Solar power trash cans

Hope for Golden-Cheeked Warbler
Ten years ago, ranchers in central Texas chopped down juniper trees to avoid attracting endangered species and the regulators who followed them.Today, the ranchers line up to see Environmental Defense Fund biologist Linda Laack. She’s helped more than a dozen landowners restore 1,200 acres of habitat for the golden-cheeked warbler — with more ranchers eager to join.

A turnaround from the warbler wars

This turnaround from the "warbler wars" of the 1990s is credited to an innovative program developed by Laack with a diverse group of allies, including the U.S. Army at Fort Hood. The program has proven so successful that government agencies and private companies across the country are seeking to emulate it. "This could be the best hope for the warbler," notes Laack.Under the program, known as a Recovery Credit System, Fort Hood pays landowners to restore habitat in areas vital to the warbler’s recovery. In exchange, the Army gets "credits" it can use if it accidentally harms nesting sites on the base. Landowners get financial assistance — so far about $1.5 million — for practices that help both the warbler and their cattle, such as installing fences or reducing erosion. To receive funds, landowners must commit to 10- to 25-year contracts and contribute part of the cost."Environmental Defense Fund gets it," says Justin Tatum, a local rancher. "If you want to help endangered species, you have to work with landowners, not against them."From the April 2008 Solutions newsletter [PDF].

Solar power trash cans
Solar powered trash cans are now a reality in Santa Cruz. They use solar power to compact trash, but is this a good thing?
Press Release: EPA Misusing Science, Jeopardizing Childrens Health, Testifies EPA Children’s Health Protection Advisory Committee Member

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

 

Contact:
 
Sean Crowley – (202) 572-3331-o, scrowley@edf.org
Dr. John Balbus – (202) 572-3316–o, jbalbus@edf.org
 
(Washington, D.C. – May 7, 2008) The senior leadership at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency “has repeatedly chosen to stray from the clear and science-based recommendations of expert advisory panels, public health organizations and advocates, and in some cases even its own career staff scientists, in order to make policies and decisions that fall short of adequately protecting children as well as the general public.” 
 
That was the conclusion of testimony today by a member of the EPA Children’s Health Protection Advisory Committee before the Senate Public Sector Solutions to Global Warming, Oversight, and Children’s Health Protection Subcommittee of the U.S. Senate Environment and Public Works Committee.
 
“In some cases, EPA policies and decisions are justified on the basis of arguments that run counter to established scientific principles and the judgments of the most prominent experts in the country,” said Dr. John Balbus, chief health scientist for the Environmental Defense Fund. “In other cases, EPA policies and decisions are made with little justification whatsoever. Greater transparency in agency decision-making and greater adherence to the recommendations of the agency’s scientific experts will help bolster public trust in the agency and lead to greater protection of the public’s health.”
 
Over the past four years, the EPA Children’s Health Protection Advisory Committee has made recommendations to the EPA Administrator on a number of science issues regarding the protection of children that have not been followed by the agency. These include recommendations for setting the level of the National Ambient Air Quality Standards for particulate matter (microscopic-sized soot that permeates lung tissue) and ozone, relying on a voluntary program to obtain critical information on children’s risks through the Voluntary Children’s Chemical Evaluation Program, and implementing EPA’s 2005 Supplemental Guidance for Assessing Susceptibility from Early-Life Exposure to Carcinogens in an expeditious and health-protective manner. 
 
“The final particulate matter standards selected by the Administrator for annual and daily concentrations of fine particulate matter were well above those recommended by the EPA Children’s Health Protection Advisory Committee, and indeed, above the range recommended by the Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee, the federal committee charged with evaluating EPA’s assessment of the science behind the standards,” Balbus testified. “EPA ultimately set standards that do not provide an adequate margin of safety for infants and children.”
 
“The EPA Children’s Health Protection Advisory Committee noted that a number of child-specific outcomes were omitted from consideration of the benefit of reducing the ozone standard, including school absences, doctor visits, medication use, and decreased resistance to infections,” Balbus testified. “[Yet] the Administrator, going against the recommendations of the leading air quality and public health experts on his advisory committees, concluded that the substantial body of evidence from epidemiologic studies showing ozone effects at levels below 0.075 parts per million could not be trusted. This results in a standard in which there is no margin of safety to protect children from ozone’s damaging effects.”
 
“There is insufficient rigor in EPA’s efforts to protect children’s health,” testified Balbus. “The EPA does not appear to be placing adequate priority on assembling the scientific data needed to determine and then act upon chemical risks to children.”
 

Denvers Climate Plan In-Depth: Voluntary Travel Offsets
Here on the Greenprint blog, we’re taking a closer look at each of the 10 recommended strategies from Denver’s recently-released draft climate action plan. Today: an overview of Item 3, which suggests promoting programs for voluntary purchases of certified carbon offsets:“Provide the opportunity to pay a small voluntary fee, at the time of air ticket [.]

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