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More States Crack Down on Protesters

In anticipation of upcoming protests, the state of South Dakota  has recently passed a bill threatening protesters. South Dakota also has a large population of Sioux tribal members culturally related to the Standing Rock tribe and the pipeline is planned to pass through South Dakota as well.  Read more.

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Backyard Talk

Let’s Be Greener This St. Patrick’s Day

I don’t mean wearing more green clothing or drinking green beer, but rather thinking and acting greener than you have most every other day. It doesn’t need to be Earth Day to raise the important issues that are fundamentally about our own survival. There are things you can do every day including St. Patrick’s Day to protect public health and the environment. For example:

  • You can ask your federal legislators, state elected representatives, your friends and neighbors to support the New Green Deal. Start a conversation about the pro’s and con’s of the legislation. Let’s get more of the conversation happening so we can find common ground.
  • Spring is around the corner so maybe you can start some seedlings to plant, when the warmer temperatures arrive, in your garden.
  • Go zero waste today and bring your own glass or cup to your local pub where you’ll purchase your green beer or beverage of choice.
  • Take part in a local parade or other festivity and use the gathering to educate people about how important it is to take care of our planet, beginning in your own backyard.
  • Share words of wisdom and motivation for this ‘Green Day.’  “Going back to a simpler life is not a step backward; and to do good, you actually have to do something,” said Yvon Chouinard (founder of Patagonia).

Here is a fun St. Patrick’s Day Trivia link see how you do so you’re ready on Sunday. (AARP)
 

As a proud Irish woman, I leave you with this Irish blessing.

May the road rise to meet you.

May the wind always be at your back.

May the sun shine warm upon your face and rain fall upon your fields.

And until we meet again.

May God hold you in the hollow of His Hands.

 

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Wheeler on climate: ‘I don’t see it as the existential threat’

Fox news interview, Payne asked the newly minted EPA chief: “Do you see [fusion_builder_container hundred_percent=”yes” overflow=”visible”][fusion_builder_row][fusion_builder_column type=”1_1″ background_position=”left top” background_color=”” border_size=”” border_color=”” border_style=”solid” spacing=”yes” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” padding=”” margin_top=”0px” margin_bottom=”0px” class=”” id=”” animation_type=”” animation_speed=”0.3″ animation_direction=”left” hide_on_mobile=”no” center_content=”no” min_height=”none”][climate change] as the existential threat that within 12 years, if we don’t do anything, that’s it, we’ve crossed the Rubicon, kiss Earth goodbye?”
Wheeler responded: “No. You know, as far as the largest environmental issue facing the planet today, I would have to say water. The fact that a million people still die a year from lack of potable drinking water is a crisis.” Read More. [/fusion_builder_column][/fusion_builder_row][/fusion_builder_container]

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EPA Should Improve the Reliability of Data on National Priorities List Sites Affecting Indian Tribes

EPA’s National Priorities List sites are some of the most contaminated places in the country. They may pose unique challenges for Indian tribes. For example, toxic substances in 2 New York rivers pose a threat to one tribe’s health and its subsistence lifestyle, which includes fishing.

EPA has a policy to consult with tribes if its efforts to deal with these sites may affect them. In some cases, consultation is a legal mandate. However, we found the databases EPA uses to track sites and tribal consultations are sometimes inaccurate.

We made 4 recommendations, including that EPA improve its data and clarify its guidance on consultations.

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Court slapps down big oil’s lawsuit against young climate activists

In a victory for environmental justice, a California appeals court on February 15 dismissed the California Independent Petroleum Associations’s lawsuit against youth organizations from South Los Angeles and Wilmington, the Center for Biological Diversity and the city of Los Angeles. Read more.

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Teenage Girls Lead Strike Demanding Climate Justice

TENS of thousands of school children, in more than 60 towns and cities across the UK, went on strike on Friday in protest at the lack of political action to address climate change.
Pupils taking part in the School Strike 4 Climate congregated at local city halls; thousands descended on Westminster, bringing the roads around Whitehall to a standstill. Holding placards bearing slogans including “Why learn facts when politicians won’t listen to them?”, the teenagers exchanged high-fives with one stranded white-van driver, while other drivers beeped their horns in support. Read more.

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Climate change could devastate Superfund cleanup

If a serious storm occurs in Butte or Anaconda the consequences could be dire for the Superfund cleanup.
Read More.

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Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Releases Green New Deal Outline

Thursday Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., and Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass., are introducing a framework defining what they call a “Green New Deal” — what they foresee as a massive policy package that would remake the U.S. economy and, they hope, eliminate all U.S. carbon emissions.
Read more.

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Backyard Talk

Confirmation Hearing for New EPA Head and Regulatory Capture

By: Daisy Clennon
This past Wednesday, the 16th of January, was Andrew Wheeler’s EPA confirmation hearing. The hearing came at a controversial moment: in the midst of the longest-ever government shutdown, and with no immediate reason to confirm the acting administrator as the official EPA head. For this reason, the hearing was criticized by Democrats for wasting time that could be better spent finding a shutdown solution. Furthermore, Wheeler had some of the EPA staff who were deemed “essential personnel” help him prepare for the hearing. Democrats and environmentalists found this frustrating, as they thought there were more “essential” tasks for the fraction of still-working EPA staffers.
Agency nominees are confirmed by the Senate, and since Republicans hold the majority, it is almost certain that Wheeler will be confirmed. Wheeler became acting head of the EPA when Scott Pruitt resigned over the summer. Pruitt was a high profile figure in the Trump Administration and was well known for his lawsuits with EPA prior to becoming its administrator. Since Wheeler is about to be confirmed, let’s take a look at his record and at his confirmation hearing.
Wheeler was Pruitt’s deputy and has been acting head of EPA since July of 2018. His first foray into the environmental world was in 1991, as a special assistant for the EPA’s toxics office. Wheeler then worked with the Senate Committee on Environment and Public works in different roles, two of which were Chief Counsel for Senator Jim Inhofe, and Chief Counsel to the Committee itself. In these roles, Wheeler worked in favor of industry deregulation. Senator Inhofe is notoriously anti-climate change and well known for bringing a snowball to the Senate floor to prove that climate change isn’t real. After working as Chief Counsel, Wheeler spent nearly a decade as a coal lobbyist. He defended some of the most prominent coal lobbying firms in the United States.
During his confirmation hearing, Wheeler stated that he would try to implement the Trump Administration’s environmental agenda and that he would stick to Pruitt’s plan for the EPA. Wheeler also refused to criticize Pruitt in any way. Fortunately, Wheeler does admit that climate change is real and that people have impacted the climate. Despite this acknowledgement, Wheeler was not prepared to make any changes to deal with climate change. He said that as Administrator, the EPA would follow the directive of Congress in terms of environmental laws, but would not go further. The vast majority of legislation surrounding environmental issues came out of the 1960s and 1970s. While climate change was on the horizon by this point (the issue was first discovered in the 1800s, confirmed by 1860, and was further researched throughout the 1900s) the vast majority of our environmental legislation does not deal with what is arguably the worst crisis humanity has ever faced.
Instead, the Trump Administration’s directive is to continue the deregulation of industries. Scientists have found that following the Trump Administration’s environmental plan is worse than doing absolutely nothing at all. This is reminiscent of the Reagan Administration’s environmental rollbacks of the 1980s. The EPA, then lead by Anne Gorsuch, dismantled many of the environmental successes of the Carter and Nixon administrations, implemented harsh budget cuts, and worsened the bureaucratic complexities of the agency.
The ties Wheeler and Pruitt have to the corporations EPA is supposed to regulate brings up the concept of regulatory capture. Regulatory capture is when a government agency works in favor of the industries it was created to regulate. In an analysis by the Environmental Data & Governance Initiative, it was determined that there was a systematic shift in the influence of corporations over the first year of the Trump administration. Wheeler has shown no initiative in deviating from this agenda.
At such a crucial time in history, it is obvious that at the very least, an EPA administrator should have no ties to the corporations that have changed the very chemistry of our planet. In order to make much needed change, in order to protect the communities that have been destroyed by toxins, in order to protect communities dealing with climate change-exacerbated natural disasters, in order to protect the water supplies that are rapidly becoming a scarcity, and in order to make the United States a leader in the greatest global crisis we have faced, we need to have an Environmental Protection Agency administrator who wants to protect the environment.

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Would Dr. King have been concerned about climate change?

The answer is resoundingly “yes.” There are clues in his writing and speeches that suggest that would he have been very concerned. A common misperception about Dr. King is that he fought for a specific group of people. Dr. King, like most great humanitarians, fought for anyone facing injustice. He likely would have been an activist for the planet once he saw who was most vulnerable. Read more.