Tuesday, April 30, 2019

News Clippings April 30, 2019

State

Company to pay $3.5M after Mississippi, Alabama oil spills
AP

An oil company has agreed to pay federal and Mississippi regulators $3.5 million in penalties and do more to prevent oil spills under a legal settlement filed last week.

Hattiesburg to begin mosquito spraying this week
WDAM

HATTIESBURG, MS (WDAM) - City of Hattiesburg trucks will begin spraying for mosquitoes this week.

County celebrates environment in Earth Day event
DeSoto Times-Tribune

Things got a little “earthy” around the DeSoto County Courthouse Square Saturday morning. Along with the start of the season for the Hernando Farmers Market, DeSoto County government officials hosted about 50 different exhibits and vendors around the square for its yearly Earth Day celebration.

HOUSEHOLD HAZARDOUS WASTE EVENT
WXXV

The Harrison County Beautification Committee and Mississippi Power teamed up on Saturday to collect household hazardous waste items.

Trash becomes treasure for 1st graders during beach cleanup in Biloxi
WLOX

BILOXI, MS (WLOX) - Ninety-five first graders from North Woolmarket Elementary School got an extra day of spring break, in a sense, Monday as they helped pick trash up on the beach near the Biloxi Lighthouse.

Beach vendors have mixed reviews leading into summer tourism season
WLOX

BILOXI, MS (WLOX) - Beach vendors say the beautiful weather the Coast has had recently is tailor-made for success but early reviews are mixed.

City employees may be responsible for parts of Jackson "Water Crisis"
WJTV

JACKSON, Miss (WJTV) - Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba announced today his administration is now taking legal action into the cause of what many call the Jackson “Water Bill Crisis.” 

National Park Service awards $28,466 to protect 10 acres of a Mississippi battlefield
WLBT

WASHINGTON, D.C (WLBT) - The National Park Service today announced $28,466 in grants from the American Battlefield Protection Program to help protect 10 acres of America’s battlefields in Mississippi threatened with damage or destruction by urban and suburban development. These grants will be used to acquire a portion of the Champion Hill Battlefield, a significant Civil War Battlefield.


Oil Spill

Triumph money to help pay for Crestview Bypass
WJHG

According to Okaloosa County leaders, the Board of Triumph Gulf Coast voted to help pay for the Crestview Bypass.

BP Profits Fall on Oil Price Volatility
WSJ

LONDON— BP PLC said Tuesday its profit dropped by 12% in the first quarter due to a weaker oil price environment at the start of 2019, echoing anemic quarterly results recently reported by other Big Oil companies.


Regional

Could Bonnet Carre Spillway reopen this year? Corps says it's possible; Here's why
The Advocate

Rising waters in the Mississippi River could require the Bonnet Carre Spillway to be reopened next month, which would the first time in history the nearly 90-year-old structure has been used twice in a single year.


National

Charges filed after fire at Texas petrochemical facility
AP

HOUSTON (AP) — Water pollution charges were filed Monday against a company that owns a Houston-area petrochemical storage facility where a large fire that burned for days in March caused chemicals to flow into a nearby waterway.


Press Releases

U.S. EPA requires onshore oil production company to protect Alabama and Mississippi’s waterways from oil discharges
04/29/2019

ATLANTA (April 29, 2019) – On April 25, 2019, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) reached a settlement agreement with Denbury Onshore, LLC to resolve Clean Water Act (CWA) and Oil Pollution Act (OPA) violations in Alabama and Mississippi. The State of Mississippi is a co-plaintiff under the consent decree in which Denbury has agreed to implement an extensive injunctive relief package, including a risk-based program designed to prevent future oil spills, and pay a civil penalty of $3.5 million. 

USDA Announces Funds to Help Mississippi Ag Producers Restore Wildlife Habitat
 Gopher Tortoise Part of Innovative Private Land Conservation 
Benefit Agriculture and Wildlife
 
Jackson, Miss. – The United States Department of Agriculture is making financial assistance available to partner with agricultural producers who want to restore and protect habitat for seven focus species, including the gopher tortoise in Mississippi. Applications that are received by May 17, 2019, will be considered in the second ranking period.



Monday, April 29, 2019

News Clippings April 29, 2019

State

EPA continues progress covering Mississippi Phosphates site
WLOX

PASCAGOULA , MS (WLOX) - The Mississippi Phosphates Corporation site is a former diammonium phosphate fertilizer plant that began operating in the 1950s.

Firefighters learn to battle burning cars and oil fires at Chevron Refinery
WLOX

PASCAGOULA, MS (WLOX) - Bright orange flames covered various structures. Thick black smoke billowed into the air. The acrid smell of burning gasoline wafted on the breeze as a team of men rushed to douse the flames with water.

Mississippi counts 75 tornadoes for year, 43 for April 18
AP

With three more tornadoes confirmed Friday from an April 18 outbreak, the National Weather Service now says 43 tornadoes hit Mississippi that day, and 75 for the year.

Residents and Farmers Still Dealing With Flood Conditions In Parts of South Delta
Delta News TV

Continued rain showers not giving much relief to parts of the Delta still looking for relief from flooding.

TALKING TRASH
Recycling just part of cleaner Meridian, Lauderdale County
Meridian Star

Throughout Lauderdale County, illegal dump sites and trash litter roadways as maintenance crews frantically try to keep up.


Oil Spill

NOARC set to make waves with ‘Blue Economy’
Sea Coast Echo

The National Oceans and Applied Research Center (NOARC) is about to take the plunge.
When Gov. Phil Bryant created NOARC in 2012, he set a lofty goal for Hancock County. He said he wanted it to be the Mississippi Coast’s Woods Hole, a reference to the esteemed ocean-research center in Massachusetts. Bryant said he wanted in a matter of years to see a booming “blue economy” in Mississippi’s waters.

Nine years after Deepwater Horizon disaster, Alabama officials welcome two coastal projects
Al.com

Nine years ago, the Deepwater Horizon disaster caused the largest oil spill in U.S. history, polluting Alabama’s coastline, ravaging its seafood industry and hurting tourism.
Years later, legal settlements from that disaster are making their way into coastal restoration projects.


Regional

The Bonnet Carre Spillway may reopen to prevent river flooding in New Orleans
WLOX

NEW ORLEANS (WVUE) - For the first time, the Bonnet Carre Spillway could operate twice in one calendar year.

Birmingham rated 14th worst U.S. city for year-round particulate air pollution
Al.com

The American Lung Association listed Birmingham as No. 14 on its list of U.S. cities with the highest levels of year-round particulate air pollution.

People flee airborne acid as North Carolina zinc plant burns
AP

Authorities in North Carolina say a fire at a zinc production plant in Mooresboro forced some residents to evacuate the area early Monday.

 
National

New EPA document tells communities to brace for climate change impacts
Washington Post

The Environmental Protection Agency published a 150-page document this past week with a straightforward message for coping with the fallout from natural disasters across the country: Start planning for the fact that climate change is going to make these catastrophes worse.

Critics accuse EPA of weakening pollution rule for Pentagon
The Hill

Critics say an Environment Protection Agency (EPA) proposal would weaken the Pentagon's obligation to deal with harmful chemicals that pollute groundwater near military bases.
They say the proposal, released Thursday, is the result of a long military effort to weaken EPA standards on cleaning up chemical pollution.

U.S. oil-storage industry fines soar on air, water violations
Reuters

HOUSTON (Reuters) - Fines for violations of air, water and waste regulations by U.S. petroleum storage facilities so far this year have exceeded all of last year - even without including two major Houston-area disasters in the last month still under investigation - according to a Reuters analysis of federal data.

A Trashy Alternative Fuel Is Emerging Deep Inside Coal Country
Bloomberg

In the heart of America’s coal country, a cavernous new recycling plant is turning trash into a fuel that burns cleaner than coal, using a first-in-the-nation process hailing from Europe.

New research links fracking to earthquakes in central, eastern U.S.
UPI

April 26 (UPI) -- Scientists have uncovered more evidence linking fracking to earthquakes, this time in the central and eastern United States.

Tests show high levels of coral-harming chemical in Hawaii
AP

KAILUA-KONA, Hawaii (AP) — Officials have found high levels of a chemical commonly used in sunscreen that is believed to harm coral reefs in bay waters off Hawaii's Big Island.

Pigs Are Playing a Part of Las Vegas' Efforts to Cut Food Waste
AP

LAS VEGAS (AP) - The reduction of food waste has taken hold in a city known for excess: Las Vegas.

Unraveling the mystery of whether cows fart
In the climate change debate, some policymakers seem to be bovine flatulence deniers.
AP

WASHINGTON (AP) — Let’s clear the air about cow farts.


Press Releases

Open Public Comment Period- Planning Framework Draft

On April 26, 2019, the RESTORE Council staff begins a 45-day public review and comment period on the Planning Framework draft, that will conclude at 11:59 pm MDT on June 12, 2019. The RESTORE Council staff will host and record two live public webinars on April 29, 2019. During each live webinar, Council staff will present an overview of the Planning Framework draft, and respond in real time to selected questions from webinar participants. 
 
The registration links for the live public webinars are below:
 
You may register for these webinars in advance. Once registered, a link to access the webinar will be sent to the email address provided during registration. A recording of the presentation and a list of all questions and responses from each webinar will be posted at www.restorethegulf.gov
 
In order to give the public additional opportunities to learn about the Planning Framework draft, ask questions, and provide comments, the RESTORE Council will host public meetings in each of the Gulf Coast states during the public comment period. Please forward this invitation to others interested in the RESTORE Council’s activities. 
 
Learn more about



Friday, April 26, 2019

News Clippings April 26, 2019

State

U.S. Department of the Interior to spend $31 million in Mississippi
Sun Herald

The U.S. Department of the Interior will spend more than $31 million in Mississippi for coastal conservation and hurricane protection projects.

Utility Authority moving on several projects
Picayune Item

Work to connect homes in the Eagle Heights subdivision to a low pressure sewer system has been put on hold, but so far 20 customers are now connected.

City dumps longtime engineers, replaces with two firms -- at twice the cost
Mississippi Press

OCEAN SPRINGS, Mississippi -- Ocean Springs aldermen recently voted to replace longtime City engineering firm Compton Engineering in what they say was a cost-cutting measure.
One problem: They replaced Compton with two firms -- at twice the cost.


Oil Spill

Study: Gulf salt marshes still recovering from Deepwater spill; marsh grass growth could boost recovery
Virginian-Pilot

When oil from an offshore spill rolls ashore, it wreaks havoc on any salt marsh in its path, smothering its grasses and the multitude of creatures living there.


Regional

The ‘nooch is loose: Alabama’s Sucarnoochee River flows free after dam removal
Al.com

After almost 40 years of being restricted by a concrete and steel dam, the Sucarnoochee River in west Alabama is flowing free again.
The Sucarnoochee, or “the ‘nooch,” as locals call it, now flows unimpeded from headwaters in east Mississippi about 50 miles through Sumter County before joining the Tombigbee River, after the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service removed an obsolete dam last year in the city of Livingston, near the campus of the University of West Alabama.

UL seafood study second phase gets additional $249,000, will be expanded to include all coastal parishes
The Advocate

State officials on Thursday committed $249,000 to the University of Louisiana Lafayette's study into improving the seafood industry in Acadiana and other Louisiana coastal parishes.

Minor cut leads to flesh-eating infection on Florida man's hand. Black blisters were sign something was very wrong
USA Today

A Florida man said he is lucky to be alive after a minor prick from a fishing hook led to a life-threatening, flesh-eating bacterial infection.

DeKalb CEO: County will miss 2020 sewer fix deadline
AJC

Nearly a decade ago, DeKalb County committed $326 million to fix its aging sewer system to reduce sanitation spills and agreed to meet a deadline of June 2020.


National

E.P.A. Proposes Weaker Standards on Chemicals Contaminating Drinking Water
NYT

WASHINGTON — After pressure from the Defense Department, the Environmental Protection Agency significantly weakened a proposed standard for cleaning up groundwater pollution caused by toxic chemicals that contaminate drinking water consumed by millions of Americans and that have been commonly used at military bases.

Trump fracking plan targets over 1 million acres in California
LA Times

The Trump administration on Thursday detailed its plan to open more than a million acres of public and private land in California to fracking, raising environmental concerns at a time when opposition to oil and gas drilling in the state is intensifying.

Trump officials halt plans to expand offshore drilling
The Hill

The Trump administration is hitting pause on its ambitious and controversial plans to expand offshore drilling in the Atlantic.

Ford: Justice Dept. opens probe into emissions certification
AP

Ford says the Justice Department has opened a criminal investigation into its U.S. emissions certification process.


Press Releases

EPA Takes Important Step Under PFAS Action Plan
Agency Asks for Public Input on Draft Interim Recommendations for Addressing Groundwater Contaminated with PFOA and PFOS
04/25/2019

WASHINGTON –Today, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) released draft interim guidance for addressing groundwater contaminated with perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) and/or perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) for public review and comment.


Commercial Red Drum season to open May 1, 2019
BILOXI, Miss. – The commercial fishing season for Red Drum (Sciaenops ocellatus) will open at 12:01 a.m. Wednesday, May 1 in Mississippi territorial waters, officials with the Mississippi Department of Marine Resources said today.


Interior FY 2018 Energy Revenues for GOMESA Climb to $214.9 Million; Funds will Support Coastal Conservation and Hurricane Protection Projects
$26.95 million increase in revenues further demonstrates President Trump’s energy agenda success
4/25/2019

WASHINGTON – Today, U.S. Department of the Interior (DOI) Secretary David Bernhardt announced that the Department will disburse nearly $215 million in FY 2018 energy revenues to the four Gulf oil and gas producing states – Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas, and their coastal political subdivisions (CPS) – an increase of 14.3 percent over the prior year.