AltWeeklies Wire

Florida's Poisoned Wellnew

What was contaminating our drinking water? Who knows -- Dade County officials stopped looking.
Miami New Times  |  Isaiah Thompson  |  03-24-2008  |  Environment

Nuclear Power is Back on the Tablenew

Are you comfortable with that?
Orlando Weekly  |  Billy Manes  |  03-24-2008  |  Environment

Gray Water: The Wave of the Futurenew

For communities serious about saving precious resources, green-friendly gray water systems may be the way to go.
Pasadena Weekly  |  Jana J. Monji  |  03-24-2008  |  Environment

Tapped Out: Surviving in a World Without Waternew

Some 18 percent of the world's population wouldn't know clean water if they saw it, and roughly 2.6 billion people, says the UN, don't have access to basic toilets. Beyond that, scientists have been telling us for years that greenhouse gases are enveloping the planet, which is only getting warmer and drier.
Pasadena Weekly  |  Kevin Uhrich  |  03-24-2008  |  Environment

The Kleercut Boycott: Outcome Undeterminednew

It's hard to boycott a consumer product when you can't determine who buys it.
East Bay Express  |  Anna McCarthy  |  03-20-2008  |  Environment

UVA Faculty Call for Emissions Cutbacksnew

While the "Resolution on Climate Commitment" recently ratified last week by the Faculty Senate is ultimately only symbolic, it implores the administration to detail specific goals for reducing greenhouse gas emissions, conduct an energy audit and create a cabinet-level position to coordinate and enforce conservation.
C-Ville Weekly  |  Will Goldsmith  |  03-19-2008  |  Environment

Pads to Save or Trash Africa?new

Environmental blogger Deanna Duke, while channel-surfing five weeks ago, happened upon a commercial for Always pads. Thanks to a new $1.4-million campaign by Procter & Gamble, the ad explained, girls in African villages will receive disposable pads so they can go to school.
The Georgia Straight  |  Pieta Woolley  |  03-17-2008  |  Environment

The Clock is Ticking on Great Lakes Cleanupnew

John Austin of the Brookings Institution says that if the government spends $26 billion cleaning up the Great Lakes, the economic benefit to America will be $80 to $100 billion. Will the next president step up?
Artvoice  |  Bruce Fisher  |  03-14-2008  |  Environment

Fight Against Nukesnew

Environmentalists and nuclear activists challenge the Savannah River Site plans to take part in a controversial new "Bombplex 2030" program.
Metro Spirit  |  Murfee Faulk  |  03-12-2008  |  Environment

Eco-Terrorism? There's No Such Thing

Property rights extremists equate burning a Hummer H2 with the mass murder of 9/11. But terrorism involves killing people -- not gas guzzlers.
Maui Time  |  Ted Rall  |  03-10-2008  |  Environment

The Plastic Plaguenew

Even China has found ways to deal with the glut of plastic shopping bags. When will Chicago get it together?
Chicago Reader  |  Mick Dumke  |  03-10-2008  |  Environment

SoCal's Ports of Harmnew

With the death toll in the thousands every year, what will it take for L.A. and Long Beach to clean up their act?
Los Angeles CityBeat  |  Alan Mittelstaedt and Emma Gallegos  |  03-07-2008  |  Environment

Portland Schools Struggle to Meet Enviro Goals at Lunchnew

Even as the district has cultivated an eco-friendly image with a "green" schools push and a new farm-to-school program to provide local food for its lunches, it has served almost 33,000 meals each school day since 2001 on nonreusable plastic-foam trays.
Willamette Week  |  Shefali Kulkarni  |  03-05-2008  |  Environment

Chemicals and Quarantines in San Francisconew

City officials resist plans to use aerial spraying against a potentially damaging moth.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  Sarah Phelan  |  03-05-2008  |  Environment

Turning Science into Social Changenew

A conference in Mexico positions sea turtles as a catalyst for future environmental efforts.
Santa Barbara Independent  |  Ben Preston  |  03-03-2008  |  Environment

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