http://www.chompchomp.com/terms/fusedsentence.htm alleges that the following is a fused sentence:
Driving home from school, Brett vowed to protect the fragile ecosystem ♦ all the while the tires of his Cadillac Escalade flattened the toads hopping on the wet streets.
The first main clause is 'Brett vowed to protect the fragile ecosystem,' and the second is 'the tires of his Cadillac Escalade flattened the toads hopping on the wet streets'. Notice that the two clauses run together with no punctuation.
One proposition from that website is to use a semicolon at the location of the square. But why not just a comma? Wiktionary states that 'all the while' is a conjunction. What are the true issues here?