Healthy Spaces Podcast: Embodied Carbon – First Movers of the Built Environment

VIDEO: Watch Season 5 Episode 3: Embodied Carbon – First Movers of the Built Environment

The cause of climate change isn’t a mystery: we’ve been reliant on burning fossil fuels for centuries, contributing to a warming planet. Our carbon emissions are a big problem, but what if carbon could be part of the solution?

How can sustainable innovation reduce emissions?

There are many solutions that can contribute to reducing our emissions footprint, from the transition to renewable energy, to sustainable consumption, production and building practices. And for the first movers in the sustainability space, the opportunities for innovation are endless.

In this episode, we speak to Cal Krause, Operational Impacts Program Manager at Trane Technologies, Nollaig Forrest, Chief Marketing and Corporate Affairs Officer at Amrize, and Molly Swanson, Transportation Management Technology Analyst at Trane Technologies.

We talk about embodied carbon in the built environment, strategies for reducing scope 1 and 2 emissions, and the sustainable innovation that could turn buildings into carbon sinks, batteries and more!

Featured in this Episode:

Hosts:
Dominique Silva, Marketing Leader EMEA, Trane Technologies
Scott Tew, Vice President Sustainability and Managing Director, Center for Energy Efficiency and Sustainability, Trane Technologies

Guests:
Cal Krause, Operational Impacts Manager, Trane Technologies
Nollaig Forrest, Chief Marketing & Corporate Affairs Officer, Amrize
Molly Swanson, Transportation Technology Analyst, Trane Technologies

About Healthy Spaces

Healthy Spaces is a podcast by Trane Technologies where experts and disruptors explore how climate technology and innovation are transforming the spaces where we live, work, learn and play.

This season, hosts Dominique Silva and Scott Tew bring a fresh batch of uplifting stories, featuring inspiring people who are overcoming challenges to drive positive change across multiple industries. We’ll discover how technology and AI can drive business growth, and help the planet breathe a little bit easier.

Listen and subscribe to Healthy Spaces on your favorite podcast platforms:

Apple Podcasts 
Spotify 
YouTube 
Amazon Music

How are you making an impact? What sustainable innovation do you think will change the world?

Share your story with us and learn more about the Healthy Spaces Podcast.

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U.S. Bank Partners With Netflix’s Happy Gilmore 2 on TV Spot

Originally published on U.S. Bank company blog

U.S. Bank is excited to partner with Happy Gilmore 2, which premieres July 25 on Netflix. The bank is integrating its brand into the movie, serving as a premier sponsor of the fictional “Tour Championship.” The U.S. Bank logo also appears on the bib of Happy Gilmore’s caddy.

Additionally, U.S. Bank has created a co-marketing campaign with Netflix, which includes social spots with pro golfer Collin Morikawa and a TV spot. The spot features the golf announcers from the original Happy Gilmore, Verne Lundquist and Jack Beard (played by Jack Giarraputo) and Morikawa, a U.S. Bank brand ambassador.

This is a national campaign and will run within the bank’s existing brand media buy across channels as well as throughout the Netflix’s ad-supported plan.

“We are delighted to be at the forefront of ‘Happy Gilmore 2,’ a partnership that strategically embeds U.S. Bank within a cultural phenomenon,” said Michael Lacorazza, chief marketing officer for U.S. Bank. “This partnership offers us the opportunity to establish meaningful connections with both our devoted customers and new audiences who are passionate about entertainment, sports, and culture. By associating with this classic film franchise and harnessing the expanding allure of golf, we’re highlighting U.S. Bank as a modern and innovative partner in our customers’ financial lives.”

With this sponsorship, U.S. Bank is focused on reaching young and midlife affluent audiences and positioning the company as a strong financial partner on the journey to achieve their “happy places.”

“U.S. Bank stands for stability, strategy, and financial planning, and we were excited to surprisingly blend these qualities with the world of Happy Gilmore, in our new campaign,” said Magno Herran, vice president of brand marketing and partnerships for Netflix. “Bringing U.S. Bank on board allowed us to imagine what it might be like to even bank happily, creating a memorable and delightful partnership for our members, that strategically channels the spirit of the highly anticipated return of Happy Gilmore this summer.”

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Meeting Consumer Demand: How Dow Drives Sustainable Packaging Innovation

“Leaning into sustainable packaging solutions helps us meet consumer expectations today and prepare for the trends to come.”

The increasing consumer demand for sustainable packaging is being driven by growing environmental awareness and the desire to reduce waste. Consumers are increasingly seeking products with packaging that is recyclable, biodegradable, compostable or made from renewable or circular materials.

This shift is inspiring companies like Dow and our customers to continue innovating all aspects of the processes that go into packaging, from design to materials to collaborations. Leaning into sustainable packaging solutions helps us address consumer expectations today and prepare for the trends to come.

Understanding packaging design for recyclability

Overall, there are numerous dimensions to sustainability, and it is a similar case if we look at packaging specifically.

Consumers may choose to examine packaging before deciding to make a purchase to see if the packaging includes circular materials or whether it is recyclable. However, even before it gets to the store shelf, the design of the packaging and the materials that go into it can have a significant impact on its sustainability.

When we say packaging is designed for recyclability, it means it has been produced in a manner that is conducive for the materials to be processed and reused in the production of new materials.

What are circular materials?

Circular material refers to material that has been recycled from some form of waste. Post-consumer recycled (PCR) content is an example of a circular material.

“As companies and consumers in general, our responsibility doesn’t end in delivering the product and consuming the product, but also in what happens after that.” Daniella Souza Miranda, global business marketing director, Dow Packaging and Specialty Plastics

Promoting circularity in packaging

Design is an important aspect of creating sustainable packaging solutions, and so are the materials selected for those designs. To gain a better understanding of how design for recyclability shows up in daily life, we can look to a morning cup of coffee as an example of how materials contribute to circular packaging.

Café Sello Rojo

The number of cups of coffee consumed globally each day reaches into the billions.

In Colombia, the third largest coffee producer in the world, about 2.5 million people rely on coffee for their livelihoods1. As a main export and key contributor to Colombia’s gross domestic product growth (GDP) in 20242, the overall sustainability of coffee production and consumption is increasingly critical in Latin America’s fourth largest economy.

Traditional coffee bean and ground coffee packaging uses a variety of materials formed into layers to preserve the quality of the product and to control moisture. To achieve this, it is common for coffee packaging to use a combination of paper, plastic and foil. This multilayered approach to packaging design extends the shelf life of many consumer products, not just coffee, but it presents a challenge once the product has been consumed and the packaging becomes waste.

With this challenge in mind, Dow began a collaboration with the Colombian coffee brand, Café Sello Rojo, and their packaging manufacturer, Alico, to produce coffee packaging designed for recyclability. Together, we have created a mono-material packaging for Café Sello Rojo’s 400g product that is made from 100% polyethylene. That means that once consumers have enjoyed the coffee, the packaging can be recycled in areas that offer polyethylene recycling services. By considering sustainable packaging trends during the design phase, the team was successful in creating packaging that uses 15% less material than traditional coffee packaging designs.

To take a deeper dive into our collaboration with Café Sello Rojo and Alico, check out this video interview on the packaging success story.

Paper coffee cups

Have you ever wondered what keeps hot liquids like coffee and tea from leaking through a paper to-go cup from your local coffee shop?

Fiber-based packaging like paper cups and plates often have a thin coating that provides that liquid barrier. Barrier coatings can also provide oil and grease resistance and control the amount of moisture and oxygen that products in sealable paper food pouches are exposed to on the grocery store shelf.

Traditional paper cups are about 93% paper and 7% hard-to-recycle barrier coating. That material composition contributes to more than 90% of disposable cups ending up in landfills. But advanced packaging technology can help change that statistic.

The Dow product portfolio of barrier coatings for paper products address the multifaceted performance needs for paper packaging while still working within existing paper recycling systems. In fact, our RHOBARR™ 320 Barrier Dispersion coating is so thinly applied, often less than 8 microns in thickness, it supports up to 99% fiber recovery when those paper products are recycled.

“Dow paper coatings are designed to meet evolving regulations, brand sustainability commitments and consumer perceptions that drive interest in packaging options.” Harry Fowler, global market segment leader for paper and metal packaging, Dow Coating Materials

We also make barrier coatings, like RHOBARR™ 214 Barrier Emulsion, with 30% bio-based content, meaning this latex incorporates plant-based raw materials. It is a part of our Ecolibrium™ sustainability pillar brand which provides our customers the assurance to confidently share that their packaging includes renewable or bio-based materials.

Dow Pack Studios: A collaborative approach to designing for recyclability

Design, materials and collaboration all contribute to sustainable packaging innovation.

That is what happens at Pack Studios. It is the place where our passionate teams work alongside our customers to develop innovative and better packaging ideas.

Pack Studios brings together advanced materials, cutting-edge technology, and industry expertise to help brands create effective packaging solutions. These facilities offer services like rapid prototyping, design testing and recyclability assessments.

Meeting our customers’ needs and consumer trends in packaging are priorities, but our commitment does not end there. We are working to address market demands, current challenges and pave the way for a sustainable future through our approach to materials science. Pack Studios collaborates with brands from concept to commercialization, ensuring solutions meet the highest standards, focusing on sustainability and performance.

About the article

This case study was developed by a cross-discipline team representing circularity and market expertise across Dow. To learn more about how Dow collaborates through science and sustainability to help transform waste, visit our Purpose in Action page.

Sources

  1. Caballero, C. (2025, June 06). Colombia’s sustainable coffee sector and its lessons for climate solutions. World Economic Forum. https://www.weforum.org/stories/2025/06/columbias-sustainable-coffee-sector-and-its-lesson-for-climate-solutions/.
  2. Colombia’s Economy To Grow 1.7% In 2024, With Coffee As The Protagonist. (2025, February 18). AmCham Colombia. https://amchamcartagena.org/en/colombias-economy-grew-by-17-in-2024-with-coffee-as-a-protagonist/.

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The Seine Reopens: How the Olympic Games Helped Paris Reclaim Its River

International Olympic Committee news

For the first time in over a century, Parisians are once again swimming in the River Seine. What once seemed impossible is now a reality – thanks in large part to the vision, momentum and partnership inspired by the Olympic Games Paris 2024.

Three new natural swimming sites – at Bras Marie, Bercy and Grenelle – officially opened to the public on 5 July 2025, just over one year after athletes swam through the Seine during the Olympic triathlon and marathon swimming competitions.

About 1,000 swimmers a day will be able to access the sites until the end of August. With clean waters and secure access, these sites offer not only places to cool down in the summer heat, but also a lasting symbol of what the Games can create when aligned with a city’s long-term ambitions.

An in-depth transformation

More than a sports venue, the Seine became the soul of Paris 2024. It hosted the Opening Ceremony, where thousands of athletes sailed down the river in a flotilla of boats, and served as the backdrop for multiple competitions.

But the real transformation happened beneath the surface – literally.

A century ago, swimming in the Seine was part of everyday Parisian life, but it was banned in 1923 due to pollution. The origins of the clean-up efforts date back to the early 90s. In 2015, the Greater Paris Sanitation Authority announced the plan to make the Seine swimmable by the time of the Olympic Games. These efforts targeted aging sewage systems, stormwater runoff and wastewater discharge – culprits long blamed for the Seine’s pollution.

A massive underground storage basin near Austerlitz now intercepts and retains overflow from the sewer system during heavy rains, preventing untreated water from spilling into the river. It is capable of holding over 50,000 cubic metres – roughly twenty Olympic-sized swimming pools – of wastewater until it can be safely treated.

Social, environmental and economic Impact

This effort, while technical, was never only about engineering. It was about giving the people of Paris – and its visitors – new access to green spaces, physical activity and leisure in the heart of the city.

The Seine now serves as a free, safe and refreshing public space. The sites offer fully accessible facilities, lifeguards, showers and sun decks. Kayaks can be borrowed at Grenelle. Swimming zones are clearly demarcated, navigation is temporarily paused during opening hours, and water quality is tested daily under strict safety protocols.

These open-air sites – carefully integrated into the urban landscape with removable, modular structures – were designed with the future in mind. They also address a growing climate need: public access to cooling spaces as urban temperatures rise.

But the Seine’s revival is not just about Paris. It echoes across France and beyond, with public swimming spots planned along the Seine and Marne throughout the Île-de-France region.

A living Olympic legacy

The Seine’s clean-up proves that the Olympic Games, when thoughtfully planned, can accelerate citywide – and regionwide – improvements that affect every layer of society. Although the efforts had already been in progress, they were accelerated by the Games, which provided an additional incentive – and a deadline – to complete them in time for the event, helping to reconnect Paris with its river.

In line with the goals of Olympic Agenda – the IOC’s strategic vision to ensure that the Games are more sustainable, more inclusive and better integrated into the fabric of host cities – Paris 2024 became a powerful catalyst for urban regeneration, environmental progress and social benefit.

“The spirit of the Games continues to live on in the streets of Paris. And now, in the waters of the Seine,” said Anne Hidalgo, Mayor of Paris. “This progress would not have come so quickly without the Olympic and Paralympic Games. It is through this joint, demanding project, supported by all the stakeholders of the State and the Olympic and Paralympic Movement, that we have been able to meet the environmental, health and technical challenges to make swimming possible, safe and sustainable.”

The reopening of the Seine is a reminder that the Olympic Games are not just about sport – they are about transformation.
Tania Braga, IOC Head of Legacy

“When a host city sees the Games as a catalyst for long-term progress, as Paris has done, the impact can reach far beyond venues and competition. It’s about reconnecting people to their environment, creating lasting public value, and showing how ambition and partnership can deliver change.”

For more information about Paris 2024 sustainability and legacy, see here.

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Saint-Gobain Creates Circular Economy Program for Insulation Fibers, Saving Over One and a Half Million Pounds of Waste in First Year

Through innovation and cross-functional collaboration, Saint-Gobain North America has successfully created a circular economy program within its CertainTeed Interior Products Group, allowing insulation fibers from its facility in Kansas City, Kansas to be recycled and reused as raw material in the production of ceiling panels at its facility in L’Anse, Michigan. In its first full year, the project has saved over one and a half million pounds of insulation from landfills.

Established in 1951 and 1959 respectively, the manufacturing facilities in Kansas City and L’Anse are two of Saint-Gobain’s longest operating plants in the United States. Fiberglass, a lightweight and strong material made from fine glass fibers, is a key component in production for both insulation and acoustic ceiling panels, creating natural synergies that make the program possible. In addition to reducing waste-to-landfill in Kansas City, one of the world’s largest fiberglass insulation plants, the use of recycled materials in production lowers the global warming potential of CertainTeed L’Anse’s ceiling panels and is estimated to save nearly 2,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide. 

“Creating circular economies within our production process is truly a win-win for our company, our customers and our communities,” said Jay Bachmann, President of CertainTeed Interior Product Group. “I commend our teams in Kansas City and L’Anse who through innovation, collaboration, and out-of-the-box thinking are reducing waste and exemplifying Saint-Gobain’s mission to be the leader in light and sustainable construction.”

Reducing waste and increasing the circularity of raw materials in its production processes remains a major commitment for Saint-Gobain. Over the past few years, the company has made significant advancements in circularity initiatives through several programs including: 

With over 160 manufacturing locations in the United States and Canada, every current and future member of the company’s team plays a vital role in achieving its sustainability goals. A current list of job openings, including in Kansas and Michigan, can be found on the company’s career website.

About Saint-Gobain

Worldwide leader in light and sustainable construction, Saint-Gobain designs, manufactures and distributes materials and services for the construction and industrial markets. Its integrated solutions for the renovation of public and private buildings, light construction and the decarbonization of construction and industry are developed through a continuous innovation process and provide sustainability and performance. The Group, celebrating its 360th anniversary in 2025, remains more committed than ever to its purpose “MAKING THE WORLD A BETTER HOME

€46.6 billion in sales in 2024
161,000 employees, locations in 80 countries
Committed to achieving Carbon Neutrality by 2050 

For more information about Saint-Gobain, visit www.saint-gobain.com and follow us on Twitter @saintgobain
 

 

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KeyBank Foundation Invests $1.56 Million in Four Cleveland Non-Profits

CLEVELAND, July 24, 2025 /3BL/ – The KeyBank Foundation, a nonprofit charitable organization funded by KeyCorp, is investing $1.56 million in four non-profit organizations in its hometown of Cleveland. These grants align with the foundation’s work to create thriving communities and drive meaningful, lasting change.

“As Cleveland’s hometown bank, we take great pride in making transformative investments that provide hope and opportunity for all,” said Kelly Lamirand, KeyBank Cleveland Market President. “We congratulate the organizations that are receiving these grants and look forward to seeing the positive impact this will have on our community.”

Funding will support workforce development and financial education programs at the following organizations:

Junior Achievement of Greater Cleveland
Funds will support educational programming at the organization’s new Experiential Learning Center. This in-classroom component is delivered by a combination of teachers and volunteers to 6th-12th grade students, with a focus on the following topics: income, savings, investing risk, debit and credit, and budgeting. KeyBank will also receive lead naming rights to the JA Finance Park simulation space, including a KeyBank storefront presence to promote banking business and career opportunities at KeyBank.

“The Junior Achievement Experiential Learning Center and JA Finance Park presented by KeyBank will transform how students and young adults learn about important life skills like budgeting, saving, and investing money wisely,” said Al DiFranco, President and CEO of Junior Achievement of Greater Cleveland. “We are grateful to the KeyBank Foundation for providing critical resources to help us create an in-classroom and experiential program that will positively impact financial literacy and wellness in our community.”

Towards Employment Incorporated
Funds will support the “Giving Clevelanders a Chance to Advance” program. This capacity-building campaign is aimed at helping Greater Clevelanders escape poverty and achieve economic mobility. This initiative focuses on providing skill development for in-demand jobs, comprehensive support, extended career coaching, and connections to employers.

“This funding makes sure that 4,000 Clevelanders, 60% of whom have justice involvement, have the support they need to successfully connect to rewarding careers while businesses are gaining new talent motivated to succeed,” said Jill Rizika, President & CEO of Towards Employment. “KeyBank, a long-term workforce partner, has provided an investment that lets us deepen Towards Employment’s career pathway services with additional behavioral health, financial literacy, and career coaching support.”

Building Hope in the City
Funds will support One World Kitchen which teaches food handling and preparation skills, commercial kitchen management lessons and business training to prepare participants to obtain meaningful employment in the food industry. The first cohort graduated 15 students in February 2025.

“Refugees bring innumerable and needed skills, talents and abilities to our city,” said Brian Upton, Building Hope in the City’s executive director. “Key’s generous partnership in these workforce and employment efforts in Cleveland will result in the launch of new immigrant and minority-owned catering enterprises and food-based businesses over time. This effort will create new opportunities for these new Americans to provide for their families and add to our region’s diverse cultural heritage and future.”

Girl Scouts of North East Ohio
Funds will support the Vivian von Gruenigen, MD STEM Center of Excellence on the Daley Family Campus for STEM Innovation at Camp Ledgewood and STEM Learning for All Students program. This programming empowers participants with hands-on, age-appropriate experiences in fields like engineering, computer science, robotics and more.

“The Vivian von Gruenigen, MD STEM Center of Excellence is located in the only Girl Scout camp in the country located in a national park,” said Jane Christyson, CEO of Girl Scouts of North East Ohio. “That is why the theme of the building is ‘making the world a better place through nature inspired design.’ Visitors will come to understand that nature is the best engineer and inventor, and we know they will be inspired to create their own big ideas using STEM technology, showcased in and around the building. We are thrilled and incredibly grateful to the KeyBank Foundation for their amazing investment in our Girl Scouts and the youth in our region! Thanks to their support, we’re able to educate and inspire young minds about the exciting world of STEM careers.”

“Each of these organizations do amazing work each day that lifts our community up and helps people from all walks of life grow and succeed,” said Mattie Jones-Hollowell, Corporate Responsibility Officer for KeyBank in Cleveland. “As we celebrate our bicentennial, we are proud to invest in the work they do and provide people in Cleveland with financial education and opportunities to build successful careers.”

Since 2017, KeyBank has invested more than $2 billion in Northeast Ohio supporting affordable housing and community development projects; small business and home lending; and transformative philanthropy.

ABOUT KEYCORP

In 2025, KeyCorp celebrates its bicentennial, marking 200 years of service to clients and communities from Maine to Alaska. To learn more, visit KeyBank Heritage Center. Headquartered in Cleveland, Ohio, Key is one of the nation’s largest bank-based financial services companies, with assets of approximately $185 billion at June 30, 2025.

Key provides deposit, lending, cash management, and investment services to individuals and businesses in 15 states under the name KeyBank National Association through a network of approximately 1,000 branches and approximately 1,200 ATMs. Key also provides a broad range of sophisticated corporate and investment banking products, such as merger and acquisition advice, public and private debt and equity, syndications and derivatives to middle market companies in selected industries throughout the United States under the KeyBanc Capital Markets trade name. For more information, visit https://www.key.com/. KeyBank Member FDIC.

ABOUT KEYBANK FOUNDATION 
KeyBank Foundation is a nonprofit charitable foundation that supports organizations and initiatives aimed at improving financial wellness, education, and community development. Through strategic philanthropy, KeyBank Foundation works to create thriving communities and drive meaningful, lasting change.

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From Low-Code to AI: Lessons in Empowering Enterprise Users

Authored by Baker Tilly’s Dave DuVarney

Enterprise artificial intelligence (AI) agents are emerging as the next wave of workplace productivity. These custom-built assistants streamline tasks, automate processes and personalize support for users across the organization. And much like the low-code movement of years past, this innovation isn’t coming from developers alone.

The rise of low-code AI adoption is empowering power users, business analysts and frontline employees to create AI agents without writing a single line of code. With tools like Microsoft Copilot, agent-building has enabled employees to design and deploy AI-powered helpers using natural language, intuitive workflows and contextual prompts.

This democratization of development presents a powerful opportunity and a familiar challenge. To scale responsibly, organizations must apply the lessons learned from the low-code era to ensure these agents are governed, supported and aligned to business priorities.

Why it matters: AI agents are growing fast 

The demand for AI agent capabilities is accelerating rapidly. In a recent Cloudera1 survey, 96% of U.S. enterprises said they plan to expand AI agent deployments within the next 12 months. As the barrier to entry falls, the number of agents being created and the range of use cases is poised to multiply.

These tools unlock innovation by enabling users closest to business challenges to design their own solutions. However, without the right frameworks in place, this growth can lead to redundancies, inconsistencies and risk.

The low-code playbook still applies 

Many of the practices that helped organizations succeed with low-code platforms apply equally to enterprise AI agents:

  • Tiered environments: Just as with app development, organizations should establish development, testing and production environments for agents to ensure quality and safety
  • Champion networks: Identifying and empowering early adopters or “agent champions” help promote best practices, support peers and surface high-value solutions
  • Usage analytics: Monitoring engagement with AI agents can highlight what’s working, what needs refinement and what should be retired

This approach enables safe experimentation without sacrificing oversight. It also creates a structured path for successful agents to be scaled across the enterprise.

Agent champions: A proven model for scale 

Champion networks are one of the most effective ways to scale emerging technologies. In the context of AI agents, champions are the users building, testing and refining solutions to real business problems.

By fostering a community of practice, where these champions can share learnings, answer questions and showcase their work, organizations can accelerate innovation while creating a strong feedback loop with IT and governance teams. Successful agents can then be reviewed, hardened and promoted to broader use, ensuring that grassroots creativity leads to enterprise-grade outcomes.

Managing agent sprawl through governance 

As with SharePoint sites or Microsoft Teams channels, unchecked growth can quickly lead to “agent sprawl.” AI agents may be created in isolation, duplicated across teams or left unused over time.

To stay ahead of this, organizations should implement a governance framework that includes:

  • Publishing controls: Require a review process before agents are made broadly available
  • Monitoring and maintenance: Use analytics tools to track usage and identify dormant agents for decommissioning
  • Ownership models: Assign accountability for active agents, ensuring they are maintained, updated and aligned with evolving business needs

This approach balances agility with control, allowing innovation to flourish while minimizing duplication, drift and technical debt.

A call to action for digital leaders 

  • AI agents aren’t a future state — they’re already here. Digital leaders should take proactive steps now to channel emerging energy into sustainable programs. This includes:
  • Establishing clear guidelines for agent development and deployment
  • Supporting communities of practice and champion contributors
  • Implementing monitoring tools and governance processes
  • Creating a culture where innovation is encouraged, but not unbounded

Those who act early will not only mitigate risk but also unlock a new level of distributed problem-solving across the enterprise.

How Baker Tilly can help 

Baker Tilly’s digital solutions team supports enterprise AI adoption with tailored services that accelerate progress while managing risk. Through AI innovation workshops and readiness assessments, organizations can:

  • Identify opportunities for agent development
  • Empower business users with the tools and training they need
  • Build governance structures that prevent sprawl and ensure sustainability

By combining grassroots innovation with strategic oversight, enterprises can safely scale the next generation of AI-powered productivity.

Connect with a Baker Tilly specialist to learn more

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What Our Latest Survey Taught Me About Clarity, Confidence, and a Few Misconceptions

In the latest blog, Cascale’s Vice President of Communications & Marketing, Lee Green shares insights from Cascale’s latest Awareness & Industry Impact Survey. The findings reflect a clear optimism about the industry’s, and Cascale’s, ability to drive meaningful change. At the same time, the survey surfaced a few misconceptions, prompting reflection on how Cascale communicates who we are, what we offer, and how we show up alongside our partners.

Read the full blog, titled: What Our Latest Survey Taught Me About Clarity, Confidence, and a Few Misconceptions

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Christian Lingua Offers Free Sermon Overdubs for Pastors to Expand Their Global Reach

“For the word of God is alive and active. Sharper than any double-edged sword…” (Hebrews 4:12)

RUTHERFORDTON, N.C., July 24, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — Christian Lingua showcases its latest initiative: free sermon overdubs for pastors and churches into Spanish and other languages. As a global leader in Christian translation and media services, Christian Lingua (CL) aims to empower churches to welcome and disciple Spanish-speaking and other audiences in both their local communities and around the world.

Breaking Language Barriers for the Gospel
Churches in North America are very multilingual. The fastest-growing and largest minority group in the US is the Spanish-speaking population, which exceeds 62 million. However, many pastors admit that they lack the resources to connect with this demographic. CL aims to remove this barrier by providing:

  • High-quality sermon overdubs
  • Quick turnaround and easy media integration
  • Faithful, Spirit-led translations that preserve the sermon’s heart
  • Free overdubs for churches with limited budgets

Sermon overdubs by Christian Lingua are already helping local churches engage Spanish-speaking believers in worship. Pastor González of the New Hope Church mentioned, “Before Christian Lingua’s overdub service, we could only reach part of our big community. Now, Spanish-speaking families are participating fully, worshipping together with English-speaking members. This has united our congregation in amazing ways never imagined before.

Equipping Churches for Greater Impact
Christian Lingua, founded over 20 years ago, partners with ministries worldwide to translate and dub Christian books, videos, and sermons. A Champion Member of the Alliance for the Unreached, they’re also recognized as one of America’s Top 30 Innovative Linguistics Companies by The Silicon Review.

Our mission has always been about accessibility. Breaking down barriers so that Christ’s message can reach everyone,” Michael Yurchuk, the founder of Christian Lingua, was quoted as saying. “Offering free Spanish sermon overdubs is a natural extension of that vision. We want to see churches grow as they embrace the fullness of their communities, crossing over language divides to welcome everyone God brings their way.

CL makes sure that every translated sermon retains the prayerful intent and spiritual impact of the original message. Thanks to this new initiative, Christian Lingua invites pastors to take advantage of free sermon overdubs, equipping their ministries for greater outreach and fulfilling the Great Commission in their communities.

For more information, visit www.christianlingua.com, their official website. Join CL in making every church a welcoming home for all.

Contact:
Michael Yurchuk
8283519551
398531@email4pr.com

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SOURCE Christian Lingua

ScottsMiracle-Gro Believes in the Power of Green Spaces – Partners With U.S. Men’s National Soccer Team Captain Tyler Adams and Every Kid Sports

Our Scotts brand is proud to announce a new partnership with U.S. Men’s National Soccer Team captain Tyler Adams and Every Kid Sports.

This partnership is dedicated to increasing youth access to natural turf sports fields, as we believe in the power of green spaces to foster healthier, happier and stronger communities.

For the official kick-off, Tyler hosted a field day at his childhood playing field in Wappingers Falls, New York, teaching soccer skills to local youth. He attributes his early success to his experiences as a youth athlete. And as a new father, he is adamant about spending time with his family outside.

Tyler will help give back to local communities by working with Scotts to launch a nationwide Keep It Real sweepstakes, offering five youth sports nonprofit organizations the chance to win a natural turf field refurbishment and soccer balls signed by Adams.

Learn more about the Keep It Real Movement and sweepstakes: https://scotts.com/en-us/about-us/keep-it-real.html

View original content here.

About ScottsMiracle-Gro
With approximately $3.6 billion in sales, the Company is the world’s largest marketer of branded consumer products for lawn and garden care. The Company’s brands are among the most recognized in the industry. The Company’s Scotts®, Miracle-Gro®, and Ortho® brands are market-leading in their categories. The Company’s wholly-owned subsidiary, The Hawthorne Gardening Company, is a leading provider of nutrients, lighting, and other materials used in the indoor and hydroponic growing segment. For additional information, visit us at www.scottsmiraclegro.com

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