Tuesday, October 31, 2017

News Clippings October 31, 2017



State

Jackson County will aid cities with Nate debris removal
WLOX

JACKSON COUNTY, MS (WLOX) -Streets in all four Jackson County cities are still littered with debris from Hurricane Nate more than three weeks after the storm. But, help is now on the way. County supervisors voted Monday to lead the charge when it comes to getting rid of the ugly piles of junk. That news is being met with relief by residents.

Led by first lady Bynum, recycling effort revs up for greener campus, cleaner communities
JSU

Although “blue and white” traditionally blankets the university, first lady Deborah Bynum and other leaders are urging everyone to also embrace “green” and join a recycling effort that, ultimately, will expand to all JSU campuses.

OYSTER SEASON BEGINS NOVEMBER 6TH
WXXV

Oyster season in the western portion of the Mississippi Sound will begin Monday, November 6th at legal sunrise.

Oil Spill

Leave your gun at home if you’re going to the Coast Coliseum — even if you have a permit
Sun Herald
BILOXI 

Those who attend concerts or events at the Mississippi Coast Coliseum and Convention Center will need to leave their weapons at home.

BP earnings rise amid cost cuts, output increase
AP

BP's third quarter net earnings rose 9.2 percent as the energy company cut costs and increased production to adjust to lower oil prices.

Regional

DEQ orders Chemours to capture more wastewater containing GenX
WECT

RALEIGH, NC (WECT) -Citing findings in an Environmental Protection Agency report, the NC Department of Environmental Quality has ordered the Chemours Company to capture additional industrial wastewater at its Fayetteville Works site instead of releasing it into the Cape Fear River.

National

Carbon dioxide levels grow at record pace: meteorologists
The Hill

The concentration of carbon dioxide in the Earth’s atmosphere surged last year at the highest pace in hundreds of thousands of years, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said Monday.

In unprecedented move, EPA to block scientists who get agency funding from serving as advisers
Washington Post

Scott Pruitt, the head of the Environmental Protection Agency, is poised to make wholesale changes to the agency’s key advisory group by jettisoning scientists who have received grants from the EPA and replacing them with industry experts and state government officials.


EPA cleanup of Pillsbury site nearly complete; lawsuits pending
State Journal-Register (IL)

The nine-month, $1.8 million cleanup at the former Pillsbury plant in Springfield -- including tons of asbestos-contaminated debris -- should be completed this week with removal of barrels containing waste oil and other chemicals.

Advocacy groups: EPA not doing enough to protect Lake Erie
AP

Environmental advocates who sued the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency because they believe not enough is being done to address the toxic algae problem in Lake Erie said they think the agency's response to the suit only bolsters their argument.

71 Michigan water systems now have higher lead levels than Flint
MLive

FLINT, MI -- Seventy-one water systems in Michigan now have higher lead levels than the city of Flint, results of the most recent federally-required testing shows.

Labor Department to appeal ruling against overtime expansion
The Hill

The Department of Labor is appealing a Texas judge’s decision to toss out an Obama-era rule that would have extended overtime pay to some 4 millions Americans.

Press Releases

EPA Announces Selections for 2017 Environmental Justice Small Grants
10/30/2017
Contact Information: 
EPA Press Office (press@epa.gov)

WASHINGTON (October 30, 2017) - Today, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced nearly $1.2 million in competitive grants selected for award to 36 local-based community and tribal organizations working to address environmental justice (EJ) issues in their communities. The grants enable these organizations to conduct research, provide education, and develop community-driven solutions to local health and environmental issues in minority, low-income, and tribal communities.
EPA's Environmental Justice Small Grants (EJSG) provide critical support to organizations that otherwise lack the funding and resources to address environmental challenges in their community. The 2017 grants will help organizations in 30 states and Puerto Rico to carry out projects that will: educate residents about environmental issues that may impact their health; collect data about local environmental conditions; and work collaboratively to address environmental justice challenges in their communities.
The grants not only support activities that address a range of community concerns, but also activities that educate and empower youth and the next generation of leaders in STEM-related job sectors and environmental stewardship. Specific grant projects will focus on: reducing exposure to lead and other water pollutants; developing green infrastructure and sustainable agriculture projects; implementing basic energy efficiency measures in low-income households; and increasing overall community resiliency.
In an effort to increase outreach to affected communities in U.S.states and territories, the 2017 EJSG program placed special emphasis on proposals from under-represented states that have been awarded three or fewer EJSGs over the last five years. Of the 36 total projects selected, 23 are from underrepresented states (64%). The agency will make final awards upon successful completion of the award application process.
For 2017 Environmental Justice Small Grant recipients and project descriptions: https://www.epa.gov/environmentaljustice/environmental-justice-small-grants-program-project-descriptions-2017
For more information on the Environmental Justice Small Grants Program, including descriptions of previously funded grants: https://www.epa.gov/environmentaljustice/environmental-justice-small-grants-program



Mississippi oyster season to begin Nov. 6
 
BILOXI, Miss. – Oyster season in the western portion of the Mississippi Sound will begin Monday, Nov. 6, at legal sunrise, officials with the state Department of Marine Resources announced Monday.
The Commission on Marine Resources originally set the start date on Monday, Nov. 13. However, oyster seasons in Louisiana and Texas are scheduled to begin that day, and MDMR officials believe that by opening earlier, local fishermen will make more money per sack.
At the September meeting, commissioners approved a 30 percent quota limit for these reefs in order to help rebuild them, which remains in effect. The daily limit for tonging is 15 sacks, and the limit for dredging is 20 sacks.
For more information, call the MDMR Oyster Hotline at 228-374-5167 or 1-800-385-5902

Monday, October 30, 2017

News Clippings October 30, 2017



State

Forrest County hosts non-hazardous waste clean up day
WDAM

FORREST COUNTY, MS (WDAM) -Forrest County residents had the chance Saturday to get rid of some old, non-hazardous household waste, free of charge.  
The county partnered with the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality to host a county-wide Clean-Up Day at eight locations. 

Supes get update on Health Dept. sewage issues
Daily Times Leader

WEST POINT, MS
Clay County Sheriff Eddie Scott gave the Clay County Board of Supervisors an update on repairs to an ongoing sewage issue at the Clay County Health Department on Division Street.

ERDC researchers developing new water treatment system
Vicksburg Post

Researchers at the U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center are working to change the world.

Gardens, field hollers, military, climate change: Campus briefs
Clarion Ledger

Global climate change's impact on business focus of forum
Millsaps College is the forum for a one-day gathering focusing on climate change and how it impacts the way international business is managed in Mississippi.
Rain garden garners national recognition
Landscape architecture and graphic design students at Mississippi State University worked side by side to build a sustainable water management demonstration garden.

Maritime Heritage Hall of Fame inductees honored
WLOX

BILOXI, MS (WLOX) -Hundreds gathered at the Maritime & Seafood Industry Museum in Biloxi to honor the best in the seafood industry. 

State Government

Lottery committee plans final meeting
Daily Journal

JACKSON – What is expected to be the final meeting of House Speaker Philip Gunn’s lottery study committee is scheduled for Nov. 16 at the Mississippi Capitol.

Oil Spill

Hayward walks back 'toxic' Bruce Beach claim on downtown Pensacola hatchery project
PNJ

In his first comments to the News Journal on the merits of continuing to support the yet-to-be-constructed $18.8 million Gulf Coast Marine Fisheries Hatchery & Enhancement Center at Bruce Beach, Pensacola Mayor Ashton Hayward conceded on Friday his administration has yet to confirm any environmental pollution exists at the site.

Regional

How a 672,000-Gallon Oil Spill Was Nearly Invisible
NY Times

Mention oil spills, and images of birds coated in black slime and a shiny slick on the ocean’s surface come to mind.

State regulators to review Frayser landfill expansion
Commercial Appeal

From the edge of a gaping waste site in Frayser, Gene Bryan points to heaps of construction and demolition debris, yard waste, dirt and other rubbish and then proceeds to recite how it all got there.

Arkansas cities propose rules to regulate 'pollution credit' trade between between companies
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

A group of four Northwest Arkansas cities has proposed the first regulation for the state's nutrient trading program -- a mechanism for groups to reduce water pollution through the trading of pollution credits.

National

New EPA Settlements Policy Has Lawyers Bracing for Long Disputes
Scott Pruitt adds requirement of industry and state participation in negotiations, avoid agency payment of legal fees
WSJ

Lawyers are digging in for longer and more expensive fights with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

Pruitt: Obama regulations were 'war' on business
The Hill

Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) chief Scott Pruitt says former President Obama declared "war" on coal and other industries with his administration's environmental regulations and by signing off on the Paris Climate Accord.

Court halts EPA rule regulating big trucks’ trailers
The Hill

A federal appeals court Friday halted implementation of a portion of an Obama administration regulation that set emissions-reduction standards for trucks’ trailers.

Five oversight issues EPA says may have fueled the Flint water crisis
MLIve

FLINT, MI -- The Michigan Department of Environmental Quality missed or ignored several opportunities to identify growing problems within the Flint water system during the city's water crisis, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's new audit says.

Origin of oil spill in Chicago River remains mystery
WGN

CHICAGO -- The EPA continues to investigate the cause of an oil spill on the South Branch of the Chicago River.

Opinion

The next time you enjoy Mississippi seafood, celebrate the people who brought it to you
BY RYAN BRADLEY AND ERIC BRAZER
Mississippi Commercial Fisheries United
Sun Herald

October is National Seafood Month, and there’s no better place to celebrate seafood than right here in the Magnolia State.

How to Kill American Solar
A crucial decision comes this week on tariffs that would raise solar costs.
WSJ

The solar power industry doesn’t like our opposition to solar power subsidies, but these days we’re on its side. We’re among the few opposing tariffs on foreign solar panels that could severely damage American solar power.



Press Releases

EPA Enforcement Actions Help Protect Vulnerable Communities Across the Country from Lead-Based Paint Health Hazards
10/27/2017
Contact Information: 

WASHINGTON (October 27, 2017) - As part of Lead Poisoning Prevention Week, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) today announced 127 federal enforcement actions completed over the last year to ensure entities like renovation contractors, landlords and property managers are in compliance with regulations that require them to protect communities and the public from exposures to lead. Renovation activities can result in lead exposures when lead based paint is disturbed and renovation debris and dust are not properly contained.  
The federal Toxic Substances Control Act, the Residential Lead-Based Paint Hazard Reduction Act and EPA rules apply to housing built before 1978 and child-occupied facilities, and require that lead safe renovation work practices are followed, among other requirements. By ensuring compliance with these rules, EPA can identify and address a major source of lead exposure that occurs in communities across the nation. Young children are most susceptible to the effects of lead, which can include behavioral or learning issues, slowed growth and, in rare cases, seizures and death. A blood lead test is the only way to determine if a child has a high lead level. Parents who think their child has been in contact with lead dust should contact their child's health care provider. 
“EPA’s work to enforce federal lead paint laws helps protect communities across the country and ensures those who break the law are held accountable for their illegal actions,” said EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt. “These cases are also helping maintain a level playing field for companies that follow the rules and building compliance with the law in order to prevent future violations.” 
From October 2016 through September 2017, EPA finalized 121 civil settlements for alleged violations of one or more of the three lead-based paint rules--the Renovation, Repair and Painting (RRP) Rule; the Lead Disclosure Rule; and the Lead-based Paint Activities Rule for abatements--and filed three complaints for ongoing actions. EPA and the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) also prosecuted one criminal case involving violations of lead paint laws and finalized two Clean Air Act settlements that included lead paint abatement projects in local communities.
In seven settlements this year, the alleged violator agreed to fund a community-based lead paint abatement project, like window replacements, to eliminate risks. Collectively, the projects are valued at $2,406,734.
The settlements require the alleged violator to come into compliance with the law and, in most cases, to pay a civil penalty. Collectively, the settlements require alleged violators to pay $1,046,891 in penalties. In setting the appropriate penalty amount, the Agency considered the violator’s ability to pay, ability to continue to do business, and other violator-specific factors. In several settlements, EPA reduced the penalty further under pilot penalty programs for very small lead-based paint businesses.
Several cases resulted from referrals by state and local authorities or tips from consumers and other companies. 
EPA’s cases this year addressed alleged violations of lead paint rules in 22 states and the District of Columbia. Case highlights include:
·        In a criminal prosecution in New York, realtor Maureen Walck pled guilty to knowingly and willfully violating the Lead Disclosure Rule’s requirements to disclose lead-based paint information to a prospective home buyer, whose child was later diagnosed with lead poisoning. Sentencing is pending; the charge carries a maximum sentence of one-year imprisonment and a $100,000 fine. EPA’s Criminal Investigation Division conducted the investigation, and worked with DOJ to prosecute the case.
·        KGN Asset Management, LLC, KGN Asset Management, Inc., and Restoration Realty, Inc., of Colorado agreed to a $30,000 penalty for alleged failure to use lead-safe work practices. Many of the violations were broadcast on the national television series “Raise the Roof.”
Additionally, some EPA enforcement actions for Clean Air Act cases included commitments from companies to implement supplemental environmental projects to abate lead-based paint hazards in their communities. One of the cases is the Lima Refining Co., in Ohio, which has agreed to settle alleged Clean Air Act violations through a civil judicial agreement, which includes a project valued at $1,750,000 to eliminate lead risks in local low-income residences with children or pregnant women. The settlement also included a $1 million penalty.
A full list of EPA’s lead-based paint enforcement actions is available at: https://www.epa.gov/enforcement/epas-lead-based-paint-enforcement-helps-protect-children-and-vulnerable-communities

Friday, October 27, 2017

News Clippings October 27, 2017



State

MARATHON
Northside Sun

Efforts to renegotiate decree long process officials say
Efforts to renegotiate the city of Jackson’s sewer consent decree are a marathon, not a sprint, according to Chief Administrative Officer Robert Blaine.

HCUA repairing broken sewer line in Long Beach
WLOX

LONG BEACH, MS (WLOX) -The Harrison County Utility Authority is working to make repairs after a 24-inch sewer line broke Wednesday near Espy Ave. and Demorelle Ave.

Geologist enjoys life on the rocks
Tulane Magazine

Photographs taken of David T. Dockery III at 5 years old picking up stray rocks and collecting them in a bucket could have predicted his career as an acclaimed geologist.

Oxford-born company growing
Oxford Eagle

GreenServ, Inc., a medical waste sterilization facility, is in the process of purchasing property in the Industrial Park to build north Mississippi’s first regulated medical waste sterilization facility.
...The facility in Lafayette County will use this same process, which is monitored by the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality.

Vicksburg takes next steps toward new sports complex
Vicksburg Post

VICKSBURG — Mayor George Flaggs Jr. has named a ×ve-member committee to review proposals to design, build and manage the city’s proposed sports complex, the Vicksburg Post reports....In June 2009, the city got a Department of Environmental Quality wetlands permit, paid another penalty of $14,152.61, and extended the contract deadline by 57 more days to April 2010.

Mitchell Appointed to Mississippi Board of Licensure for Professional Engineers and Surveyors
MBJ

William C. “Bill” Mitchell of Brown, Mitchell and Alexander Inc., has been appointed by Gov. Phil Bryant to the Mississippi Board of Licensure for Professional Engineers and Surveyors.

Hunter bags 36-point freak-of-nature deer with his crossbow
Clarion Ledger

JACKSON, Miss. — The hunt for a 6-point management buck that spanned four years ended with a Philadelphia, Miss., man taking a rare 36-point giant.

SMW Manufacturing acquires Caterpillar operations in Lafayette County
MBJ

SMW Manufacturing is taking over operations at the former Caterpillar facility in Lafayette County. The company plans to invest in excess of $15 million and hire up to 50 employees, comprised of predominantly former Caterpillar employees, by the end of 2018.

State Government

Gov. Bryant wants Medicaid eligibility under Human Services, alludes to work requirement
Clarion Ledger

Gov. Phil Bryant has instructed officials to develop plans to transfer all Medicaid eligibility verification responsibilities to the Department of Human Services.
 
Governor advocating for two statewide votes: state flag, transportation tax
Daily Journal

JACKSON – If second-term Gov. Phil Bryant has his way, 2018 could be a busy year for Mississippi voters.

RESERVOIR STUDY
Northside Sun

The Pearl River Valley Water Supply District (PRV) is completing a “manpower study” of the Ross Barnett Reservoir police department.

Stop calling me! Mississippi launches app to report telemarketers
Daily Journal
JACKSON 

Northern District Public Service Commissioner Brandon Presley, whose agency regulates telemarketers, was relaxing on his porch in Nettleton one Saturday afternoon about a year ago when he got an unwanted phone call from a telemarketer.

Oil Spill

MDEQ to host Mississippi Restoration Summit
NewsMS

The Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality (MDEQ) will host the second annual Mississippi Restoration Summit on November 14 at the Mississippi Coast Coliseum and Convention Center in Biloxi.

Regional

Louisiana 'dirt farmer' asks Supreme Court's help
AP

Some residents in bayou country deep in southeastern Louisiana raise alligators or crawfish. Some grow turnips. Until a local government stepped in, Chad Jarreau farmed dirt.
To be more precise, he dug up dirt on his property in Cut Off, Louisiana, graded it again and again and sold it for use in construction projects.

National

Now, it’s the New York Times vs. the EPA
Washington Post

Elisabeth Bumiller, the Washington bureau chief of the New York Times, hesitated a bit when asked if she’d ever seen anything like it. “It’s an unusual statement coming out of the EPA, let’s put it that way,” said Bumiller in a Wednesday interview with the Erik Wemple Blog.
 
State aims lawsuit at Trump administration over smog control rules
Albany Times Union

The state is taking the administration of President Donald J. Trump to court for not taking steps to reduce air pollution from predominantly coal-burning states upwind that is causing chronic smog in metropolitan New York City.

Kentucky engineer picked to head surface mining agency
AP

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — The Trump administration has nominated the head of a Kentucky engineering firm to run the federal agency that regulates and cleans up former surface mines.
Steve Gardner, president and chief executive officer of Lexington consulting and engineering firm ECSI, has been nominated for the top job at the Interior Department's Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement.

A Turkey-Sized Dinosaur With a Raccoon-Like Bandit Mask
NY Times

Sinosauropteryx first strutted onto the fossil scene in 1996. With its fuzzy feather coat, it revolutionized paleontology, suggesting that many dinosaurs had feathers.

Opinion

REVERSE AUCTIONS NO PANACEA FOR PURCHASING
Northside Sun

Earlier this year, the state Legislature passed legislation that will require, beginning in January 2018, most governmental agencies to utilize reverse auctions when purchasing goods and services.



Press Releases

EPA Releases Guidance on Reporting Air Emissions of Hazardous Substances from Animal Waste at Farms
10/26/2017

(WASHINGTON) — Today, EPA is releasing guidance to assist farmers in reporting air releases of hazardous substances from animal waste at farms. EPA is making this information available to provide time for farmers to review and prepare for the reporting deadline, currently set for November 15, 2017