimedia strategy.


    She's also worked at Commonwealth Magazine, writing stories on a variety of public policy and political issues, and as a radio reporter and producer for WERS, anchoring news breaks and reporting and producing long-form segments for the station's award-winning public affairs show, You Are Here.


    In her spare time, she enjoys yoga, spicy cocktails, riding bicycles, mountains, hiking and trying to teach herself coding.

    http://www.jessaloe.com

    You can follow me on Twitter:

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