Public

"TVA Building Landfill To Handle Remaining Ash From Spill"

"HARRIMAN, Tenn. — Streets of empty houses sit with dark windows around the glittering coves of the Emory River. A glance away, giant earth-moving machines scoop, pull and push ash, the unwelcome trespasser that nearly three years ago belched from a failed landfill to ooze over 300 acres and the river. As the machines reshape the muck, massive tankers continually sprinkle water to keep dangerous silica floaters out of the air and out of people’s lungs."

Source: Chattanooga Times Free Press, 10/04/2011

"W.H. Aides Debated Politics of Solyndra Visit"

"Top White House officials debated the political implications of President Barack Obama’s May 2010 visit to Solyndra, just before his trip to the California solar company, after hearing from one of Obama’s top 2008 fundraisers, according to internal email excerpts released Monday by House Democrats.

Steve Westly, a prominent California venture capitalist and a member of Obama’s 2008 national finance committee, raised warning flags to senior Obama advisers regarding the solar company’s finances.

Source: Politico, 10/04/2011

SEJ Reporting Fund Awards $14,886 for 10 Projects in Summer 2011

SEJ announces the winners of partial project funding through the Fund for Environmental Journalism’s third round of grant making, supporting travel, website development, audio and video for multimedia, radio, online and print projects submitted by independent journalists and new media ventures in Massachusetts, California, Montana, Pennsylvania, Oregon, British Columbia (Canada) and Rome (Italy).

Visibility: 

"Drilling Boom Sparks Rise in Water Testing"

"Bryan and Kathleen Borres worried that Marcellus shale drilling near their Murrysville home might affect their well water. During the summer, the couple had a baseline test done. The results surprised them — the water they had been drinking from the well, drilled in 2005, contained coliform and E. coli bacteria."

Source: Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, 10/03/2011

"Los Alamos Under Renewed Environmental Scrutiny"

"LOS ALAMOS, N.M. -- Pickup trucks believed present at the world's first nuclear bomb test, coke and whiskey bottles, a calendar and a toothbrush are just a few of the items unearthed by a cleanup of one of Los Alamos National Laboratory's original toxic dump sites, where the detritus of the 1940s Manhattan Project was strewn through some of northern New Mexico's most scenic mesas and canyons."

Source: AP, 10/03/2011

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