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· In the
News: Trip, Patti, polar
bears, and Tuesdays
with Tom
· Take
Action: Coal-poisoned drinking
water
· The
Stew: Monthly highlights

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Trip era begins at
Earthjustice
Earthjustice's new President, Trip Van Noppen, emerged
from his childhood in North Carolina enchanted and
repulsed by what he had experienced. In his own words,
Trip describes how those early days
shaped his character and may shape the future of
Earthjustice.
...In his
footsteps
Patti
Goldman, who for nine years led the
Seattle office, has taken over Trip's vacated position of
Vice President for Litigation. She will now
guide litigation efforts for the entire group of 10 regional
offices.
The Polar Bear: more threat than
threatened?
The U.S. Department of Interior was supposed
to decide this month whether the polar bear is an
endangered species, but -- amid ominous political
rumblings -- the agency is taking an extra month. It appears the
real question isn't whether global warming threatens polar
bears, but whether the bear threatens U.S. economic
interests. The answer
may come even as the Bush administration offers millions of
acres of prime polar bear habitat in the
Arctic Ocean to oil and gas development.
Greenflash: Tuesdays are Tom's
days
Environmental miscreants are on the run now
that Tom Turner is writing every week. Read Tom
every Tuesday. Today he celebrates another's
retirement and explores how the green wool gets pulled over our
eyes. | |
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Coal keeps killing long after it
poisons the air Coal ash is the nation's second largest
industrial waste stream, with more than 129 million tons
generated each year. It's full of arsenic, lead, and
other toxins. And unsafe disposal practices have
poisoned water supplies across the country. Tell the Environmental
Protection Agency we need safe disposal
standards for coal ash now!
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New Earthjustice office targets
Northeast Earthjustice is expanding into four more states with the
opening of its Northeast Office this month.
Attorneys Abigail Dillen and Keri Powell are staffing the
office. Long-planned, the office will target environmental
issues in New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Connecticut,
with special focus on human health and global warming. Active
cases are toxic brownfields in NY, mercury emission from cement
kilns, and pollution control of coal-fired power
plants.
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Twain would be hopping
glad An
Earthjustice suit aims to protect the frog made famous
by Mark Twain. The suit is one of dozens challenging
Bush administration interference in management
of endangered species and public lands.
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Bush gives in -- won't axe forest
rules Pressured by Earthjustice and its
allies, the Bush administration has abandoned its attempts to gut some
rules protecting 191 million acres of national
forests.
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Mine threatens grizzlies, bull
trout A
proposed mine that would harvest metals, at the expense of
grizzly bears and bull trout in northwest Montana, is being challenged by a powerful coalition of
conservation groups led by Earthjustice.
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Utah drops one of many "highway"
grabs The state of Utah dropped one lawsuit claiming highway
rights over federal land, but is holding on to thousands more
claims. "Huge threats remain" because of the state's attempts to
use a Civil War-era law to open National Park streams and
other sensitive lands to bulldozers and off-road uses, warns
Earthjustice attorney Ted Zukoski.
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Challenging a gaseous
mine Seven million cubic feet per day of methane -- one of the
most potent greenhouse gases -- would spew from drainage wells
linked to a coal mining project authorized by the U.S. Forest
Service in West Elk roadless areas of Colorado. Earthjustice and
the law firm Jenner & Block have filed an administrative
appeal on behalf of Rocky Mountain Clean Air Action, Natural
Resources Defense Council, and others, alleging the project
violates the Forest Service's Roadless Rule and that the agency
failed to take the required hard look at burning or capturing
the methane.
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Corralling the slaughter
ships New England's commercial herring industry is rapidly
being dominated by high-volume
ships. Midwater trawlers
use small-mesh nets to kill all forms of sea life in their path.
They're the biggest fishing vessels on the East Coast. But
they're subject to some of the weakest rules. It defies logic
that these industrial ships face less regulation than small,
family-owned operations, says Earthjustice attorney Roger
Fleming,who represents New England fishermen interested in
preserving their livelihoods with sustainable fishing
regulations.
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