This Chemical Kills. Why Aren’t Regulators Banning It?

by Susan Sargent | July 8, 2019
From: New York Times “Last month’s spectacular explosions at a large Philadelphia oil refinery complex injured five workers, terrorized city residents and drove up gasoline prices. But the impact could have been vastly worse had the explosions triggered a release from the refinery ...

The Costs of #InstaTravel

From: Dope Magazine “PEER advocates for parks engaging in more comprehensive planning to ensure they have needed protections in place while setting aside more area to conserve wildlife and meet the rising demand for outdoor recreation and natural solitude. Ordinary travelers can help ...

EPA prosecutions haven fallen sharply, especially in New England, advocacy group says

From: The Boston Globe “Jeff Ruch, a director at the Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility, said the group based its analysis on EPA statistics. “Our point is that criminal enforcement activity is declining at EPA during this administration as measured by available ...

Lawmakers talk legislation in response to FOIA changes

From: The Hill “It would definitely be an amendment to FOIA, those aren’t that uncommon,” Kevin Bell, staff counsel for the Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility, on what shape a bill would have to take. “With an amendment there’s a lot of ground to cover. I think ...

Does size matter with lead in D.C. playground rubber? 7 On Your Side has the answer.

From: WJLA “Kevin Bell with Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility observed some of those samples gathered. He points out many larger tire shreds come from potentially more hazardous industrial tires. “These big tractor tires would have lead added to them specifically so ...
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