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Geos Institute helps communities build resilience in the face of climate change
By David Petersen
GJSentinel.com
By Paul Fattig
Medford Mail Tribune

Salmon, water, old-growth forests and climate win!

WASHINGTON, DC

The Obama administration announced today its decision to cancel a Bush era plan that would have harmed salmon, clean water and old-growth forests on 2.6 million acres of public lands in western Oregon.

By Noelle Straub and Eric Bontrager
eenews.net

Four showcase events: “Shifting Patterns: Preparing for Unsettled Days”

Ashland, Oregon

Jefferson Nature Center is coordinating “Shifting Patterns: Preparing for Unsettled Days,” a climate change arts project that connects sixteen local artists with scientists at the GEOS Institute. “Shifting Patterns” artistic participants include writers, visual artists and performance artists.

WaterWired

It is impossible to ignore the concerns expressed recently by a coalition of scientists about a proposed plan to pipe precious water from aquifers along the Utah-Nevada border to Las Vegas. Read more…

By Charles Pope and Matthew Preusch
OregonLive.com
By Paul Fattig
Medford Mail Tribune

Bush Rule Exempting Pesticide Application From Clean Water Act Protections Vacated

Cincinnati, Ohio

Contact:

  • Charlie Tebbutt, Western Environmental Law Center, 541-485-2471 ext 110
  • Charles Caldart, National Environmental Law Center, 206-568-2853
  • Cindy Deacon Williams, National Center for Conservation Science & Policy, 541-601-4737
  • Sejal Choksi, San Francisco Baykeeper, 925-330-7757
  • Scott Edwards, Waterkeeper Alliance 914.674.0622, x13

In yet another of a long list of stinging defeats for the Bush’s Environmental Protection Agency, the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals today issued a clear rebuke against the  administration’s 2006 rule which exempted certain commercial pesticide applications from the oversight provided by Congress under the Clean Water Act.  The Court held that pesticide residuals and biological pesticides constitute pollutants under federal law and therefore must be regulated under the Clean Water Act in order to minimize the impact to human health and the environment.

By Paul Fattig
Medford Mail Tribune

With the region caught in the icy grip of a winter storm that brought a dusting of snow to Medford, the last thing on most residents’ minds is global warming.  Read more…

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