AltWeeklies Wire

The End of Waternew

Everyone's screaming about the end of oil, but its really H2O we should be worrying about.
NOW Magazine  |  Wayne Roberts  |  09-22-2004  |  Environment

A Flood of Frances: Hurricane Stories Pack a Wallopnew

New Times writers spread out across wind-torn South Florida for Frances' three-day extravaganza, and find partiers who think the best way to face a hurricane is drunk.
New Times Broward-Palm Beach  |  Staff Writers  |  09-13-2004  |  Environment

Water Torture: Flooding and the Future of the Worldnew

One billion people, many of them among the world's poorest, live in the potential path of a 100-year flood. Due to the effects of climate change, rising sea levels and unsustainable human activities, that figure is expected to double by midcentury.
L.A. Weekly  |  Margaret Wertheim  |  09-13-2004  |  Environment

Unsanctioned Sicknessnew

With victim-compensation legislation stalled, and the science of asbestos-related disease uncertain, how does the federal government plan to "heal" Libby, Montana?
Missoula Independent  |  Mike Keefe-Feldman  |  09-09-2004  |  Environment

Methane Madnessnew

Montana Gov. Judy Martz insists that Canada assess the environmental impacts of coal bed methane drilling north of Glacier National Park. So why is she giving a pass to the same industry in her own backyard?
Missoula Independent  |  Yogesh Simpson  |  08-26-2004  |  Environment

Class-Action Lawsuits Likely in Wake of BioLab Firenew

Three months after a massive chlorine fire 25 miles east of Atlanta caused the evacuation of at least 11,000 Rockdale County residents, BioLab Inc. is just one step away from finishing its environmental cleanup. The 3,000 or so people hoping to sue the company are another matter.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Michael Wall  |  08-26-2004  |  Environment

Is B.C. Jeopardizing Glacier to Pay for the Olympics?new

British Columbia sees drilling in Elk Valley as a source of revenue. But with it comes with the possibility of impacting watersheds in Montana, including some in Glacier National Park, with increased salt or metal levels.
Missoula Independent  |  Mike Keefe-Feldman  |  08-20-2004  |  Environment

Sierra Club Election Snags on Immigration Debatenew

While Sierra Club leaders worry about a takeover by proponents of fringe causes, dissident board candidates argue that an influx of foreigners endangers biodiversity and food production in California.
Santa Barbara Independent  |  Matt Kettmann  |  08-07-2004  |  Environment

Robert McNamara's Son Pursues Passion for Social Justicenew

Raised during his father's war, California organic farmer Craig McNamara cultivates fields and minds.
Sacramento News & Review  |  Cosmo Garvin  |  08-07-2004  |  Environment

Nassau County Dumps Trash on a Public Beachnew

The county is using one of its public beaches as an illegal landfill. File cabinets, old auto parts, rusty oil drums, and home appliances are piled ten feet high behind massive walls of sand, apparently created to disguise the trash behind them.
Long Island Press  |  Christopher Twarowski  |  08-07-2004  |  Environment

Wilderness on Holdnew

Next month the Wilderness Act turns 40. Montana hasn't put it to use in two decades. Is it still relevant today?
Missoula Independent  |  Mike Keefe-Feldman  |  08-06-2004  |  Environment

Smell? What smell?new

Examining the decisions of a local air quality board in North Carolina reveals statewide problems with influence, laws and enforcement.
Mountain Xpress  |  Steve Rasmussen  |  07-23-2004  |  Environment

Owners of Abandoned Hazardous Waste Left Warning Signsnew

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency enforcer Bob Rosen was dumbfounded that a now-defunct company left 13,000 drums, most of them filled with hazardous waste, in an open-air shipping depot in southeast Atlanta. Then he spotted a stream of fluid spouting from a cracked barrel.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Michael Wall  |  07-15-2004  |  Environment

Bringing Back the Salmon: Gail Norton Claims Credit for Bushnew

Interior Secretary Gail Norton jetted into Oregon to claim credit for returning salmon and steelhead to the Deschutes River "for the first time since 1968" on Tuesday. The Pelton Round Butte Dam complex has been the biggest stumbling block to healthy anadromous salmon fisheries in the high desert rivers for the last 50 years.
The Source Weekly  |  Lacey Phillabaum  |  07-14-2004  |  Environment

Cake Out in the Rain: Tanker Leaks Liquid Uraniumnew

While the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies was convened in San AANtonio, a truckload of liquified uranium was dripping on the highway in Asheville, N.C. -- and daily shipments of uranyl nitrate are routine.
Mountain Xpress  |  Cecil Bothwell  |  07-09-2004  |  Environment

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