"Investigation: Parks in the Dark"
"Investigation reveals publicly funded Parks Canada staff and scientists are still not free to speak to the media".
"Investigation reveals publicly funded Parks Canada staff and scientists are still not free to speak to the media".
"Documents suggest an aggressive response to possible protests against the oil pipeline amid fears of another Standing Rock".
"The EPA’s Refrigerant Management proposed rule would rescind Obama-era regulations to control leaks and the venting of HFC refrigerants from refrigeration and air conditioning equipment. This proposal also requests public comment on rescinding other provisions that were extended to HFCs."
"The U.S. government will test and implement a new system to capture and destroy dangerous vapors released at the nation’s most polluted nuclear weapons production site as part of a settlement agreement reached Wednesday."
"Lawmakers from New York and Connecticut have joined environmental groups in ramping up efforts to block the federal government from selling a mysterious piece of land in Long Island Sound that for years has housed a government animal disease research facility."
"The administration’s push to relax Obama-era regulations threatens to reverse years of federal efforts to reduce property damage, contamination and human suffering."
"Hurricane Florence has moved on, but rivers continue to rise in the Carolinas, and their aging dams are beginning to feel the strain."
"Veteran Energy and Commerce Republicans vying to hang on, an Iowa GOP lawmaker who appeared recently with acting EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler and two Democratic challengers with clean energy business backgrounds are among the candidates in this year's top energy and environmental House races."
"Aerial photographs show widespread devastation to farms and industrial sites in eastern North Carolina, with tell-tale trails of rainbow-colored sheen indicating potential contamination visible on top of the black floodwaters."
"Detroit public schools tested drinking water on the majority of its campuses and found that samples in 57 of 86 schools had copper or lead levels in excess of legally acceptable limits."