Where Do You Go When You Gotta Go? America's Public Bathroom Shortage Aug 15, 2022 Aug 15, 2022 Updated Jan 13, 2026 0 YC3 Grants Chief ribbon cutting Massive proton therapy device installed at Buffett Cancer Center People attend College World Series Fan Fest Ranking the top five stadiums at the 2026 World Cup Wrapped in paradox: Most inclusive tournament in terms of countries participating yet many excluded Nebraska's Will Bolt and players after elimination from NCAA Baseball Regional Municipal Band Taylor Swift among celebs at stars studded MSG for Game 4 of NBA Finals Migrant woman speaks out on ICE camp conditions after deportation and husband’s death NCAA Faces Crisis Over Ruling on Brendan Sorsby's Eligibility Nebraska Reptiles Lion statue stolen from Piqued Curiosities Antiques Steilacoom ferry terminal Pride flag draws angry emails, town cites state lease Serena Williams makes her tennis return after nearly four years Literacy Training Prefer us on Google Learn More If a person has to go to the bathroom while out in public, it may be difficult to find a toilet without some sort of catch. Locations Davenport Illinois As featured on Toilets spew invisible aerosol plumes with every flush: Here's the proof Toilets eject aerosol droplets that may carry disease-causing pathogens. Learning how the particles move could help cut exposure in public restrooms. Latest video US-Iran peace agreement: A reason to be optimistic? Early morning storms bring wind and hail US fans celebrate victory over Paraguay in World Cup opener Watch: Sights and Sounds from Pride in the Park Birthright citizenship decision looms as Trump court cases mount SpaceX soars in $2T market debut, making Elon Musk the world’s first trillionaire Naturalization ceremony at Homestead National Historical Park GLP-1s and cancer prevention: What’s known and what isn’t Facebook Twitter Bluesky WhatsApp SMS Email Print Copy article link Save 0 Comments
Toilets spew invisible aerosol plumes with every flush: Here's the proof Toilets eject aerosol droplets that may carry disease-causing pathogens. Learning how the particles move could help cut exposure in public restrooms.