Wednesday, December 5, 2018

News Clippings December 5, 2018

State

One Lake Project could lead to 'catastrophic' bridge failures, MDOT says
Clarion Ledger

The Mississippi Department of Transportation says the One Lake Project proposal would result in the "catastrophic failure" of bridges on the Pearl River if allowed to proceed as planned.

Sewer line ruptures near Callaway High School
WLBT

A sewer line ruptured near Callaway High School and JPS maintenance crews were dispatched to the school to repair the line along with a professional contractor to make repairs.

Conservation organization calls for supplemental feeding of deer ban
Clarion Ledger

The Commission on Wildlife, Fisheries, and Parks has approved bans of supplemental feeding of wildlife in certain areas, but a Mississippi conservation organization said it's not enough to protect wildlife and is calling for a statewide ban.

Mahannah Wildlife Management Area Reopens to the Public
WJTV

Mahannah WMA will be open to public access December 5. Deer hunts will be permitted December 6.

Supervisors asked to name local turtle as county reptile
Picayune Item

During Monday’s Pearl River County Board of Supervisors meeting, county leaders were asked to consider naming the Pearl River map turtle as the county reptile.

Natchez National Historical Park to celebrates Audubon
Natchez Democrat

NATCHEZ —From noon to 2 p.m. Saturday, Natchez National Historical Park will commemorate James Audubon’s life and legacy in Natchez with special programs in the theater of the Natchez Visitor Center.  

Army Corps Funds Dredging Project in Greenville
Delta Daily News

The Army Corps of Engineers will invest an additional $22.5 million on 15 projects in Mississippi including a Vicksburg wastewater project and dredging at ports in Gulfport, Pascagoula, Vicksburg, and Greenville.

Unhappy water association members restart removal petition
AP

Members of a south Mississippi water association have to start over again if they want to remove the group's board.


State Government

Pre-legislative briefing sets table for 2019 session
WLOX

BILOXI, MS (WLOX) - Fresh off a 2018 historic legislative session that brought the state a lottery and BP oil spill settlement money to the Coast, South Mississippi lawmakers are already looking ahead to what 2019 holds.


Oil Spill

How Texas Is Using BP Oil Spill Money
Houston Public Media

Four Gulf States, including Texas, recently received another $280 million in restoration grants from the BP oil spill of 2010The National Fish and Wildlife Foundation says Texas is getting $19 million dollars, including $6 million to protect about 575 acres of coastal habitat.

New funding aims to revive Wakulla County's oyster industry, create hurricane shelter
WTXL

WAKULLA COUNTY, Fla. (WTXL) - New funding from the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill will be used in Wakulla County to focus on boosting the economy and bringing new jobs to the area. 


National

EPA to move to roll back another Obama coal rule
The Hill

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is expected to formally propose rolling back an Obama administration climate change rule for coal-fired power plants.

Coal consumption on track for four-decade low
The Hill

The United States is on track for the lowest yearly coal consumption in nearly four decades, the federal government said Tuesday.

Big Fracking Profits at $50 a Barrel? Don’t Bet on It
Claims of low ‘break-even’ prices for shale drilling hardly square with frackers’ bottom lines
WSJ

The rapid decline of U.S. oil prices will test the claim of fracking companies that they can now prosper at $50 a barrel or less, a price level they have found challenging in the past.


VW Settlement: Illinois Awards $19M for Cleaner Bus and Train Engines
WTTW

The first chunk of Illinois’ windfall from the Volkswagen emissions lawsuit settlement will fund cleaner-burning bus and train engines in and around Chicago.

West Coast fishermen are suing oil companies for climate change damages
LA Times

Fishermen are still waiting for permission to catch Dungeness crabs off California’s northernmost coast this season — and they want oil companies to pay for the delay.


Press releases

EPA Releases Proposed Cleanup Plan, Announces Public Meeting for Kerr-McGee Superfund Site in Columbus, Miss.
12/04/2018

ATLANTA (December 4, 2018) – Today, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is proposing a cleanup plan to address contaminated soil at the Kerr-McGee Chemical Corporation Superfund Site in Columbus, Miss.

EPA to Host Community Information Sessions in Grenada, Miss. Ahead of Sampling this January in Eastern Heights
12/04/2018

ATLANTA (December 4, 2018) – Between Jan. 7-17, 2019, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) will conduct soil and groundwater sampling at residential yards in the southern portion of the Eastern Heights neighborhood associated with the cleanup of the Rockwell Grenada Superfund Site.


MISS. LAWMAKERS ANNOUNCE $14.1 MILLION USDA RURAL DEVELOPMENT AWARD FOR NEW ALBANY WASTEWATER PLANT
 
USDA Provides $29.4 Million in Loan & Grant Awards for Water & Wastewater Projects in State
 
WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senators Cindy Hyde-Smith (R-Miss.) and Roger Wicker (R-Miss.), and Representative Trent Kelly (R-Miss.) today praised the approval of a $14.1 million loan and grant package from the U.S. Department of Agriculture that will allow the City of New Albany to replace its wastewater treatment system.

EPA and USDA Encourage Use of Market-based and Other Collaborative Approaches to Address Excess Nutrients
Trump Administration tackles nutrient issues in water resources across the country
12/04/2018

WASHINGTON  — Today, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) issued a letter to state co-regulators that encourages increased engagement and a reinvigoration of state, tribal, and federal efforts to reduce excess nutrients in waterways, with a focus on market-based and other collaborative approaches.

USDA Invests in Water and Wastewater Infrastructure in 46 States

WASHINGTON, Dec. 4, 2018 – Assistant to the Secretary for Rural Development Anne Hazlett today announced that USDA is investing $1.2 billion (PDF, 509 KB) to help rebuild and improve rural water infrastructure for 936,000 rural Americans living in 46 states.


Mississippi Engineering Society
December Guest Speaker
Dr. Bill Elmore, Ph.D., P.E.
"Building Engineering Education from the Ground Up"
 
Date:
Monday, December 10, 2018
 
Time:
Sign in by 11:45 am
 
Where:
Capital Club
125 South Congress Street
Jackson, MS
 
Cost:
$15.00 for Non-Members
& $10.00 for Members
 
 
 
Pay for your lunch using PayPal using the following link or pay at the door.
 
 
Please RSVP for the lunch meeting by noon on Friday, December 7th, using the links above or by email to mseng.jackson@gmail.com. It is important that I have a good head count to avoid extra fees for empty seats, but to also ensure we have enough place settings to accommodate everyone.
 

Tuesday, December 4, 2018

News Clippings December 4, 2018

State 

TREADING WATER | UNFOCUSED AND UNDERFUNDED, GOAL OF CLEANER WATER FALTERS
The Gazette

America’s Midwest faces worsening trouble with undrinkable well water, recreational lakes choked with toxic algae and water treatment plants requiring budget-busting upgrades to remove pollution washing from farm fields and industries.

How states are faring
It’s impossible to make apples-to-apples comparisons between the states on how they are living up to their goals because the federal government, which created the Gulf Hypoxia Task Force, let each chart its own path.
Without real pressure from the EPA, few of the states have consistent funding, some aren’t documenting what steps they’re taking and there’s little urgency, despite the clock ticking on an interim deadline of seeing a 20 percent reduction in nitrate and phosphorus by 2025.
Here’s a breakdown:

Mississippi
Mississippi talks a good game, with officials claiming the state is the “leader in the development and implementation of nutrient reduction strategies” in its 2012 draft strategy.
But that document never has been adopted and there are no reports since on what state officials are doing to clean up the river that shares the state’s name.
“At this time, MS (Mississippi) does not publish annual updates to the strategies,” Natalie Segrest, who works with basin management and nonpoint sources for the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality, said in an email.
State officials meet once or twice a year to talk about progress within three geographic regions: delta, coastal and upland, Segrest said. The state has seven years of data from the delta region and now is beginning to analyze it, Segrest said.
Mississippi doesn’t have baselines, but officials estimate conservation projects from 2007 to 2014 cut phosphorus by 217,873 pounds per year and nitrogen by 506,406 pounds per year.

Oyster season may end on sour note
WLOX

PASS CHRISTIAN, MS (WLOX) - This year’s oyster season is coming to a close, ending just as quickly as it began.

Dog bite slows trash collection
Daily Leader

Children say the dog ate their homework.
Arrow Disposal Service Inc. says the dog ate their garbageman.

Climate change has chipped away at home values on the Mississippi coast, new analysis says
Clarion Ledger

Sea-level rise is already hurting home prices in certain communities on the Mississippi Gulf Coast, a new analysis finds, erasing some $264 million in value since 2005.


State Government

AG: Retirees could serve at Capitol without pension hit
AP

Mississippi Attorney General Jim Hood's office says retired state employees may serve in the Legislature while continuing to receive their government pension, if certain conditions are met.

Davis joins Mississippi State Personnel Board as general counsel
MBJ

The Mississippi State Personnel Board recently announced that Richard Davis will serve as the agency’s general counsel. In this role, Davis will be chief advisor to the executive director regarding policy, procedures, and administrative programs. He will also be MSPB’s liaison to the governor’s office and legislators.



Regional

Neighbors Want A Stop Put To Proposed Landfill In Their Backyards

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (localmemphis.com) - Another landfill proposed in Memphis is facing a challenge by people living nearby.

Decreasing prices for alligator skins contributing to slow wild harvest season in Louisiana
AP

Here’s a fashion trend that’s good news, if you’re an alligator in Louisiana: Prices for skins are down to less than half what they were just five years ago, making for a slow wild harvest.
The director of the state’s alligator program estimates that about 18,000 were taken from the wild this year.


National

Trump's pick for EPA already rolling back climate change protections
CNN

Andrew Wheeler, the former coal lobbyist who is now acting administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, was a "driving force" behind the agenda of Sen. James Inhofe, who called climate change a "hoax," according to people familiar with Wheeler's work for the senator.

Agent Orange’s Other Legacy—a $12 Billion Cleanup and a Fight Over Who Pays
WSJ

The Ironbound neighborhood of Newark, N.J., has been revitalized. The tree-lined river that runs beside it has not.

Shell to Link Carbon Emissions Targets to Executive Pay
WSJ

LONDON— Royal Dutch Shell RDS.A 2.38% PLC plans to set short-term carbon-emissions targets and link them to executive pay, the company said Monday, capitulating to months of investor pressure.

Busted! Recycling smuggling ring netted $16.1 million, California officials say
USA Today

LOS ANGELES – California authorities say they've broken up a smuggling ring that was hauling empty cans and bottles into the state so they could cash in the recycling refund.
Three suspects were arrested in a case that resulted in fraudulent payouts totaling $16.1 million over three years, the California Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery reported Monday.


Opinion

Supreme Court Deals Unanimous, Welcome Blow to Administrative State in Frog Case
George Will
National Review

Unanimity is elusive in today’s America but the Supreme Court achieved it last week. Although the dusky gopher frog is endangered, so are property rights and accountable governance. Both would have been further jeopardized if the frog’s partisans in the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) had gotten away with designating 1,544 privately owned Louisiana acres as a “critical habitat” for the three-inch amphibian, which currently lives only in Mississippi and could not live in the Louisiana acres as they are now.


Press Releases

Secretary Perdue Names NRCS Chief

WASHINGTON, December 3, 2018 – U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Sonny Perdue announced today the appointment of Matthew J. “Matt” Lohr to serve as Chief of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS).

EPA Announces 2018 Safer Choice Partner of the Year Award Winners
12/03/2018

WASHINGTON (December 3, 2018) — The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is recognizing 12 Safer Choice Partner of the Year award winners across eight states for outstanding achievement in 2017 for the design, manufacture, and promotion of cleaning and other products that carry the Safer Choice label for use in households and facilities nationwide.

NFWF Announces $521,833 in Grants to Support Sustainable Fisheries in Six U.S. States
Seven grants will build capacity of fishermen and fishing communities, improve recreational fisheries strategies, reduce bycatch and advance aquaculture projects
​WASHINGTON D.C. (December 3, 2018) –The National Fish and Wildlife Foundation (NFWF) today announced $521,833 in grants to support sustainable fisheries through fishermen and community-led projects in California, Florida, Louisiana, Alaska, Massachusetts and Hawaii.


Monday, December 3, 2018

News Clippings December 3, 2018

State

Officials concerned for well-being of manatee spotted in Pascagoula harbor
Mississippi Press

PASCAGOULA, Mississippi -- Officials with a manatee sighting network are concerned for the welfare of a manatee spotted in a Pascagoula harbor over the past week.

RECENT CASE OF CWD HAS DEER PROCESSORS ON HIGH ALERT
WCBI

MACON, Miss. (WCBI)- Friday evening was business as usual at Murray’s Deer Processing in Macon.

Water pressure restored; 60K Jackson residents still under boil-water alert
WAPT



Oil Spill

City awaiting funding decision on park project
Destin Log

After two years of waiting, the city of Destin could be getting another waterfront park.
In October 2016, the city bought a 3.9-acre parcel at 820 Beach Drive, which was formerly the site of the CEMEX cement plant.


Regional

What should TVA do with coal ash storage areas at the Allen Fossil Plant?
Commercial Appeal

The Tennessee Valley Authority is asking the public for input on what it should do with coal ash storage areas at the former Allen Fossil Plant.

'Dead zone' worsens troubles for Louisiana shrimpers
The Gazette

CYPREMORT POINT, LA. — Tommy Olander Jr. took his first baby steps on the deck of a 42-by-16-foot Lafitte skiff shrimp trawler. His dad, Thomas Olander, named the boat Tommy Boy after his son, now 25.

Investigation: Few results flowing from nutrient reduction plans
Ames Tribune

America’s Midwest faces worsening trouble with undrinkable well water, recreational lakes choked with toxic algae and water treatment plants requiring budget-busting upgrades to remove pollution washing from farm fields and industries.

Consent decree in works as WWTA plans $245 million upgrade to sewage systems
Chattanooga Times Free Press

The Hamilton County Water and Wastewater Treatment Authority's plan to spend $245 million upgrading sewage systems in Hamilton County and some cities has the full weight of Uncle Sam behind it.


National

EPA increases 2019 mandate for fuel made from plant and animal waste
The Hill

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) on Friday announced it will be increasing the amount of advanced biofuels refiners must sell in 2019 by 15 percent.

Federal EPA watchdog raises alert about sludge application
Athens News

A report published last month by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Office of Inspector General revealed that the federal agency’s controls over the land application of biosolids, or sewage sludge, are incomplete or suffer from weaknesses and may not fully protect human health and the environment.

Betting on a new way to make concrete that doesn’t pollute
NYT

LEIGHTON BUZZARD, England — Just after sunrise, a concrete plant located in a muddy industrial zone north of London stirs to life. Workers in orange suits and hard hats watch through a protective window as a machine presses what looks like red sand into a tray of brick-shaped blocks.

U.S. judge gives preliminary OK to $48 mln VW investor settlement
Reuters

A U.S. judge in California has granted preliminary approval to a $48 million settlement for investors who said Volkswagen AG made false and misleading statements over its excess diesel emissions.



Press releases

HYDE-SMITH ANNOUNCES $22.5 MILLION IN ADDITIONAL FUNDING FOR ARMY CORPS WORK IN MISS.
FY2019 Work Plan Adds Money for 15 Projects, Including Water Improvements & Dredging
WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senator Cindy Hyde-Smith (R-Miss) today announced the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers will invest an additional $22.5 million on 15 projects in Mississippi, including $3.0 million for a Vicksburg wastewater project and millions for dredging at ports in Gulfport, Pascagoula, Vicksburg, and Greenville.

The United States, Mexico, and Canada Conclude Negotiations on a Trilateral Agreement on Environmental Cooperation
11/30/2018

WASHINGTON – Building on President Trump’s signing of the historic United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and U.S. Department of State announced today that the governments of the United States, United Mexican States, and Canada concluded negotiations on a new Agreement on Environmental Cooperation (ECA).

EPA Finalizes RFS Volumes for 2019 and Biomass Based Diesel Volumes for 2020
11/30/2018

WASHINGTON – Today, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) finalized a rule that establishes the required renewable fuel volumes under the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) program for 2019, and biomass-based diesel for 2020.