The EPA has approved a flurry of new mountaintop removal coal mining projects. We need your support to end this terribly destructive practice.
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Photo: Mark Schmerling
United States of Efficiency
This summer, celebrate your citizenship with the United States of Efficiency.
Energy efficiency is not just about changing light bulbs. It's about setting benchmarks to make all the products we use more efficient, and carry these bench marks into all areas of your life.
Historic Fight For Clean Energy FutureCongress is deciding whether America seizes the chance for a clean energy economy or capitulates to many more decades of fossil fuel addiction, reports Earthjustice President Trip Van Noppen. Earthjustice is in a fierce struggle to keep oil and coal interests from de-railing this historic opportunity for change.
Humpback Chub Has Friend In High PlacesIt isn't easy being a humpback chub in the Colorado River. Trout are prettier and even catfish are more cuddly. What's worse, as other fish flourish in these waters controlled by Glen Canyon dam, the 4-million year old chub is going extinct. But there's one thing the chub has that his neighbors don't—a friend in high places.
Jared Saylor As Obama stalls, Congress takes on mountaintop removal.
Brian Smith The "God Squad" threat against whales and salmon.
David Guest Court legalizes pollution of United States waters.
Suit Filed to Re-list Gray WolvesIn April, the federal government finished what the Bush administration started when it dropped Endangered Species Act protection for gray wolves in the northern Rockies. With the stroke of a pen, wolves in Montana and Idaho lost legal and habitat protections. Instead, they got state management and the promise of a fall hunt. Conservation groups represented by Earthjustice filed a lawsuit to get back protections for the wolves.
Salmon Get Notch From CourtA federal judge has told the government to consider notching four small, salmon-killing dams on the lower Snake River if other remedies fail to save salmon. Meanwhile, the Obama administration asked the judge for more time to review the legal mess they inherited from the Bush administration before having to act.
In The Win ColumnEarthjustice and its allies won advances—or outright victories—across a broad front in the last month:
Obama Grants Reprieve For Roadless AreasThe Obama administration provided a welcome break for millions of acres of forest lands by virtually freezing development and roadbuilding on them for about a year. Dept. of Agriculture Tom Vilsack announced that he will make any decisions about roadless area development in the national forests (except Idaho), including Tongass National Forest. During the Bush years, Earthjustice took numerous legal steps to keep our public lands from being turned over to developers, road builders and loggers.
EPA To Review Burning of Hazardous WasteThe U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has agreed to review a Bush-era rule that allows highly toxic emissions to be released by facilities that burn hazardous waste. There are approximately 265 facilities nationwide that burn such waste, sending poisons into playgrounds and neighborhoods across America. The rule was first challenged in 2005 by Earthjustice, representing the Sierra Club.
A Second Chance For WolverinesUnder pressure from Earthjustice legal action, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has agreed to reconsider whether wolverines in the lower-48 states should be protected by the Endangered Species Act. The agency had earlier concluded wolverines deserve protection but then precluded protecting them. The decision is due by December 2010.
Agency Sets New Rules To Protect California SalmonCalifornia's chinook salmon, steelhead—and even killer whales—are threatened by the way state and federal water projects are managed in that state's Central Valley, according to a biological opinion by the National Marine Fisheries Service. The opinion establishes a new set of operating rules for the water projects.
Protect Glacier National Park! Glacier National Park and its sister park in Canada are threatened by mining and gas drilling. You can help by alerting decision makers.
You’ve heard of
sniffer dogs, but what
about sniffer bees? It
might sound a bit
far-fetched, but Croatian
scientists have been
trying to put the amazing
senses of honeybees to a
new use: finding
potentially fatal
landmines. It’s
estimated...
The profound sadness that
stems from grief can look
a lot like the sadness
depression brings. The
similarity can create a
dilemma for mental health
professionals: When
should someone
experiencing the loss of
a loved one be diagnosed
as depressed?
Shopping at the mall is a
social experience.
According to a recent
survey of more than 3,400
adults ages 18 and up, 81
percent of Americans shop
with someone else. The
inaugural survey,
designed to understand
why people come to the
mall, was released ...
The first trailer for the
new science fiction film
"Europa Report" has
launched onto the
Internet and just might
be the most realistic
â and
harrowing
â
depiction of space travel
on the big screen in
years.
To acquire knowledge, one
must study;but to acquire
wisdom, one must
observe.- Marilyn vos
SavantThe voyage of
discovery is not in
seeking new landscapes
but in having new eyes.-
Marcel Proust Be an
Observer of Life.Gaining
wisdom from carefully
obs...