AltWeeklies Wire

Oregon Eco-Activist Sent to Secretive New Prisonnew

The federal government has begun creating special prison units for terrorists, and eco-saboteur Daniel McGowan has been sent to the newest "communication management unit" (CMU) in Marion, Ill., possibly in retaliation for his continued environmental activism while behind bars.
Eugene Weekly  |  Camilla Mortensen  |  12-07-2008  |  Civil Liberties

Boy Killer Mitchell Johnson Speaksnew

On March 24, 1998, the 13-year-old Johnson helped murder four of his classmates and a teacher. Now, his account is public.
Arkansas Times  |  David Koon  |  12-05-2008  |  Crime & Justice

How the Facts Came to Hate Americanew

Journalism's emphasis on objectivity and balance fabricated a controversy in climate science that didn't exist. Have reporters learned anything?
Boulder Weekly  |  Dylan Otto Krider  |  12-04-2008  |  Media

Conservationists Hope Stimulus Efforts Get Directed Toward National Landsnew

The National Parks Conservation Association is trying to steer economic-stimulus efforts toward the parks, through back-to-work and service programs.
Tucson Weekly  |  Tim Vanderpool  |  12-04-2008  |  Environment

In Florida, If You Don't Own It, You Can't Save Itnew

While other states grant municipalities the right to go over the heads of private property owners in designating landmarks, Florida's law protects property owners from just that sort of thing. "Florida is a super-private property rights state," says city lawyer Karen Consalo. "We're very conservative like that."
Orlando Weekly  |  Billy Manes  |  12-04-2008  |  Housing & Development

There's Little Justice for Incarcerated Womennew

Progress is being made to try to make the criminal justice system more "gender-responsive," but the change is very slow in coming. In the meantime, girls and women locked up in the system often come back to their communities sicker, more miserable and more alienated than before.
Santa Fe Reporter  |  Silja JA Talvi  |  12-04-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Will San Francisco Be the First U.S. City to Implement Congestion Pricing?new

The city could raise $35 million to $65 million for public transit improvements annually by charging drivers $3 to cross specific downtown zones during peak travel hours, according to a San Francisco County Transportation Authority study. But the plan requires approval from both local officials as well and the state legislature.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  Sarah Phelan  |  12-04-2008  |  Transportation

Will North Carolina Resume Executions or Keep the Ban?new

Now that the legal battle over a doctor's role in death row executions is nearing a conclusion, the issue of capital punishment in North Carolina is about to land in the laps of the 2009 General Assembly and Governor-elect Bev Perdue.
INDY Week  |  Bob Geary  |  12-04-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Drug-War Violence Has the Border Under Siegenew

The current violence is beyond anything anyone has ever seen here before, an epidemic of murder and sadistic violence that's being waged with American weapons and aided by American government dollars, led by forces trained by the American military.
Fort Worth Weekly  |  Peter Gorman  |  12-04-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Vermont's Commitment to Low-Income Kids is Being Testednew

Vermont can reduce violence to children. But the way to do so won't win any sexy headlines. The state can make kids safer from abuse by making them less poor.
Seven Days  |  Judith Levine  |  12-03-2008  |  Children & Families

California Regulators Admit 'Shredder Waste' from Junked Cars is Unsafenew

In September, regulators wrote to auto recyclers saying that the state's 1988 policy on shredder-waste handling would be rescinded. This policy shift largely went unnoticed by the public, but it was momentous.
SF Weekly  |  Matt Smith  |  12-03-2008  |  Environment

Terror Unlike the Usual Terrors: A Report from Mumbainew

Mumbai, India has endured terrorist attacks for decades, but the November assault on the Taj Mahal Hotel stopped the city in its tracks.
Boston Phoenix  |  Kathryn Gearhart  |  12-03-2008  |  International

Inside San Antonio's Growing Surveillance Economynew

The NSA's new Texas Cryptology Center, a data-mining center, is one component of a growing local surveillance industry
San Antonio Current  |  Greg M. Schwartz  |  12-03-2008  |  Business & Labor

Midwest Oil Mining is a Crude Idea to Manynew

A web of pipelines has sprouted up throughout the Midwest, following the Great Lakes, moving all the way from the Dakotas to Chicago and Detroit. But it comes at a heavy cost, a price so large that one environmentalist remarked that in comparison to the nightmarish ramifications of the oil sands, offshore drilling is an "environmental yawn."
City Pages (Twin Cities)  |  Beth Walton  |  12-03-2008  |  Environment

Car Recycling is a Huge Generator of Hazardous Wastenew

Donating your old car to charity may make you feel good, but it doesn't necessarily create a net benefit for the environment.
SF Weekly  |  Matt Smith  |  12-03-2008  |  Environment

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