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PROTECT WILDLIFE IN PIERCE COUNTY
"Directions for Protecting and Restoring Habitat" is a proposal before
the Pierce County planning commission. The group 1000 Friends of
Washington is calling on people to help make sure this package is not
weakened. To get involved: justine@1000friends.org or 206-343-0681.
LEARN TO LIVE WITH WASHINGTON'S 48 TOXIC WASTE DUMPSITES?
Washington State has 48 toxic-waste dumpsites dangerous enough to
qualify for the federal Superfund priority list, yet the Bush
administration is slowing down the cleanups, says the public interest
group WashPIRG. The group also reports that due to increased pollution
in rivers and reservoirs that provide the state's drinking water,
utilities are using more chlorine, "leaving dangerous chemical
byproducts in the water that may cause cancer, birth defects or cause
pregnant women to miscarry." WashPIRG is urging the Department of
Ecology to finish a review of the state's waters (which has been
delayed by corporate interests) and to make the polluters clean up
their wastes.
YUCCA MT. NUKE WASTE DUMP A 250,000-YEAR MISTAKE
US government plans to make Yucca mountain in Nevada the repository
for all US nuclear waste is a dangerous idea, says Physicians for
Social Responsibility, www.psr.org.
Problems include transportation of
nuclear waste through thousands of communities to reach the Nevada
site, possible highway accidents or terror attacks and a major
geological fault running through the site that has produced more than
600 seismic events since 1978, says PSR. The group asks what the
impact would be of 77,000 tons of nuclear waste concentrated in one
site on ground water that is used as far away as southern California.
Also, why did the Environmental "Protection" Agency exempt the site
from safe drinking water rules? And when will the US start reducing
its production of nuclear waste?
REMOVE FOREST ROADS TO RESTORE ECOSYSTEMS
Habitat for predators can be destroyed by as few as "one mile of road
per square mile of habitat" says The Home Range, published by Predator
Conservation Alliance,
www.predatorconservation.org.
Grizzly bear and
wolf mortality rise in proportion to the number of roads in the
"wilderness." The magazine says decommissioning forest roads confers
multiple benefits including jobs and stream restoration. "Roads cause
most of the erosion and stream siltation associated with logging.
Removing them almost completely stops the erosion and allows damaged
streams to heal.
VAST RUSSIAN FORESTS PROTECTED
In a historic conservation measure, forestland in the Russian Far
East totaling 1.7 million acres was recently designated as protected.
Approximately the size of the state of Ohio, the areas are now
off-limits to all major industrial activity, with some of the land
designated as "areas of traditional use" for the indigenous Evenk
peoples. The area, including the Amur forests, hosts some of the most
pristine forests and watersheds in the world. The designation comes at
the same time that timber and mining industries are rapaciously
extracting resources in the area. Said a spokesman for the group
Pacific Environment, "While in America we're fighting to protect small
swaths...across the Pacific there are still huge areas that have escaped
development. And people who live in those areas who are working hard
to preserve them." Pacific Environment works to protect the Pacific
Rim by supporting over 100 grassroots organizations in Russia, China
and Japan. www.pacificenvironment.org
LEAKING UNDERGROUND FUEL TANKS
(ENS)-More than 76,000 leaking underground storage tanks across the
country are polluting the nation's groundwater because they are
leaking hazardous substances. In fiscal year 2000, more than 14,500
leaks or releases from regulated tanks were reported. A Senate
committee recently heard of a school in Indiana where children had
been using and drinking water with 10 times the EPA's recommended safe
limit of the gasoline additive methyl tertiary butyl ether (MTBE). An
oxygenate added to fuel for reducing emissions and raising octane,
MTBE poses health risks including damage to kidneys and livers and can
cause cancer.
POLLUTER PAY LAW THREATENED
(ENS) - A bipartisan group of senators is cosponsoring a bill to
ensure that polluters will continue to pay for cleanup of the nation's
most toxic waste sites, known as Superfund sites. The Bush
administration announced earlier this year that it would not request a
reauthorization of Superfund fees on oil and chemical companies. This
fee, established in 1980, provides revenue to the Superfund Trust
Fund, which ensured that polluters paid the bulk of Superfund
cleanups. "One in every four Americans lives within four miles of a
Superfund site, putting these individuals at a higher risk of cancer
and other diseases," said Sen. Barbara Boxer. "Sadly, the Bush
administration has turned its back on the people of this country and
weakened the Superfund program by abandoning polluter pays."
ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS ENDANGERS WILDLIFE
The National Wildlife Federation says that among the Army Corps of
Engineers' most destructive projects are the dams on the Lower Snake
River in Idaho and Washington, which threaten salmon. Funded by tax
dollars, since 1779 the Corps has constructed 8500 miles of levees and
seawalls, more than 500 dams and 11,000 miles of inland waterway
navigation channels. With its 37,000 members, it is now involved in
$52 billion worth of projects, many of which "threaten to destroy
vital wildlife habitat." The NWF says Corps projects are often
destructive because they "alter...America's environmentally sensitive
landscapes. They develop on top of wetlands, alter the flow of rivers,
dredge rivers with channels and construct dams." Go to
www.nwf.org for
more information.
TINY POLLUTION PARTICLES LINKED TO LUNG CANCER
(ENS)-Long term exposure to soot-filled air carries nearly the same
risk of lung cancer as breathing second hand smoke, a new nationwide
study suggests. Researchers in the US and Canada finds that breathing
air containing high concentrations of tiny soot and dust particles
significantly boost the risk of dying from lung cancer and heart
disease. For more information go to
ens-news.com/ens/mar2002/2002L-03-06-07.html
AN END TO MERCURY THERMOMETERS?
(ENS)-A Senate committee has approved a bill that would phase out
mercury thermometers and improve management of surplus mercury. S351
"reduces toxic health hazards in American's homes, particularly to the
most vulnerable populations of pregnant women and young children,"
said Sen. Jim Jeffords. The measure would ban the sale of mercury
thermometers except by prescription and directs the EPA to establish a
national mercury thermometer collection and exchange program, and
dispose of all mercury collected under hazardous waste regulations. "A
mercury thermometer contains about a gram of mercury, which when
airborne is enough to contaminate a 20-acre lake for a year," said a
spokesperson for the Mercury Policy Project, based in Montpelier,
Vermont.
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