Monday, March 20, 2017

News Clippings 3/20/17

State

Will the port finally use its controversial North Gulfport land?
Sun Herald

GULFPORT 
The state port will host a public workshop Tuesday night about potential uses for 140 acres it owns in North Gulfport, where residents have opposed previous development plans.
http://www.sunherald.com/news/business/article139286083.html

City awaits decision on grant allowing Kuhn’s demolition
Vicksburg Post

The future of Kuhn Memorial Hospital could lie with the Environmental Protection Agency.
The city of Vicksburg has applied for two Brownfields cleanup grants totaling $400,000 to help pay part of the estimated $850,000 cost of razing and removing the three buildings and removing a diesel tank containing 4,000 gallons of fuel.
http://www.vicksburgpost.com/2017/03/18/city-awaits-decision-on-grant-allowing-kuhns-demolition/

Late U.S. Rep Nunnelee to be honored with DEQ building name
NewsMS

The Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality building in downtown Jackson will soon receive a new title: the Patrick Alan Nunnelee Building.
http://newsms.fm/late-u-s-rep-nunnelee-to-be-honored-with-deq-building-name/

Mississippi government building to be named for Nunnelee
AP

JACKSON, MISS. 
A state office building could soon be named for a Mississippi congressman who died in 2015.
http://www.sunherald.com/news/state/mississippi/article139495558.html


Recycling about to get easier in Harrison County
Sun Herald

Keep America Beautiful and The Coca-Cola Co. will give 70 recycling bins to the Harrison County Beautification Commission.
http://www.sunherald.com/news/local/counties/harrison-county/article139510973.html

County to hold cleanup day next weekend
Picayune Item

“Make it shine like a pearl” will be the theme in Pearl River County next weekend as members of the Board of Supervisors hold the first county cleanup day of the year.
http://www.picayuneitem.com/2017/03/county-to-hold-cleanup-day-next-weekend/

New program teaches students about marine life
WLOX

A new program sponsored by the Institute of Marine Mammal Studies in Gulfport kicked off Sunday.
http://www.wlox.com/story/34950053/new-program-grants-gulfport-students-opportunity-to-learn-about-marine-life

Oil Spill

BP oil spill money not flowing in Escambia and Santa Rosa area
PNJ

Nearly seven years after the massive 2010 BP oil spill fouled beaches from Perdido Key through Navarre, Pensacola-area leaders say the region is just beginning to benefit from billions of dollars scheduled to arrive as part of legal settlements and penalties paid by the British oil giant and other companies involved in the nation's biggest environmental disaster.

http://www.pnj.com/story/news/2017/03/18/bp-oil-spill-pensacola-beach-settlement-money/98824270/


BP claims delayed by moratorium damage demands can go to court
Times-Picayune

Companies and individuals with unpaid claims of suffering millions of dollars in economic damages as a result of both the BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill and a six-month federal moratorium on drilling operations in the Gulf of Mexico following the accident will be allowed to go to court to recover their losses, U.S. District Judge Carl Barbier ruled Friday (March 17.)

http://www.nola.com/environment/index.ssf/2017/03/bp_claims_delayed_by_moratoriu.html#incart_river_index

Regional

'This has devastated my life': Pollution in soil may have sickened store owner
Commercial Appeal

During the dozen or so years she operated an arts-supply store near the University of Memphis, Sharri Schmidt made sure all the varnishes, thinners and sprays she sold were as non-toxic and safe as possible.
http://www.commercialappeal.com/story/news/environment/2017/03/20/has-devastated-my-life-pollution-soil-may-have-sickened-store-owner/99247078/

One Alabama sample tests positive for avian influenza
Gadsden Times

At least one sample suspected of avian influenza in an Alabama county has tested positive for the less severe strain, according to the Alabama Department of Agriculture.
http://www.gadsdentimes.com/news/20170319/one-alabama-sample-tests-positive-for-avian-influenza


National

Feds provide $100M for Flint water improvements
The Hill

The federal government has approved a $100 million in emergency funding for Flint, Mich., as part of recovery efforts following the city’s drinking water crisis. 
http://thehill.com/policy/energy-environment/324533-feds-provide-100m-for-flint-water-improvements

People are sending EPA employees chocolate chip cookies and thank you cards
Washington Post

The cookies showed up Monday morning, hundreds of them packed tightly in cardboard boxes, and made their way to offices throughout the Environmental Protection Agency’s headquarters in downtown Washington.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/energy-environment/wp/2017/03/17/people-are-sending-epa-employees-chocolate-chip-cookies-and-thank-you-cards/?utm_term=.9942fd2dee2a

These Breakthroughs Could Save Our Oceans From Harmful Oil Spills
NBC

On April 20, 2010, an explosion on the Deepwater Horizon caused the oil rig to sink down into the Gulf of Mexico, leaking more than 3 million barrels of crude oil over four months. The spill off the coast of Mississippi was the largest in United States history, and seven years later, the National Resource Damage Assessment (NRDA) is still determining the extent of its contamination.
http://www.nbcnews.com/mach/environment/these-new-devices-could-stop-oil-spills-their-tracks-n734536

Mexican sewage routinely fouling San Diego beaches, ocean waters
Fox News

During the 17 days that 140 million gallons of raw sewage poured from Mexico into the Tijuana River and then into the ocean fronting several popular South San Diego communities, no Mexican official disclosed the potential health and environmental hazards.
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2017/03/17/mexican-sewage-routinely-fouling-san-diego-beaches-ocean-waters.html

Former EPA admin confirmed as DNREC secretary
Shawn Garvin to lead environmental agency
Cape Gazette

Delaware legislators have confirmed former Environmental Protection Agency administrator Shawn Garvin as the new head of the Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control.

http://www.capegazette.com/article/former-epa-admin-confirmed-dnrec-secretary/128861


New regs for Monday: Trump delays environmental, labor rules
The Hill

Climate: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is further delaying five Obama-era regulations to comply with Trump’s regulatory moratorium.

Water: The EPA is also considering new benchmarks that would limit the amount of lead in drinking water.
http://thehill.com/regulation/324455-new-regs-for-monday-trump-delays-environmental-labor-rules

Opinion

Fuel diversification is real lignite plant issue for PSC
Bill Crawford

What will natural gas prices look like over the next 40 years?

http://www.sunherald.com/opinion/other-voices/article139272873.html

Op-Ed -According to Scott Pruitt, states only have the right to pollute, not protect their environments
LA Times
Richard Revesz

Throughout his confirmation hearing and in a recent interviewEPA Administrator Scott Pruitt wrapped himself in the mantle of federalism, calling the shared distribution of power between the federal government and states a “bedrock principle” of environmental laws. Pruitt accused the Obama administration of intruding on the autonomy that environmental laws give to the states and vowed to set this balance right.
http://www.latimes.com/opinion/op-ed/la-oe-revesz-pruitt-epa-federalism-20170320-story.html

Press Releases

DOI Announces $3.74 Million to 12 States for Species Recovery
Nine Projects Receiving Funding from Cooperative Recovery Initiative on 12 Refuges
3/17/2017
WASHINGTON - The Department of the Interior today announced that through the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s (FWS)  Cooperative Recovery Initiative (CRI) more than $3.74 million is being committed to nine projects across 12 states to help recover some of the nation’s most at-risk species on or near national wildlife refuges.
“We are targeting our work where it will do the most good for America’s resources,” said FWS Acting Director Jim Kurth. “This initiative is a unique way to engage in conservation work with states and partners, giving the taxpayer a good return on investment.”
Species to benefit from CRI funding include the Miami blue butterfly, ocelots, Puritan tiger beetles, masked bobwhite and spectacled eiders.
Since 2013, FWS has funded 66 projects for nearly $27 million through the CRI. Other species that have benefited include the Oregon chub, the first fish in the nation to be taken off the endangered species list; Sonoran pronghorn; dusky gopher frog; and red-cockaded woodpecker. These projects often provide conservation benefits to other imperiled species and encourage partnerships with states and private groups.
Project Details:
Pacific Region
  • Protect Two Endangered Hawaiian Waterbirds and Core Wetland Habitats at Kealia Pond National Wildlife Refuge 
A project team will establish long-lasting protections for two endangered birds, the Hawaiian coot and Hawaiian stilt, against predators and ungulates and create new habitat, resulting in a large-scale restoration of Kealia Pond National Wildlife Refuge, a critically important wetland habitat in Hawaii.
  • Enhance the Conservation Status of Spalding’s Catchfly
A project team will establish five additional viable subpopulations of 500 individual threatened Spalding’s catchfly on protected habitat at Turnbull National Wildlife Refuge in Washington and three other partner and privately-owned locations within the Channeled Scablands and Palouse Prairie regions in Washington and Idaho.
Southwest Region
  • Protect Endangered Species Corridors in the Rio Grande Valley
Staff at Laguna Atascosa National Wildlife Refuge in Texas will work with partners to acquire a 400-acre conservation easement to expand habitat between the refuge and Lower Rio Grande Valley National Wildlife Refuge for the endangered ocelot. The increased habitat will also aid the endangered northern aplomado falcon.
  • Establish Second Captive Breeding Population of Masked Bobwhite Quail in North America
A project team will expand the endangered masked bobwhite population by creating a captive population in a rearing facility at the Buenos Aires National Wildlife Refuge in Oklahoma  and establish a second captive population and biosecurity program at Sutton Avian Research Center.
Southeast Region
  • Protect and Enhance Watercress Darter Habitat at Watercress Darter National Wildlife Refuge
A project team will maintain the current pool habitats on Watercress Darter National Wildlife Refuge in Alabama for the endangered watercress darter to improve migration and genetic diversity, promote additional aquatic habitats on the refuge, and monitor restored and developed habitats. They will also remove a failing water control structure, promote connectivity for fish passage between pools and enhance habitats downstream or adjacent to the pools.
  • Habitat Restoration through Prescribed Fire at Lake Wales Ridge National Wildlife Refuge for 11 Listed Plant Species and the Florida Scrub Jay
A project team will restore fire-suppressed scrub and sandhill habitat to enhance populations of 11 listed plant species and the endangered Florida scrub jay at Lake Wales Ridge National Wildlife Refuge in Florida. In particular, the staff will augment the only protected population of endangered Garrett’s mint through seed collection and strategic dispersal, which will significantly increase the population.
  • Restore Populations of the Critically Endangered Miami Blue Butterfly
A project team will establish new viable populations of the endangered Miami blue butterfly over a much larger geographic range in south Florida, including on National Key Deer Refuge, Great Heron National Wildlife Refuge and local state parks.
Northeast Region
  • Puritan Tiger Beetle Habitat Enhancement and Population Stabilization in the Connecticut River Watershed
Two new viable subpopulations of the threatened Puritan tiger beetle will be established by a project team from Silvio O. Conte National Fish and Wildlife Refuge on state-owned lands in New Hampshire and Vermont, within the Connecticut River watershed. The project will optimize a captive rearing protocol, enabling the beetle to be reared in the lab and translocated to protected habitat sites.
Alaska Region
  • Estimate Global Abundance and Evaluate Changes in At-Sea Distribution of Threatened Spectacled Eiders.
A project team will estimate the global population of threatened spectacled eiders as well as evaluate changes in distribution at marine molting, staging and wintering areas, including in Yukon Delta National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska. The team will also evaluate changes in non-breeding distribution of adult females captured on the refuge breeding area.
For more information on the 2017 projects and those in previous years, please visit: https://www.fws.gov/refuges/whm/cri/.