Tuesday, May 28, 2019

News Clippings May 28, 2019

State

Analysis: Politics of water policy flows across party lines
AP

Political discussions about water policy in Mississippi have long focused on concerns about how to control flooding and let people earn a living without creating environmental harm.

How the Bonnet Carre Spillway opening affects coastal Mississippi
Fresh water continues to flow through the Bonnet Carre Spillway, and that means our coastal ecosystem could be impacted. Here to talk about it is Department of Marine Resources Executive Director Joe Spraggins and DMR's Marine Fisheries Director Joe Jewell.
Video – WLOX


Biloxi mayor calls on other coastal mayors to meet, discuss impacts of Bonnet Carre spillway
WLOX

BILOXI, Miss. (WLOX) - Biloxi mayor Fofo Gilich has asked all Coast mayors to meet at the Biloxi Visitors Center Tuesday to discuss the negative impacts the Bonnet Carre spillway has had on the Mississippi Sound.

Resident spots dead dolphins on Biloxi beach
WLOX

BILOXI, Miss. (WLOX) - A Gulfport resident was shocked by what she saw when she visited the beach in Biloxi Sunday morning. Chasity Burnett said she was walking along the shoreline with her husband when she spotted three dead dolphins.

CLEANING UP THE MISSISSIPPI SOUND
WXXV

Mississippi State University, Mississippi Commercial Fisheries United, and Mississippi Coalition for Vietnamese American Fisher Folks and Families have partnered together to clean up the Mississippi Sound.

Amite emergency proclamation OK’d for May 9 storm
Enterprise-Journal

…• Accepted a $27,710 solid waste assistance grant from the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality.

Renovations needed at proposed public defender’s office
Enterprise-Journal

…• Accepted a $23,763 solid waste assistance grant from the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality.

MDMR ACCEPTING PROPOSALS FOR GOMESA
WXXV

The Mississippi Department of Marine Resources is giving South Mississippi residents a say in the projects that may receive funding from the Gulf of Mexico Energy Security Act.

One seriously injured after Amtrak train wreck just outside of Bentonia
WLBT

YAZOO COUNTY, Miss. (WLBT) - The Yazoo County Sheriff’s Department and Bentonia police responded to a train crash Friday morning.

River continues to rise, backwater flood crest a ‘moving target’
Vicksburg Post

There is no comfort to those residents battling flooding along the Mississippi River or dealing with the flooding in the Yazoo Backwater Area that history is being made in their misery.
Both the duration of the flood on the Mississippi and the level of flooding, particularly on Eagle Lake, are setting marks no one would have wanted or expected, or hope to deal with ever again.

Mississippi man finds huge alligator snapping turtle, sets county record
Fox News

Talk about a big boy.
Mississippi man found a massive alligator snapping turtle while conducting research on the reptiles.

These ‘jellyfish on steroids’ are pretty but dangerous. Can they show up on the Coast?
Sun Herald

It looks like a jellyfish. It’s as colorful as a jellyfish. It even appears to float like a jellyfish. But these large, colorful creatures that popped up in Orange Beach, Alabama, this week are no jellyfish.

 
Oil Spill

If they build it, will the oysters come?
Washington Post

COPANO BAY, Tex. — The orange buoys placed along the perimeter of an underwater construction site here keep disappearing, leaving behind a rust-stained barge with a massive pile of broken limestone. The barge carried it down the Mississippi River, to be dumped a mile off the Texas coast.

Bucs not entitled to BP oil spill damages
KLFY

NEW ORLEANS, La. - The Tampa Bay Buccaneers is not entitled to damages caused by the 2010 BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill ruled by a federal appeals court.


Regional

Baton Rouge is compliant with federal air quality standards, but the city's air still has F rating
The Advocate

Baton Rouge's air quality may now be compliant with federal standards, but that doesn't mean it doesn't still pose health risks for residents as the summer season approaches.
The city's air still gets an F rating with the American Lung Association, which ranks it among the most polluted in the country.

Mosaic's plan for removing acidic water from St. James complex concerns environmentalists
The Advocate

CONVENT — Mosaic Fertilizer wants to remove 300 million gallons of hazardous, contaminated water from its operations at the company's St. James Parish complex by Sept. 30 as regulators voice concerns that it's nearing the limits of containing the huge lake of acidic water.

New cutoff on dicamba use starts in state
Arkansas Democrat Gazette

A ban on dicamba use in Arkansas kicks in today, the start of the fourth season for the sometimes-fitful effort by state regulators and farmers to deal with an herbicide that can be as damaging to some crops, gardens, trees and shrubs as it is to the weeds it targets.

No word from feds on Tampa sewage spat
Tampa Bay Times

TAMPA — Back in February, a Tallahassee environmental group made a front-page splash with a federal complaint charging Tampa with polluting the bay with inadequately treated discharges from its Howard F. Curren sewage plant.

Dam Removed from Congaree Creek
Free Times (SC)

A section of Congaree Creek in Cayce is flowing naturally for the first time in five decades following the removal of a dam.


National

Lawmakers, Trump agencies set for clash over chemicals in water
The Hill

An aggressive push by Congress to pass bipartisan legislation addressing cancer-causing chemicals that are leaching into the water supply is setting the stage for a fight with the Trump administration.

Green groups angered over EPA's newest regulations for rocket fuel chemical
The Hill

Environmental groups are saying the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) isn’t going far enough with its new regulations for a chemical commonly used in rocket fuel.he proposal.

Refiners Poised for Boost From Clean-Fuel Rules
Worries about higher fuel prices for consumers have been supplanted by optimism about rising investment into the industry
WSJ

DELAWARE CITY, Del.—The oil refinery owned by PBF Energy Inc. near this Delaware Bay town was mothballed nearly a decade ago. Today it is running almost full-bore, and PBF and a business partner are spending $100 million to expand it.

Pittsburgh Breathes Easier After Repairs at U.S. Steel Coke Plant
WSJ

PITTSBURGH—Emissions from the nation’s largest coke plant, 15 miles south of Pittsburgh, have dropped sharply after a surge in pollution earlier this year prompted health warnings and widespread complaints of foul smells.

Feds approve plan to help block Asian carp from Great Lakes
Detroit News

Federal officials announced Thursday that they approved a plan aimed at keeping Asian carp out of the Great Lakes after studying the issue for five years.

San Diego authorities close entire Imperial Beach shoreline over contamination from Mexico
Fox News

The shoreline of Imperial Beach in San Diego County, California has been closed to swimmers after sewage contamination flowed from Mexico's Tijuana River.

Malaysia to send back plastic waste to foreign nations
AP

Malaysia will send back some 3,000 metric tons (3,300 tons) of non-recyclable plastic waste to countries such as the U.S., U.K., Canada and Australia in a move to avoid becoming a dumping ground for rich nations, Environment Minister Yeo Bee Yin said Tuesday.


Press Releases

Mississippi to Receive $254,000 from EPA for Beach Water Quality Monitoring
05/23/2019

Atlanta (May 23, 2019) — As the nation heads into the summer beach season, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has begun awarding up to $9.24 million across 39 states, territories and tribes to develop and implement beach monitoring and notification programs. Upon meeting the eligibility requirements, Mississippi will receive $254,000.

DEAD ROOTS, NOT JUST WAVES, ACCOUNT FOR MARSH LOSSES IN GULF
May 24, 2019
Duke University

DURHAM, N.C. -- A new Duke University-led study finds that the death of marsh plants due to disturbances like the heavy oiling from the Deepwater Horizon oil spill can double the rate of shoreline erosion in hard-hit marshes. 

Attend Four Deepwater Horizon Trustee Events the Week of June 3 in Pensacola, Florida
The Deepwater Horizon Trustee Council and Open Ocean Trustee Implementation Group are holding four public outreach events June 4, 5, and 6, 2019 in Pensacola, Florida. We encourage you to attend and learn about the work we're doing restoring the Gulf of Mexico.


Friday, May 24, 2019

News Clippings May 24, 2019

State

COSTCO PERMITS TO REMAIN INTACT
Northside Sun

Developers of the Ridgeland Costco recently won a major victory, thanks to environmental permitting officials, but opponents of plans to bring the wholesale warehouse to Highland Colony Parkway vow to fight on.
Last week, the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality (MDEQ) permit board refused to pull the permits granted for the construction of the third phase of Renaissance at Colony Park.

Civic women’s club takes recycling survey
Picayune Item

The Civic Woman’s Club of Picayune presented a survey on interest to establish a county wide recycling program during Wednesday’s Pearl River County Board of Supervisors meeting.

Floodgate reopened as high water stands in Mississippi Delta
AP

VICKSBURG, Miss. (AP) - A floodgate in the Mississippi Delta has been reopened as large stretches of rural land remain underwater.

Tenn-Tom Waterway reopens
WTVA

COLUMBUS, Miss. (WTVA) - The Tennessee Tombigbee Waterway reopens after being shutdown for several weeks due to flooding and heavy rains.


Regional

EPA issues recommendations for level of toxin from blue-green algae considered harmful for swimming
WPTV

ST LUCIE COUNTY, Fla. - The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has issued new recommendations for what it says should be considered a dangerous level of exposure to cyanotoxins, released by blue-green algae, when swimming.

Morganza Spillway could be open by June 2, governor to call for federal emergency declaration
Times-Picayune

Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards said in a news conference on Thursday (May 23) that the opening of the Morganza Spillway could happen as early as June 2.

LaPlace manufacturing plant fails to meet emission reduction goals
Times-Picayune

A LaPlace chemical plant failed to meet a state order requiring it to curb its release of potentially cancer-causing emissions.

NOAA predicts a ‘near normal’ 2019 hurricane season for the Atlantic
WLOX

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration predicts that the coming hurricane season will be near normal in the Atlantic.

Local I-Team: Northeast Memphis property owner accused of illegally dumping on his property

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (localmemphis.com) - A Northeast Memphis property owner already in environmental court is accused of continuing to illegally dump on his property.


National

Historic U.S. Bill To Clean Up Recycling At The Bin And Save Billions
Forbes

In a landmark move, a national recycling strategy is to be launched across the U.S., aiming to streamline recycling bin labels and, in so doing, give the market a desperately needed overhaul.

Frac sand expected to remain cheap as supplies outpace demand
Houston Chronicle

Sand prices for oil and gas fracking and for the valuations of sanding mining companies are expected to remain depressed as growing supplies continue to outpace rising demand, research reports say.

EPA taking 1st big steps to clean up leaking Colorado mines
AP

DENVER (AP) — The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency will take the first major steps this summer to clean up wastewater flowing from dozens of old mines at a Superfund site in southwestern Colorado, officials said Thursday.

$26 million cleanup planned for Grand Calumet River
Chicago Tribune

A $26 million cleanup of a portion of the Grand Calumet River is planned to remove contaminated sediment.

US withdraws train crew proposal that came after explosions
AP

BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) — The Trump administration said Thursday it was withdrawing a proposal for freight trains to have at least two crew members, nullifying a safety measure drafted under President Barack Obama in response to explosions of crude oil trains in the U.S. and Canada.

Are the balloons released before the Indy 500 really safe? We tested them.
Indianapolis Star

INDIANAPOLIS -- In a bit of citizen science, the IndyStar conducted an experiment to test a claim that the balloons released by the Indianapolis Motor Speedway each year are biodegradable, and therefore pose little risk to wildlife.


Press Releases

MDMR accepting proposals for GOMESA projects

BILOXI, Miss. –The Mississippi Department of Marine Resources is accepting proposals for projects that may receive funding from the Gulf of Mexico Energy Securities Act (GOMESA). The deadline for proposals to be submitted is 5 p.m. on June 13, 2019.

Four Additional Counties Added to Mississippi’s Latest Federal Disaster Declaration
 
PEARL - The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) has approved four more counties to receive Public Assistance as part of Federal Disaster Number 4429, which is in response to the February 22-24 severe storms, tornadoes and flooding that impacted the state. Those counties, as previously requested by Governor Phil Bryant, are CoahomaLeflore, Sunflower and Washington.
 
The addition of these four counties brings the total number receiving federal assistance to 24. The others already included in this disaster are Alcorn, Calhoun, Carroll, Chickasaw, Clay, Grenada, Itawamba, Lafayette, Lee, Lowndes, Montgomery, Panola, Pontotoc, Prentiss, Quitman, Tallahatchie, Tishomingo, Union, Webster andYalobusha.
 
The Public Assistance categories are as follows:
  • Category A: Debris Removal.
  • Category B: Emergency Protective Measures.
  • Category C: Roads and Bridges.
  • Category D: Water Control Facilities.
  • Category E: Buildings and Equipment.
  • Category F: Utilities.
  • Category G: Parks, Recreational Facilities and Other Items.
 
Both MEMA and FEMA will continue to complete joint damage assessments in other counties that were affected by the February storm system. Additional designations may occur at a later date, if requested by the state and warranted by the results of those assessments.
 
Mississippi is also approved statewide for the Hazard Mitigation Grant Program, which is for measures/actions taken that reduce or eliminate long term risk to people and property from natural hazards.
 
For more information about recovery efforts, visit MEMA’s website at www.msema.org. The best way to get up-to-date information is to “Like” MEMA on Facebook, @msemaorg or “Follow” us on Twitter @msema.


EPA Seeks Comment on Proposed Options for Regulating Perchlorate in Drinking Water
05/23/2019

WASHINGTON – Today, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) released a notice of proposed rulemaking that seeks public input on a range of options regarding the regulation of perchlorate in public drinking water systems.

NOAA predicts near-normal 2019 Atlantic hurricane season
El Nino and warmer-than-average Atlantic help shape this season’s intensity
May 23, 2019

NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center is predicting that a near-normal Atlantic hurricane season is most likely this year. This outlook forecasts a 40% chance of a near-normal season, a 30% chance of an above-normal season and a 30% chance of a below-normal season. The hurricane season officially extends from June 1 to November 30.

National Park Visitor Spending Contributed $40 Billion to U.S. Economy
Report Finds 2018 Spending Supported 329,000 jobs in Hotels, Restaurants, Transportation, Recreation
5/23/2019
 
WASHINGTON – As the summer vacation and travel seasons opens, U.S. Secretary of the Interior David Bernhardt announced today that visitor spending in communities near national parks in 2018 resulted in a $40.1 billion benefit to the nation’s economy and supported 329,000 jobs.