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Headlines for Friday, April 30, 2010
Fri, 04/30/2010 - 14:02
Gulf oil spill reaches shore “The main effort we’ve been trying to do is get the booms out in front of key wildlife areas to include the nesting areas at Breton National Wildlife Refuge which has a number of brown pelicans that are on site right now literally hatching their eggs.” This morning President Obama reaffirmed his position that domestic oil production was a necessary piece of the US energy puzzle, but also said oil companies would be held to higher safety standards moving forward.
Another energy company in trouble for environmental violations The Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission approved $650,000 in fines against OxyUSA on Thursday. The state says the company was operating waste ponds that polluted spring water. OxyUSA was operating the two waste ponds without permits. One of the ponds had been operating for a decade. Holding ponds are suppose to include liners, but in this case they were either torn or completely absent. Regulators discovered high levels of benzene in nearby waters in 2008, and traced the pollution back to OxyUSA. Conrad Wilson, FSRN, Carbondale, Colorado.
Arts funding slashed in GA, nationwide Last week, hundreds of arts supporters marched to the Georgia state capital, protesting cuts to the Georgia Council for the Arts, the state agency that awards grants to encourage arts programming throughout the state. Subsequent negotiations between the House and Senate versions of the budget resulted in restoring a little over $790,000. Just last year the council’s budget was over 2 million and double that in 2008. Chris Appleton, Executive Director of WonderRoots, a community art organization, says he has mixed feelings about the restored funding. “It’s a great show of support by large and small art organizations and institutions rallying together to try to save Georgia Council of the Arts the art. We need better support from the state as far as arts funding goes.” According to the National Assembly of State Art Agencies, legislative appropriations to the arts have declined nationally in the last two years. Last year, the organizations say arts funding fell by 10%, with Michigan, Florida and Illinois experiencing the biggest cuts. Back in Georgia, the arts weren’t the only area to see declines – education lost 600 million dollars. But lawmakers were able to find $10 million to purchase land for a new College Football Hall of Fame for Atlanta. Sacajawea Hall, FSRN, Atlanta. Journalist found alive after paramilitary ambush in Mexico The two reporters from Contralinea magazine, David Cilia and Erika Ramirez, were the last missing members of the caravan to be accounted for alive. They had run into a canyon and hid with other Oaxacan activists David Venegas and Noe Bautista. The two activists emerged yesterday afternoon with videotaped evidence that the reporters had not been killed in the hail of bullets that riddled both sides of their car. An official search and rescue operation found the reporters not far from the crime scene. Both reporters are receiving treatment for dehydration. David Cilia also has two gunshot wounds. Human rights organizations and pro-autonomy activists are marching this afternoon in Oaxaca City to call world attention to the situation in San Juan Copala, the town where the aid caravan was headed. The indigenous town has been harassed by paramilitary forces since it declared autonomy more than 3 years ago. Shannon Young, FSRN, Oaxaca. Japan issues arrest warrant for anti-whaling activist Share this page! »
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