/manage/frontpage/in_the_news/inspector.html
In The News /
Dec 29
-
The discovery of PCBs and other contaminants at Greenwich High School two years ago is only part of a mosaic of cancer-causing toxics that have cropped up at various sites around one of the nation's wealthiest, most exclusive communities.
Stamford Advocate, Connecticut
-
In the 1920s, a young working-class woman could land a job working with radium wristwatches.
They became known as the radium girls.
All Things Considered, NPR
-
Many animals are fleeing their homes and risking their lives to search for food sources that have been diminished by California's prolonged drought.
Los Angeles Times
-
Texas says it shouldn't be forced to make deeper emissions cuts than Kentucky and West Virginia. The reason: It's already moving toward more climate-friendly electricity through the use of natural gas and wind, while the other two states remain devoted to coal.
Houston Chronicle, Texas
-
Oil and gas wells have been drilled piecemeal around the iconic red rock vistas of Moab, Utah for decades. But today's wells represent a kind of backcountry industrialization that this area hasn't dealt with before.
Denver Post, Colorado
-
Ukraine shut down one of the six reactors in its most powerful nuclear power plant yesterday - for the second time in a month - because of an apparent electrical malfunction.
The Independent, United Kingdom
-
Severe flooding in Malaysia and Thailand has killed at least 24 people and forced the evacuation of more than 200,000, according to official data reported Sunday.
Al Jazeera America
-
West Africa's fight to contain Ebola has hampered the campaign against malaria, a preventable and treatable disease that is claiming many thousands more lives than the dreaded virus.
Associated Press
-
The pictures of medical dysfunction were devastating: broken hospitals in Africa struggling, and largely failing, to contain the Ebola epidemic. As deaths mounted, the problems seemed intractable: no money, no infrastructure, no hope. But Haiti now has two new clinics designed to tackle diseases that can be as insidious and deadly.
New York Times
-
One Wisconsin county is setting aside about $1.3 million for new technology officials say could turn lake-fouling dairy cow manure into crystal clear water.
Wisconsin State Journal, Wisconsin
-
Three days before Los Angeles lawmakers voted on a proposal to ban genetically modified crops, the world's largest biotechnology trade group hired three top City Hall lobbyists to stop it.
Los Angeles Times
-
For about two years, Steve and Patricia Borushko had a slice of the American Dream. But since their well stopped in 2005, they have had water problems — no water, contaminated water, orange water. They blamed Eighty-Four Mining Co., which owned adjacent property.
Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, Pennsylvania
-
For two years we travelled the country to find off-gridders, and studied their ways of life. (Part of series).
Vancouver Tyee, British Columbia
|
/manage/frontpage/top_stories/inspector.html
|
By Deborah Sontag, Brent Mcdonald
New York Times
29 December 2014
If critics of North Dakota's elected officials viewed them as too close to the oil industry, critics on one Indian Reservation had more pointed concerns. Their leader was part of the industry, seeking and getting contracts from oil companies that operated under his watch.
On the Fort Berthold Indian Reservation, where identity is deeply connected to the land, conservationists have been more vocal than elsewhere in North Dakota, and they have denounced their leadership's oversight of the oil industry for mirroring the state's pro-business posture.
more…
|
By Larry Pynn
Vancouver Sun
29 December 2014
Two farmland owners in the Fraser Valley have conducted wide-ranging remediation work — and a third is under a provincial order to do so — following a lengthy Vancouver Sun investigation into the environmental impact of farming on fish streams.
The Sun series, published in June, probed several cases in which farmers had altered important fish habitat, and it also exposed the B.C. government's lax laws on farm manure runoff into fish streams compared with neighboring Washington state.
more…
|
/manage/frontpage/syndicated/inspector.html
By Lindsey Konkel
Environmental Health News
11 December 2014
Medical researchers are now uncovering clues that appear to link some cases of ALS or Lou Gehrig's Disease to people’s proximity to lakes and coastal waters. Researchers have identified several ALS hot spots in lake and coastal communities in New England, and they suspect that toxic blooms of blue-green algae may play a role.
more…
By Marianne Lavelle
Daily Climate
1 December 2014
The U.N. global climate talks are no longer just about emissions limits and trends. The annual negotiations, opening today in Peru, have also become the most visible effort to address social justice and human rights.
more…
By Marianne Lavelle
Daily Climate
1 December 2014
As human rights gain prominence at the UN climate talks, clean energy and forest protection projects lose their shine amid allegations of inequity.
more…
By Brian Bienkowski
Environmental Health News
24 November 2014
One of the most widely prescribed drugs in the United States may have an extra benefit: protecting people from air pollution.
Statins, prescribed to lower cholesterol and reduce risks of heart attacks and strokes, seem to diminish inflammation that occurs after people breathe airborne particles.
more…
|
Topics
From today's news and archives
Want more? search here
|
/manage/frontpage/editorials/inspector.html
Editorials
-
By
New York Times
Responding to a damning report this year by Human Rights Watch, some cigarette companies and growers have said they will voluntarily restrict child labor in tobacco fields. Though welcome, these steps should be reinforced by new federal rules.
more…
-
By
Charleston Post and Courier
The City of Charleston in October distributed an e-letter touting Carnival Cruise Lines' new energy-saving initiatives that have reduced air emissions. It was enough to make you want to breathe a sigh of relief.
But then this month the Friends of the Earth sent out its annual environmental report cards for cruise ship operations. Carnival scored a D.
more…
|
/manage/frontpage/opinions/inspector.html
Opinions
-
By Bill Berry
Madison Capital Times
Here’s a short and not-so-sweet list of science news that should have made a big impact but didn’t. You’ll notice a common theme here.
more…
-
By Rhea Suh
Los Angeles Times
Oil is not cheap, at any price. What we're charged at the pump for gasoline is just a down payment on the far larger tab we're running to support our national oil habit. Rather than allow a temporary price reprieve to mask those costs, we should use this moment to take stock and change course.
more…
|
|
|
|
/manage/frontpage/media_review/inspector.html
Media Notes
Notable media news and reviews
-
You’d think the filing of a class action lawsuit last month by the families of the 78 coal miners killed in the 1968 Farmington, West Virginia, mine explosion would serve as a painful reminder that coal isn’t clean. But familiar headlines about “clean coal” endeavors continue to roll off the newswires. Jeff Biggers, Al Jazeera. more…
|
-
Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism announced 14 winners of the Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Awards. Award winners included The Seattle Times' large multimedia project on ocean acidification and the documentary Virunga, which examined environmental issues in the forested depths of eastern Congo. Columbia Journalism School. more…
|
|
/manage/frontpage/in_the_news_contd/inspector.html
In The News: Sunday's compilation underway (CONTINUED) /
Dec 29
Many more stories today, including:
- Trial run of Union Carbide's toxic waste disposal in India
- Climate: US senator gives 83 climate change speeches; Transportation tops Inhofe's priorities for 2015; Crowdfunded "ice stupas"
- Stories from: UK, India, Pakistan, Australia, Trinidad, Canada
- US stories from: PA, WV, FL
- Opinions: Radioactive waste puts North Dakota at risk; Religion and green energy connect
|