The Great Lakes Zephyr - Wind Energy & Hydrogen Journal

Wednesday, June 30, 2004

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Great Lakes News: 30 June 2004
A collaborative project of the Great Lakes Information Network and the Great
Lakes Radio Consortium.

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Pollutant level rising in Great Lakes gull eggs
----------------------------------------
Herring gull eggs collected from nests along the Great Lakes are
contaminated with a pollutant that could be as bad as PCBs. Source: Chicago
Sun-Times (6/30)


Money surfaces to help 2 creeks' watersheds
----------------------------------------
A $100,000 grant from the Great Lakes Commission will help environmental
groups protect the Black Creek and Oatka Creek watersheds. Source: Rochester
Democrat and Chronicle (6/30)


EDITORIAL: Still too much sewage
----------------------------------------
Many communities continue to struggle with expensive repairs that will
reduce but not end sewage overflows, and the public remains vulnerable.
Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (6/30)


Is it safe to swim today?
----------------------------------------
A new predictive model being tested this summer in Illinois waters of Lake
Michigan will provide a real-time method of gauging the presence of E. coli
bacteria. Source: Daily Herald (6/30)


Door County seeks solution to its ozone problem
----------------------------------------
There may be little Door County, Wisconsin, can do to reduce ozone pollution
except wait for Milwaukee and Chicago to clean up their emissions. Source:
Green Bay Press-Gazette (6/30)


33 Ohio counties fail new EPA air standard
----------------------------------------
The federal government says that tiny airborne particles pose a far greater
air pollution problem than Ohio environmental officials suspected. Source:
The Plain Dealer (6/30)


Lake Superior faces development pressure
----------------------------------------
Northland residents got to experience Lake Superior firsthand as part of a
recent joint educational effort by the University of Minnesota Sea Grant and
University of Wisconsin's Lake Superior Research Institute. Source: Duluth
News Tribune (6/29)


Ft. Wayne mayor pushes water cleanup measure
----------------------------------------
Local officials are calling for support of the Great Lakes Restoration Act,
which would provide $600 million annually for 10 years in grants to state
and local governments to enable clean water compliance. Source: The Ft.
Wayne Journal Gazette (6/29)


Polluting province shoots for cleaner air
----------------------------------------
Environmental groups are praising an Ontario plan to crack down on the
pollution that contributes to smog. Source: Great Lakes Radio Consortium
(6/28)

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Did you miss a day of Daily News? Remember to use our searchable story
archive at http://www.great-lakes.net/news/inthenews.html


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From CNET:

E-voting: Nightmare or nirvana?
Last modified:June 30, 2004, 4:00 AM PDT
By Paul Festa
Staff Writer, CNET News.com

If electronic voting were to face an international referendum, it would almost certainly lose.

Once the province of a small group of election officials and equipment sellers, e-voting has exploded into the popular consciousness because of a spreading controversy over security and verifiability. Thanks to a concerted effort by opponents and to the missteps of voting machine vendor Diebold Election Systems, most of the news has been bad.

The fight is being waged around the world--in legislative chambers and state agencies, on newspaper editorial pages and over the Internet--as voting rights advocates and computer scientists hash out the technology's merits and risks in an increasingly polarized debate.

Some voting rights advocates call touch screen electronic voting machines...(Full story & features)

Tuesday, June 29, 2004

Editor's Cut: The Costs of Bush's War

The Bush Administration, in a stealthy move designed to minimize anticipated insurgent attacks, yesterday handed "sovereignty" to Iraq's interim government two days before it had been scheduled to do so on June 30th.

The premature hand-off--or what might be called a sovereignty scam--means that the Bush Team's PR offensive is certain to kick into high gear in the coming weeks. (When Bush learned that Paul Bremer had formally relinquished his authority to the Iraqi government, he added an Orwellian touch to a hand-written note that his national security advisor Condi Rice had just sent him. His note said: "Let Freedom Reign!")

Now more than at any time since Bush invaded Iraq, journalists need to give Americans a clear assessment of the mounting costs of this war. This is a great opportunity for the media to redeem itself for malpractice in the run-up to war when, as Washington Post ombudsperson Michael Getler wrote this month in a tough rebuke to his own paper---and the larger media world, "...the press, as a whole, did not do a very good job in challenging administration claims...Too many public events in which alternative views were expressed...were either missed, underreported or poorly displayed."

The costs are now detailed in..(Full story & features)

Climate experts urge immediate action to offset impact of global warming

Governments and consumers in the United States and worldwide should take immediate steps to reduce the threat of global warming and to prepare for a future in which coastal flooding, reduced crop yields and elevated rates of climate-related illness are all but certain, top U.S. scientists said Tuesday.

At a meeting organized by AAAS and its journal, Science, the climate researchers argued that while some policy experts and sectors of the public dispute the risk, there is in fact no cause for doubt: The world is significantly warmer today than it was a century ago--and it's getting warmer. Without action now, they warned, the impact could be devastating.

As the Earth warms, ice sheets are melting and sea levels are rising--island and river-delta communities already are vanishing beneath the waves. Native Inuit fishermen are falling through thinning Arctic ice they've traversed many times before. In recent decades, climate change claimed some 150,000 lives in 2000 and sickened many others, especially elderly people and very young children, according to the World Health Organization.

One of the conference experts, Harvard geochemistry Professor Daniel Schrag, likened the situation to...(Full story & features)

Two Thirds of U.S. Public Willing to Pay to Fight Global Warming
Jim Lobe
WASHINGTON, D.C., Jun 28 (OneWorld) - More than 80 percent of the U.S. public supports pending legislation to cut the emission of greenhouse gases, while two thirds said they are willing to pay the U.S.$15 a month - or nearly $200 a year - that experts believe the legislation, the Climate Stewardship Act (CSA), will cost the average household, according to a nationwide poll released Friday.

Public support is also strong for using tax incentives to encourage utility companies to use cleaner energy technologies and car-buyers to purchase more energy-efficient cars, according to the survey, which was conducted by the University of Maryland's Program on International Policy Attitudes (PIPA).

Moreover, slightly more than half of respondents (52 percent) said a candidate's support for the cutting emissions would incline them more to vote for him in November, while only 14 percent said that such support would make them less inclined to vote for him. Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry has endorsed the bill, officially known as the Climate Stewardship Act (CSA), while President George W. Bush opposes it.

Nearly two-thirds of respondents (64 percent) said they would want their member of Congress to support the Kyoto Protocol, which is also supported by Kerry but opposed by Bush.

The poll, which coincided with the running of the Hollywood special-effects blockbuster on global warming, 'The Day After Tomorrow,' found that the movie did not appreciably affect viewer attitudes toward global warming or the urgency with which the problem should be addressed.

But it did find that...(Full Story)

Japan's Approach To Hydrogen Fuel Cells:
http://www.fuelcellseminar.com/pdf/2003/Morota.pdf

Web posted Monday, June 28, 2004

Wind, fuel cells could power future

By Patricia Liles
For the Journal

Alternative energy sources currently provide 15 percent of Alaska's electric power to the state's Railbelt population, a percentage that could grow with the addition of a large-scale wind power project near Anchorage proposed by the state's largest electric provider.

Chugach Electric Association is working to advance the Fire Island wind power project, located on the southern portion of a 4,000-acre island about two miles offshore from Anchorage in Cook Inlet.

"The economic model is for 50 megawatts of power, but it could support over 100 megawatts," said Steve Gilbert, manager of energy projects development, operation and maintenance at Chugach. "It would be a very valuable resource for the Railbelt."

Currently, three hydroelectric projects provide up to 180 megawatts of power to the railbelt, an interconnected electric grid that stretches from Homer and Seward in the south, through Anchorage and the Matanuska-Susitna area, up to Fairbanks and Delta Junction. Natural gas, coal and fuel oil generators provide the remaining railbelt power, which totals about 1,374 megawatts.

Chugach, the largest of the six electric utilities on the railbelt, has been...(Full Story)

Fort Missoula eyed for hydrogen energy showcase
By Betsy Cohen of Montana Lee Newspapers - 06/28/2004

MISSOULA — Fort Missoula's future may be closer than we think.

In a rare happenstance, the diverse stakeholders city, county, state, federal, private who own the fort's acreage agree on a

preliminary development plan for the area.

Even more astounding, the plan includes a hydrogen-powered university campus as a main feature.

If it all works out, Fort Missoula will be home to a 245-acre

superpark unlike any in the

United States.

Imagine this: 10 kilometers of walking trails that meander along the Bitterroot River and wander the periphery of new soccer fields and softball pitches worthy of regional competitions.

Trails that connect the Historical Museum at Fort Missoula and the Rocky Mountain Museum of Military History to new picnic areas, a swimming pond, a series of gardens and lead to the Hydrogen Futures Park, the University of Montana's new College of Technology campus and the state's first hydrogen-fueled facility.

Imagine...(Full Story)

'MICROGRID' POWER NETWORKS
Next-generation architecture for the new energy landscape:

The summer 2003 blackout in North America that affected tens of millions of people was the eighth such area-wide outage in seven years and the worst in the United States' history. More than a wake-up call, the blackout was a telling statement on the widely acknowledged weaknesses in the US national electric power grid.

Not surprisingly, the blackout prompted, among other things, calls for massive investment in the grid infrastructure. Avoiding such catastrophes in the US and elsewhere around the world will certainly require substantial investment to improve the hardware, software and human elements of transmission and distribution systems. But it will also take a willingness to embrace new solutions - including cutting demand through energy efficiency and increasing the use of innovative distributed generation strategies - to ease electrical system strain.

LIGHTENING THE LOAD

In peak load periods, when electricity supplies are tight and the system is at the greatest risk of failure, demand reductions can help the system absorb an unexpected shock from equipment failure, maintenance mistake, or an intentional disruption of power supply.

Over the last two decades...(Full Story)

Regulator Removes Barriers to UK Distributed Generation

UK energy regulator Ofgem and the Government's Department of Trade and Industry have published the second annual report of the Distributed Generation Co-ordination Group (DGCG), which shows that at least half of the 24 barriers to the development of small-scale distributed generation (DG) identified by the DGCG when it was founded have been removed. Many, but not all, of these distributed generators are wind farms or other renewable generation schemes.

UK Energy Minister Stephen Timms said: 'The DGCG has made real progress in addressing many of the barriers faced by distributed generation and is to be congratulated on its work to date. However, much more remains to be done, particularly in addressing the significant barriers to the connection of smaller-scale generation that remain in place.'

The focus of the DGCG has been...(Full Story)

Denmark to Renationalize Transmission Grid

Denmark is to renationalize its power transmission grid to allow fairer access conditions to wind and distributed generation.

Broad agreement was reached at the end of March between parties of the ruling coalition in Denmark on a transfer of ownership of the electricity grid from the present grid system operators, ELTRA and Elkraft, to a new state-owned enterprise, EnergiNet Danmark, as of January 2005. The present operators will not receive any remuneration from the state.

Minister for Economic and Business Affairs in Denmark, Bendt Bendtsen, commented: 'This is a far-sighted agreement to provide the necessary conditions for an energy market which should function more smoothly in future. The whole electricity grid in Denmark will belong to the government, ensuring that it is open to all users of the network on equal footing. On my part it is also important to point out that this agreement provides a stable framework for investors in the Danish electricity market.'

Preben Maegaard of the Folkecenter for Renewable Energy and President of the World Wind Energy Association described as 'sensational' the decision to nationalize the high-voltage power transmission system in order to allow all users equal access to the grid.

Measures will also...(Full Story)

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Great Lakes News: 29 June 2004
A collaborative project of the Great Lakes Information Network and the Great
Lakes Radio Consortium.

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Hands off the Great Lakes, environmentalists say
----------------------------------------
Michigan is the only state in the Great Lakes region without rules governing
massive water withdrawals, and environmentalists say that must change --
now. Source: Booth Newspapers (6/29)


Lake level increase nets new business
----------------------------------------
Businesses that cater to recreational boaters and commercial shipping
interests are buoyed by the recent rise in Great Lakes water levels. Source:
The Detroit News (6/29)


St. Lawrence Seaway dredging hits rough waters
----------------------------------------
Critics claim a binational transportation study of the Great Lakes and St.
Lawrence Seaway is the first step toward enlarging the system, despite
supporters' assurances to the contrary. Source: The Northwest Indiana Times
(6/29)


Clean Water Act to cost $1 billion
----------------------------------------
Local officials in the Maumee River basin say the federal government should
help provide the more than $1 billion they estimate it will cost their
communities to implement federal clean water standards. Source: Fort Wayne
Journal Gazette (6/29)


Ohio EPA wants options on ozone rules
----------------------------------------
The Ohio Environmental Protection Agency has filed a lawsuit seeking more
flexibility to develop plans to meet new federal limits for ground-level
ozone under the Clean Air Act. Source: The Plain Dealer (6/29)


Utility corridors to serve as restoration laboratory
----------------------------------------
Restoring native plant communities, reducing business costs and connecting
scattered natural habitats via power line corridors are intended results of
a $50,000 grant presented Monday to Save the Dunes Conservation Fund.
Source: The Northwest Indiana Times (6/29)


Water gardens a route for new invasives
----------------------------------------
Water gardens are all the rage. But scientists warn that if plants or
animals get out of a backyard pond, they can endanger native species.
Source: Great Lakes Radio Consortium (6/28)


Anglers to profit from whitefish study
----------------------------------------
Biologists will pay Great Lakes fishermen five dollars for every tagged
whitefish they catch. But if their study proves the fish are in danger, it
could mean tighter restrictions on the fishermen. Source: Great Lakes Radio
Consortium (6/28)


Northern Michigan has scenic bike routes
----------------------------------------
It is confidently written on the state of Michigan's Web site: "There is no
better bicycling country than Michigan's scenic and gently rolling two
peninsulas located in the heart of the Great Lakes Basin." Source: The
Detroit News (6/27)


Milwaukee not alone in dumping sewage
----------------------------------------
Chicago politicians spouting off about the recent bout of sewer spills in
Milwaukee might want to take a look - or a whiff - in their own backyard.
Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (6/26)

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Did you miss a day of Daily News? Remember to use our searchable story
archive at http://www.great-lakes.net/news/inthenews.html


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Consortium (www.glrc.org), both based in Ann Arbor, Mich.
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
6/29/2004
CONTACT: Libby McCann, (608) 262-5367, epmccann@wisc.edu

NOTE TO PHOTO EDITORS: High-resolution photos of institute activities and students working in their schoolyards are available by contacting Pat Brown at (608) 265-3355 or pabrown1@wisc.edu.

TEACHERS LEARN TO ENGAGE THEIR STUDENTS IN ECOLOGICAL RESTORATION

MADISON - School's out, but not for a select group of kindergarten through grade 12 teachers who are attending Earth Partnership for Schools (EPS) workshops at the University of Wisconsin-Madison Arboretum. They are learning that ecological restoration - returning the land in their schoolyards to its original state, the way it was before settlers arrived - is not only good for the land, but also good for developing their students' skills across the curriculum.

Teachers throughout Wisconsin and from as far away as New York are currently participating in a two-week EPS Summer Institute at the Arboretum. The New York teachers will be working with their students on restoring some of the Hempstead Plains on Long Island, an exceedingly rare prairie ecosystem. It appears that they have vestiges of this ecological community on the school grounds.

During the workshop, teams of teachers literally get down and dirty with a variety of hands-on activities designed to show them how to teach their students ecological restoration. In the process, they get tips on how to make the experience meaningful, fun and educational.

Teachers learn how to incorporate math, science, art, music, social studies, history, literature and other curriculum areas into land-restoration activities. Soon, their students will get to participate in this hands-on, minds-on approach to learning and watch the changing face of their schoolyard as it develops into an outdoor laboratory that can be shared with the community.

"We have found that planting a prairie or other ecosystem provides students with rich and personally meaningful opportunities to learn ecological concepts and study the natural and cultural history of their school property," says Libby McCann, program manager for Earth Partnership for Schools. "Student involvement is grounded in basic science and enhanced through a variety of activities in other subjects as they design, plant, maintain and complete their restoration project. In addition, we have found that along with improving student performance, the experience brings schools and communities together."

As one 2003 participant stated: "This institute has been a once-in-a-lifetime experience for me as a teacher. I have never taken any course that has left me so energized to improve my teaching and student learning."

The Earth Partnership for Schools Program has provided environmental education strategies for students in kindergarten through high school since 1991. Begun as outgrowth of the Arboretum's focus on ecological restoration as a way of establishing a positive relationship between people and the land, the program also helps teachers meet a state mandate requiring school districts to incorporate environmental education into the curriculum.

The current institute runs from June 21 through July 2. A second institute runs from July 19-30. Teams of teachers apply to the program, with two "lead teachers" from a school attending the first two-week summer institute, and receiving three graduate credits, a stipend and program resources (e.g. curricular activities). The second summer, the two lead teachers return with four "associate" team members, who can be other teachers, staff and/or community members. Teachers in the second summer's institute also receive three graduate credits, a stipend and program resources.

"We encourage the teams to have teachers from many different subject areas - science, language arts, math, etc. - given the nature of the program," says McCann. "Participants will sharpen their teaching techniques, gain new content knowledge and collaborative skills, address relevant state standards and student assessment issues, and receive a variety of educational resource materials and curricula."

All schools accepted into the program also receive ongoing support from EPS staff after the summer institute series. This support includes school-wide in-service opportunities, student field trips to the Arboretum, loan of equipment kits, classroom support for science inquiry projects related to the restoration site and site consultations.

"EPS provides support to encourage long-term involvement because we want to ensure that the project becomes a sustainable part of the school curriculum," McCann explains.

The UW-Madison Arboretum, world famous for pioneering restoration work initiated by Aldo Leopold and his colleagues in the 1930s, provides living laboratories for restoration-related research and teaching. The Earth Partnership for Schools Program is sponsored by the Arboretum and supported in part by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Wisconsin's Improving Teacher Quality Higher Education Program and ESEA Title II Higher Education Professional Development Program.

To find out more about the Earth Partnership for Schools Program, contact McCann, at (608) 262-5367 or epmccann@wisc.edu.
###
- Pat Brown, (608) 265-3355, pabrown1@wisc.edu




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University Communications
University of Wisconsin-Madison
27 Bascom Hall
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Madison, WI 53706

Phone: (608) 262-3571
Fax: (608) 262-2331

Fahrenheit 9-11: The Temperature at Which Freedom Burns
Meryl Ann Butler

OpEdNews.com


Seeing police stationed outside our small town movie theatre in Northern Arizona was the first clue that something unusual was going on. The next was the shell-shocked looks on the faces of viewers leaving the premier of Michael Moore's Fahrenheit 9-11.

Painstakingly researched and documented, the movie offers some good-sized chunks of the evening news that never made it into American living rooms. As the bandwagon filled with most of America’s media heads into the sunset, with Cheney holding the reigns, we finally see the intertwined connections between the bin Laden and Bush families, the infiltration of Halliburton and the Carlyle Group into our government and the Nero-ic image of Bush golfing while Rome burns...(Full Story)

Monday, June 28, 2004

County's largest wind turbine goes up

By Amelia Buragas / The Captol Times
May 27, 2004

CROSS PLAINS - The largest wind turbine in Dane County was erected Wednesday on a farm near the village of Cross Plains.

The 35-kilowatt turbine, which will produce enough energy to power five to seven homes, was installed on Steve Kalscheur's property on County J.

Kalscheur, vice president of UW Provision Co., a Middleton-based meat packing company, said he chose wind energy for both environmental and economic reasons.

"When I was a kid there were windmills around all the farms," Kalscheur said. "I figured someday that would pay off."

Kalscheur noted that after the initial investment, he will pay nothing but...(Full Story)

SMALL WIND E-NEWSLETTER

July 2004

Issue No. 11, June 28, 2004

Editor: Larry Sherwood, Interstate Renewable Energy Council

TABLE OF CONTENTS

NEWS
(1) USDA Announces Renewable Energy Funds
(2) OREGON 22 kW Wind Turbine is First Wind Project in National Scenic Area
(3) PENNSYLVANIA Announces $5 Million Energy Harvest Grant Program
(4) NORTH CAROLINA Small Wind Initiative Receives Grant Funding
(5) MISSOURI Offers Equipment to Measure Wind Resources
(6) CALIFORNIA and NEW YORK List Turbines Eligible for Rebates
(7) MASSACHUSETTS Entrepreneurs Work to Lower Wind Power Cost
(8) Interior West Think Tank Releases Comprehensive Study for Western Power Grid
(9) Residential Windmill Preventative Maintenance
(10) Upcoming Small Wind Events

INTERCONNECTION AND NET METERING
(11) VIRGINIA - SCC Opens Docket to Amend State's Net Metering Rules
(12) MICHIGAN - PSC to Develop Net Metering Rules
(13) HAWAII - Net Metering Capacity Expanded to 50 kW

INCENTIVES
(14) HAWAII Residential and Wind Energy Credit

RESOURCES
(15) TECHNICAL PAPER: Break-Even Turnkey Cost of Residential Wind Systems
(16) New Small Wind Consumer Guides Released

LINKS TO SMALL WIND IN THE NEWS
(17) Capital Times (Madison, WI)
(18) KPVI (Pocatello, ID)
(19) Omaha World-Herald
(20) Houston Chronicle

ABOUT THE SMALL WIND NEWSLETTER
Includes information on how to subscribe and unsubscribe.

The current Small Wind Newsletter is also available on the web at http://www.irecusa.org/smallwindenergy/e-newsletter.html

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Great Lakes News: 28 June 2004
A collaborative project of the Great Lakes Information Network and the Great
Lakes Radio Consortium.

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Steel plant deal puts Michigan up in pollution
----------------------------------------
Toxic waste generated in Michigan is up, according to data released last
week, but officials say the numbers were skewed by one big change. Source:
Detroit Free Press (6/28)


Lawmakers asked to cut water exports
----------------------------------------
Michigan environmental groups are launching a campaign to get state
legislators to pledge to support limits on bulk water withdrawals and
diversions from the Great Lakes. Source: The Toledo Blade (6/28)


Wetland restoration and hypoxia relief
----------------------------------------
Some experts say that more wetlands in the upper Midwest could reduce the
size of the oxygen-depleted "dead zone" that appears in the Gulf of Mexico
every spring. Source: Earthwatch Radio (6/28)


Cormorants' fish-eating habits targeted for WDNR study
----------------------------------------
In an effort to satisfy the angler concerns over declining perch
populations, the Wisconsin DNR has launched a study of the two major
fish-eating bird species on Green Bay. Source: The Appleton Post-Crescent
(6/27)


Debate grows over weed-control methods
----------------------------------------
Faced with thick tangles of unwanted water weeds, property owners on three
Michigan lakes took very different approaches to control the invasive
European watermilfoil. Source: The Bay City Times (6/27)


Great Lakes protection bill passes Senate panel
----------------------------------------
Legislation to help complete a preventative barrier in the Illinois River to
keep Asian carp from reaching the Great Lakes passed the Senate Environment
and Public Works Committee last week. Source: Port Clinton News Herald
(6/26)


Water woes mount as level of available groundwater decreases
----------------------------------------
The cost of returned treated wastewater to the Great Lakes could make it
impractical for Milwaukee suburbs to tap Lake Michigan water, even if
expected new rules governing Great Lakes water use allow them to do so.
Source: Greater Milwaukee Today (6/25)


Ohio unveils recreational boating plan
----------------------------------------
A recreational boating plan to serve as a guide for future development of
Ohio waterways was recently completed by the state DNR. Source: The Fremont
News-Messenger (6/25)


New law aims for smooth ride
----------------------------------------
A new New York state law this year requires personal watercraft users to
take a boating safety class before going out on the water. Source: The
Ithica Journal (6/22)

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Did you miss a day of Daily News? Remember to use our searchable story
archive at http://www.great-lakes.net/news/inthenews.html


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Information Network (www.glin.net) and the Great Lakes Radio
Consortium (www.glrc.org), both based in Ann Arbor, Mich.
TO SUBSCRIBE and receive this Great Lakes news compendium daily, see
www.glin.net/forms/dailynews_form.html or send an e-mail message to
majordomo@great-lakes.net with the command 'subscribe dailynews' (minus
the quotes) in the body of the message.
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Friday, June 25, 2004

From MoveOn.org :

Dear MoveOn member,

When Fahrenheit 9/11 opened in New York on Wednesday, it broke box-office records, beating out even Men in Black with wall-to-wall sold-out shows. And tonight, despite the right-wing campaigns to stop it, it will open at over 800 theaters across the country -- totally unprecedented for a documentary. Well over one hundred thousand MoveOn members will be there over the course of the weekend, and we hope you can come, too.

But this huge opening for Fahrenheit 9/11 is just the beginning. On Monday night, tens of thousands of MoveOn members are gathering at house parties across the country in "Turn Up the Heat," a nation-wide virtual town meeting with Michael Moore. Together, we'll take the enormous momentum of Fahrenheit 9/11 and channel it into strategic action to win back the White House.

There are over 1,400 house parties planned so far, from Delray Beach, Florida to Salem, Oregon. To find a party near you, or host one of your own, just go to:
http://action.moveonpac.org/f911/

We launched this campaign around Fahrenheit 9/11 because to the media, the pundits, and the politicians in power, the movie's success will be seen as a cultural referendum on the Bush administration and the Iraq war. Together, we have an opportunity to knock this ball out of the park -- to powerfully prove that when someone has the courage to publicly speak the truth, the American people will be right behind them.

Plus, it's a great movie.

To find out where Fahrenheit 9/11 is playing and get tickets, just go to:
http://www.f911tix.com/

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
6/25/2004
CONTACT: Faramarz Vakili-Zadeh, (608) 265-2757, fvakili@fpm.wisc.edu

UW-MADISON ENERGY-SAVING EFFORTS YIELD NATIONAL AWARD

MADISON - Faramarz Vakili-Zadeh, a leader in energy-efficiency efforts at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, received the 2004 Public Service Award at the Energy Efficiency Forum in Washington, D.C., for his efforts to manage energy use on campus.

The forum's annual award recognizes a federal or state government official who has provided exemplary leadership in instituting and advancing energy efficiency.
Vakili-Zadeh, associate director of UW-Madison's physical plant, accepted the award on behalf of the state and the university last week at a congressional reception in the Library of Congress.

"This really is a recognition of the efforts of the whole campus and of the state," he says. "Energy conservation is the right thing to do. Saving money, concern for the environment and energy security are some of the right reasons to do it. We must do everything possible to maximize energy conservation on campus."
Vakili-Zadeh has been a leading advocate of energy efficiency on campus, and was instrumental in implementing UW-Madison's efforts under the state's energy-saving Wisconsin Energy Initiative, begun in 1992.

That program, a partnership between the state of Wisconsin and Johnson Controls Inc., is expected to save the university more than $75 million in total energy costs, reduce water use by 1.7 billion gallons and cut carbon dioxide emissions by 8.9 million tons over 30 years.

The program has involved installing more energy-efficient lighting, occupancy sensors, more efficient motors, toilet replacements, energy monitoring, window retrofits and other energy-saving measures.

For more information on the forum awards, visit www.eeforum.net/awards.html
###




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Great Lakes News: 25 June 2004
A collaborative project of the Great Lakes Information Network and the Great
Lakes Radio Consortium.

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Who needs oceans?
----------------------------------------
Mention "beach," and most Americans tend to think of the oceans. But on the
Great Lakes, there are hundreds of beaches in the nation's heartland that
visitors would be hard-pressed to distinguish from their ocean cousins.
Source: USA Today (6/25)


Wilson Island for sale
----------------------------------------
Creating a rare opportunity to buy island property in the greatest of the
Great Lakes, huge Wilson Island off Lake Superior's north shore has been put
on the market. Source: The Globe and Mail (6/25)


Ontario okays Niagara power plant expansion
----------------------------------------
A generating project that will involve boring a new tunnel under the city of
Niagara Falls has been given a green light by the Ontario government.
Source: Canadian Press (6/25)


Lake Erie adventure
----------------------------------------
Lake Erie's Presque Isle State Park is becoming an increasingly popular spot
for kiteboarding, a wind-driven sport that isn't yet a decade old. Source:
CNN (6/25)


Lake Michigan perch are landed in big numbers
----------------------------------------
The size and numbers of perch being taken off Waukegan, Ill., are simply
scary, likely the best fishermen will see for years. Source: The Star (6/24)


Rain gardens seen as key to cutting pollution
----------------------------------------
Rain gardens, designed to hold rainwater and let it seep gradually into the
ground, are the latest effort to cut runoff pollution in northern Wisconsin.
Source: Minnesota Public Radio (6/23)


Beaches vary in approaches to safety
----------------------------------------
Neither red flags nor loudspeaker warnings seem to be taking hold with
swimmers, despite seven drownings on the Fourth of July last year in Berrien
County on Lake Michigan. Source: South Bend Tribune (6/23)


Walkerton fund sparks anger
----------------------------------------
The firm overseeing the Walkerton compensation plan has been paid $11.2
million over three years to pay out $48.5 million worth of claims in a
process that's come under fire for its secrecy and lengthy delays. Source:
The Toronto Star (6/23)


Seaway navigation study raises questions
----------------------------------------
The U.S. and Canada are about halfway through a major Great Lakes avigation
study, the scope of which has changed since it was first proposed. Source:
Great Lakes Radio Consortium (6/21)

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Great Lakes News: 24 June 2004
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Lakes Radio Consortium.

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Gobies discovered in Grand Traverse Bay
----------------------------------------
It's an ugly, mean nuisance that doesn't belong in this part of the world,
but the round goby has come to Michigan's Grand Traverse Bay. Source:
Lansing State Journal (6/24)


Senate boosts plan to build carp barrier
----------------------------------------
The U.S. Senate yesterday moved along legislation that could help fund
completion of an electrical barrier near Chicago that is designed to prevent
the highly destructive Asian carp from entering Lake Michigan. Source: The
Toledo Blade (6/24)


Indiana's pollution rose 7%, EPA says
----------------------------------------
The volume of pollution released by Indiana industries increased almost 7
percent in 2002, although emissions of cancer-causing toxins declined for
the fifth year in a row, according to a federal inventory released
Wednesday. Source: The Indianapolis Star (6/24)


E. coli casts shadow over public beaches
----------------------------------------
Potentially dangerous levels of bacteria caused by last month's heavy rains
and flooding have all but subsided at local beaches, health officials said.
Source: The Port Huron Times-Herald (6/24)


Ferry not running at full capacity
----------------------------------------
The new Rochester-Toronto fast ferry can seat nearly 800 passengers and
carry 238 vehicles, but some days are slower than others. Source: NEWS 10 -
Rochester (6/24)


High mercury levels in Ohio rain
----------------------------------------
Columbus, Ohio, area rainfall contains up to 15 times more mercury than what
would be considered safe in a major waterway, according to a new study
released by sportsmen groups this week. Source: The Advocate (6/23)


COMMENTARY: The mistake by the lake
----------------------------------------
Humans don't need steel. They don't need rubber. They need water. Source:
The Cleveland Free Times (6/23)


Workshop on Great Lakes protection June 30
----------------------------------------
A public Lake Superior Restoration and Protection Priorities Workshop will
be held June 30 on the University of Minnesota - Duluth campus. Source: The
Ashland Daily Press (6/22)

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Great Lakes News: 23 June 2004
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Lakes Radio Consortium.

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Great Lakes forever campaign launched in U.S.
----------------------------------------
This summer, the Biodiversity Project hopes millions of Great Lakes region
residents will become concerned about the future of the Lakes to change
things for the better. Source: Environmental News Network (6/23)


Locks expansion discussed at Lake Superior meeting
----------------------------------------
Citizens voiced concerns about the future of the Great Lakes at the
International Lake Superior Board of Control meeting Monday. Source: The
Holland Sentinel (6/23)


Ohio sewer district plans emergency backup
----------------------------------------
The regional sewer district will spend nearly $30 million on backup
emergency power equipment to keep its treatment plants running in another
blackout. Source: The Plain Dealer (6/23)


County gets EPA grant to assess brownfields
----------------------------------------
St. Joseph County's Economic Development Corp. has been awarded a $400,000
grant through the Environmental Protection Agency to assess potential
brownfield sites throughout the county. Source: South Bend Tribune (6/22)


Measure would protect bluffs
----------------------------------------
A proposal outlines the transfer of Lake Michigan bluffs from the Navy to
the Openlands Project, a non-profit land conservancy based in Chicago.
Source: Chicago Tribune (6/22)


Detroit port authority breaks ground on riverfront
----------------------------------------
Detroit's hopes to become more of a tourist draw got a boost Monday as
officials broke ground for an $11.25-million headquarters and public
terminal for the Detroit Wayne County Port Authority. Source: Detroit Free
Press (6/22)


Navy property on lake could become park
----------------------------------------
A secluded two-mile stretch of Lake Michigan shoreline that has remained
much the same since explorers saw it centuries ago could be opened as a
public park. Source: Arlington Heights Daily Herald (6/22)


Wisconsin fish at risk
----------------------------------------
Overfishing, pollution and the proliferation of invasive species are to
blame for the depletion of fish in the Great Lakes. Source: Madison Capital
Times (6/21)


Group hopes for deal preserving 413 acres of Lake Michigan dunes
----------------------------------------
A conservation group's plans are moving forward to preserve more than 400
acres of dunes along Lake Michigan that an unidentified benefactor pledged
more than $30 million to help save. Source: Detroit Free Press (6/21)


Lake Erie's got quite a catch
----------------------------------------
The perch and walleye are plentiful in Lake Erie this season, according to
those involved in fishing. Source: The Lorain Morning Journal (6/19)


Water quality impacts of Middle Bass Island project topic of public hearing
----------------------------------------
The Ohio EPA will hold a public information session and hearing to accept
nominations on water quality impacts associated with a proposed project
along the south shore of Middle Bass Island. Source: Port Clinton News
Herald (6/19)

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Great Lakes News: 21 June 2004
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Lakes Radio Consortium.

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Commercial fishers angling for trout fishing rights
----------------------------------------
With fish populations in the Great Lakes recovering dramatically, some
commercial fishing operations are asking for a bigger share of the trout
fishing rights. Source: Great Lakes Radio Consortium (6/21)


EPA lets Milwaukee off the hook
----------------------------------------
Despite what Mayor Richard Daley and local members of Congress say, there is
no evidence that "Cheesehead sewer water" is responsible for the swimming
bans that have plagued Lake Michigan beaches early in the summer season, an
EPA official said. Source: Chicago Tribune (6/21)


Coast Guard to fine ships for ballast violations
----------------------------------------
Later this summer, the U.S. Coast Guard will be able to fine cargo ships
that don't comply with ballast water reporting regulations. Source: Great
Lakes Radio Consortium (6/21)


Waterways choked with flood debris
----------------------------------------
The May floods that swamped hundreds of acres in Macomb County, causing an
estimated $6 million in damage, are still causing problems on the waterways.
Source: The Detroit News (6/20)


Revolution or pollution?
----------------------------------------
Minnesota's Iron Range is viewed mostly as a home to polluting industry, but
Excelsior Energy and Mesabi Nugget say they can make steel and power more
cleanly and efficiently than ever before. Source: Duluth News Tribune
(6/20)


Breeze opening Canada health market
----------------------------------------
Health care providers hope Canadian patients will hop on the ferry in
Toronto to get medical services in the U.S. - bypassing the long waiting
times for many services at home. Source: Rochester Democrat and Chronicle
(6/20)


COMMENTARY: 'Frankenfish' may be coming to water near you
----------------------------------------
Northern snakeheads, a top-level predator fish native to China, have the
potential to wreak as much havoc as the litany of other invader pests that
increasingly are plaguing the Great Lakes. Source: The Toledo Blade (6/20)


Storms stir up E. coli, prompting water warnings at area beaches
----------------------------------------
In the wake of this week's heavy rain, water at some of Ohio's Lake Erie
beaches may be rich with E. coli bacteria, which can cause nausea, abdominal
cramps, and diarrhea if swallowed. Source: The Toledo Blade (6/19)


New diversion rules soon to test the water
----------------------------------------
The region's governors are expected to release a draft of new rules
governing water diversion from the Great Lakes within a month, but nobody
should expect a free flow from the world's largest freshwater system anytime
soon. Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (6/18)


EDITORIAL: It's everybody's sewage
----------------------------------------
The consensus after this spring's heavy rains and subsequent dumping of
storm water and raw sewage into Lake Michigan is that changes need to be
made at the Metropolitan Milwaukee Sewerage District. Source: Milwaukee
Journal Sentinel (6/15)

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Great Lakes News: 18 June 2004
A collaborative project of the Great Lakes Information Network and the Great
Lakes Radio Consortium.

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Ontario considers building a nuclear plant
----------------------------------------
Moves are under way in Ontario to build the first nuclear reactor in North
America in more than two decades. Source: The New York Times (6/18)


Champagne, sushi mark ferry inaugural
----------------------------------------
The Spirit of Ontario set sail Thursday with its first shipload of paying
passengers, the majority dressed in formal attire for the high-priced party.
Source: Rochester Democrat and Chronicle (6/18)


Head west for a quick getaway
----------------------------------------
Several new or improved attractions, beyond the pristine Lake Michigan
beaches, make west Michigan and Wisconsin prime vacation spots for families
seeking an easy getaway just a few hours' drive from Detroit. Source: The
Detroit News (6/18)


Walleye population takes a hit
----------------------------------------
Much like the yellow perch population in Lake Michigan, Lake Erie's walleye
population has seen a reduction over the past decade. Source: Merrillville
Post-Tribune (6/18)


Proposed DNR rules would limit mercury from coal-burning plants
----------------------------------------
With an eye on making fish from Wisconsin waters safer to eat, the Natural
Resources Board will be asked to approve regulations requiring utilities and
large manufacturers to reduce mercury emissions from coal-burning power
plants. Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (6/18)


State guide to eating fish is victim of cuts
----------------------------------------
Because of state budget cuts, the Michigan Department of Community Health
will not update or distribute its annual Michigan Family Fish Consumption
guide. Source: The Detroit News (6/18)


Harbor light to appear on license plate
----------------------------------------
Toledo's 100-year-old lighthouse is to be featured on a new Lake Erie
commemorative license plate to help benefit the Lake Erie Protection Fund.
Source: The Toledo Blade (6/18)


A faceoff on green power proposal
----------------------------------------
Environmentalists Wednesday praised a proposal that would require a quarter
of electricity purchased in New York to come from renewable energy sources,
but local business officials worried that the requirement could drive up
power prices. Source: The Buffalo News (6/17)


Young artists enlisted for new bridge mural
----------------------------------------
It depicts the Great Lakes region and the importance of the waterways
leading to it, and yesterday was the sneak preview of the new mural under
the Martin Luther King, Jr., Bridge on the west side of the Maumee River
near Maritime Plaza. Source: The Toledo Blade (6/17)


Government slow to respond to invasive species
----------------------------------------
Exotic species introduced into the Great Lakes are dominating or destroying
native creatures, yet the official response has been slowed by bureaucratic
inertia, budget shortfalls and fuzzy lines of responsibility. Source:
Duluth News Tribune (6/15)

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Great Lakes News: 17 June 2004
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Lakes Radio Consortium.

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New system will hasten results of E. coli tests
----------------------------------------
A new system could detect high levels of E. coli bacteria at Lake Michigan
beaches in just three hours instead of one day. Source: The Indianapolis
Star (6/17)


EDITORIAL: Aliens all over/nothing natural about this
----------------------------------------
The Great Lakes are not the only portion of the American environment under
severe threat from invasive animals and plants. Source: Star Tribune (6/17)


Bass virus is spreading, but still a mystery
----------------------------------------
No one knows where largemouth bass virus originated, but that question has
become moot now that the disease has spread to 17 states, including
Michigan. Source: Detroit Free Press (6/17)


Ferry makes a test run
----------------------------------------
The Spirit of Ontario makes its maiden passenger voyage today to Toronto.
Source: Rochester Democrat and Chronicle (6/17)


Zoning for water bottling disputed
----------------------------------------
A local man's plan to bottle and sell village water has slowed to a trickle
after a local environmental group made waves. Source: Traverse City
Record-Eagle (6/17)


Some will want to hold their breath over air quality
----------------------------------------
If you're an older adult, a child or someone with heart or lung disease,
particulate matters, Michigan officials say. Source: The Bay City Times
(6/16)


Deal for lake water may bring sewer funds
----------------------------------------
Milwaukee needs a major and likely expensive fix for its dumping-prone
sewers. Source: MSNBC (6/15)


EDITORIAL: Far-sighted beach rules anticipate rising waters
----------------------------------------
A new Army Corps of Engineers policy concerning the removal of vegetation
along exposed beaches in Grand Traverse and Saginaw bays could bring some
middle ground to the issue. Source: Traverse City Record Eagle (6/15)


Ford and GM plants in line for big slice of $1-billion fed pie
----------------------------------------
The federal government will invest $1 billion in the manufacturing sector
over the next five years, with half of that money earmarked for the auto
industry. Source: The St. Catharines Standard (6/15)


Trees coated in goop for ash borer assault
----------------------------------------
An operation is being carried out in the woods of Michigan and Ohio this
summer to put the sting on a certain type of insect: the emerald ash borer.
Source: The Toledo Blade (6/14)

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Great Lakes News: 15 June 2004
A collaborative project of the Great Lakes Information Network and the Great
Lakes Radio Consortium.

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Invaded waters: A sea of red tape
----------------------------------------
Inaction or delays by federal agencies in dealing with threats from invasive
speices have contributed to an ecological crisis in the Great Lakes and
beyond. Source: Star Tribune (6/15)


COMMENTARY: Similar studies yield different results on pollution
----------------------------------------
Judging people's sincerity is often less difficult than assessing scientific
accuracy, as evidenced by the debate over mercury pollution. Source: The
Beacon News (6/15)


Michigan State group backs dredging plan
----------------------------------------
A group of university experts says mechanical dredging is no more likely to
stir up contaminated sediments than other methods at Indiana Harbor and
Shipping Canal. Source: The Northwest Indiana Times (6/15)


Lakeshore plan starts to flow
----------------------------------------
The Marquette Greenway Plan, envisioned as a transformation of Indiana's
Lake Michigan shoreline from an Industrial Revolution-age relic to a
seamless recreational vista, is moving forward. Source: The Northwest
Indiana Times (6/15)


Sheriff's marine unit pushes watercraft safety
----------------------------------------
A recent fatal crash between a personal watercraft and a boat in Michigan's
Oakland County has renewed concerns about the safe use of the machines.
Source: The Detroit News (6/15)


Swimmers might be threatened by big rains
----------------------------------------
Heavy rains have flooded drought-stricken Lake Lansing, which means better
boating and fishing but poses a potential risk to swimmers. Source: Lansing
State Journal (6/15)


Rainfall boosts levels of lakes
----------------------------------------
The heavy, recent rains that flooded basements and roads in Metro Detroit
have also boosted Michigan's lake levels. Source: The Detroit News (6/14)


Deal for lake water may bring sewer funds
----------------------------------------
Discussions are quietly taking place regarding a controversial proposal in
which Milwaukee would provide Lake Michigan water to its suburbs in return
for cash to fix its sewer system. Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (6/14)


A new shortcut across the lake
----------------------------------------
Lake Express, a high-speed diesel catamaran, is the first passenger and car
ferry to operate between Milwaukee, Wis., and Muskegon, Mich., since the
Milwaukee Clipper bowed out in 1970. Source: Chicago Tribune (6/13)


Invaded waters: First in a series
----------------------------------------
The Great Lakes have become a giant outdoor biology experiment with no one
in charge, as invasive species have damaged irreversibly an ecological
design that took thousands of years to evolve. Includes links to image
galleries and other material. Source: Star Tribune (6/13)

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W I R E D N E W S Top Stories - 09:15AM 23.Jun.04.PDT
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

More False Information From TSA (Politics 8:55 a.m. PDT)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/politics/0,1283,63958,00.html/wn_ascii

It keeps getting worse. Turns out more airlines secretly turned over
sensitive passenger information to the Transporation Security
Administration than previously admitted, raising questions about
whether government employees broke the law. By Ryan Singel.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Profiting From Political Urgency (Politics 2:00 a.m. PDT)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/politics/0,1283,63951,00.html/wn_ascii

Sensing the importance of this year's election, organizations on the
political left and right are shelling out as much as $10,000 for
Votenet's voter-registration software. But will the company's products
actually produce voters on Election Day? By Louise Witt.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Stars Power Move to Green Energy (Autopia 2:00 a.m. PDT)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/autotech/0,2554,63883,00.html/wn_ascii

Driven by a desire to lessen America's dependence on fossil fuels,
actors like Cameron Diaz, Ed Begley Jr. and Dennis Weaver hop on the
green-power bandwagon. By John Gartner.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Rocket Fuel Found in Moo Juice (Med-Tech Center Tuesday)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/medtech/0,1286,63948,00.html/wn_ascii

Researchers detect small amounts of perchlorate -- the explosive
ingredient in missile fuel that has been linked to thyroid damage -- in
milk from California cows.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

File-Trading Bill Stokes Fury (Business 2:00 a.m. PDT)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/business/0,1367,63969,00.html/wn_ascii

A new bill would make it illegal to 'induce' people to steal copyright
materials. It could help the recording industry fight piracy, but
opponents say it targets any device that could store or play pirated
files. By Joanna Glasner.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Florida: Felon List Not for Copy (Machine Politics 2:00 a.m. PDT)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/evote/0,2645,63972,00.html/wn_ascii

State officials respond to a CNN suit, saying they don't have to give
the media copies of a felon list. Preventing felons from voting in
Florida elections may disenfranchise legitimate voters. Jacob Ogles
reports from Orlando.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Digging for E-Voting Skulduggery (Machine Politics 2:00 a.m. PDT)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/evote/0,2645,63954,00.html/wn_ascii

Electronic-voting activists suspect that some election officials who
ardently defend touch-screen voting machines are in the pockets of the
machine makers. So one nonprofit is digging into the issue. By Kim
Zetter.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Florida to Tax Home Networks (Business 2:00 a.m. PDT)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/business/0,1367,63962,00.html/wn_ascii

Home and small businesses with two or more networked computers may be
subject to a communications tax in Florida. No one seems to want the
tax, but it's moving along anyway. By Michelle Delio.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Thursday, June 24, 2004

California family drives to Argentina on recycled vegetable oil

Thursday, June 24, 2004
By Terence Chea, Associated Press

BERKELEY, California — Mali Blotta and David Modersbach were unfazed by rising gas prices when they drove 11,000 miles (17,700 kilometers) during a recent family road trip from California to Argentina. Their 24-year-old station wagon runs on much cheaper fuel: recycled vegetable oil.

http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-24/s_25117.asp

New on ENN:
Great Lakes Forever Campaign Launched in U.S.

From Biodiversity Project
Wednesday, June 23, 2004

MADISON, Wis. (June 22, 2004) ? According to a recent report from the Environmental Projection Agency and the Government of Canada, "the Great Lakes are changing . . ." This summer, the Biodiversity Project, a Madison-based non-profit environmental education and communications group, hopes millions of Great Lakes region residents will become concerned about the future of the Lakes to change things for the better.

Following two years of public opinion research in the Great Lakes states, the Biodiversity Project, headed by executive director Jane Elder, is launching its Great Lakes Forever public education initiative this June. "This campaign is a bit different," said Elder. "We're not just trying to achieve a short-term victory. Instead, we're trying to raise the overall profile of a suite of threats to the Great Lakes. We're trying to build a deeper constituency for the lengthy effort that it will take to restore, protect and care for one of the world's largest freshwater ecosystems."

Stretching from the rustic shores of Lake Superior, through the hard-working waters of Lake Michigan, Huron, Erie and Ontario, and on to the mouth of the St. Lawrence river, the Great Lakes are one of the natural wonders of the world. The Lakes and their connecting channels contain roughly 18 percent of the world's surface freshwater, second only to the polar ice caps. More than 37 million people and a rich, unique diversity of plants and animals call the Lakes and their surrounding lands and waterways home.

The Great Lakes' natural bounty have played a defining role in the region's history and still support its primary economic activities - including...(Full Story)

Wednesday, June 23, 2004

Anti-War Left Makes Grab for Dem Platform

By Charles Mahaleris
Talon News
June 8, 2004

They've protested. They've rallied. They've banged drums. Now those who cry loudest for an end to the military operation in Iraq are preparing to let their voices be heard at the Democratic and Republican National Conventions this summer in Boston and New York City respectively.

The nation's ardent anti-war activists are planning efforts aimed during both political parties' conventions this summer to add an anti-war leg to the party platforms.

Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-OH), the self-described "Peace Candidate," knows that he cannot win his party's nomination for the White House but has remained in the race in order to advance his anti-war message. Kucinich has organized a petition drive that he hopes will pull the Democratic Party firmly into the anti-war camp.

"On July 29th, the 4400 or so delegates to the Democratic National Convention will...(Full Story)

Kucinich should be Democratic nominee
Bucks County Courier Times

As Sen. John Kerry waffles his way to the Democratic nomination for president, it's fairly forgotten that U.S. Congressman Dennis Kucinich of Ohio still wants the spot.

Mostly abandoned by the press, Kucinich and his team remain on a lonely campaign.

They made a swing through New Jersey late last week, stopping at the Moorestown Friends School, where Kucinich spoke to a packed auditorium.

Kucinich embodies cutting-edge liberalism, which can be summed up thusly: The only thing better than Big Government is Bigger Government.

(Full Story)[And it's a good one, too!]

Kucinich Takes Roads Less Traveled in Bid
Campaign Stops in Neglected Areas Help Democrat Net 70 Convention Delegates

By Evelyn Nieves
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, June 7, 2004; Page A04

MOORESTOWN, N.J. -- As the candidate for president of the United States stepped onto the stage, flashing a smile and a wave, the audience exploded with cheers and applause and screams worthy of Beatles fans.

(Full Story)

No-frills Kucinich show hits N.J.
Democratic hopeful in pre-primary visit
Sunday, June 06, 2004
BY MIKE FRASSINELLI
Star-Ledger Staff

The Democratic presidential candidate with the dark hair, thick regional accent and surname that begins with K went stumping for last-minute votes in New Jersey yesterday, railing against President Bush and the war in Iraq.

No, not John Kerry. That other Democratic presidential candidate, Dennis Kucinich. The candidate who travels not with Secret Service in limousines, but with friends in a minivan. (Full Story)

UCSC students march for peace
Sentinel staff report

SAN FRANCISCO — About two dozen UC Santa Cruz students marched from Santa Clara to San Francisco over the holiday weekend to support a bill calling for creation of a Cabinet- level Department of Peace, said Will Parrish, a UCSC student...(Full Story)

Isle Democrats meet in
atmosphere of openness


By Richard Borreca
rborreca@starbulletin.com

With an influx of new party members, the state Democratic Party this weekend is debating the influence of corporations on democracy; whether to support Israel or Palestine; and whether President Bush should be impeached.

Democrats, gathering at the Sheraton Waikiki Hotel for their biennial convention, are going through hundreds of resolutions, many introduced by first-time delegates who were drawn to the party because of a dislike for Bush and the early excitement of the Democratic presidential primary.

One resolution in rhyme declares: (Full Story)

Tuesday, June 22, 2004

Wired News - a must-read for the latest information and commentary on
our rapidly changing digital world.

W I R E D N E W S Top Stories - 09:15AM 22.Jun.04.PDT
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

NASA Spaces on Energy Solution (Technology 2:00 a.m. PDT)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/technology/0,1282,63913,00.html/wn_ascii

Beaming power gathered by satellites to Earth could help satisfy the
world's need for energy, and several nations are researching it.
However, the country with the biggest pockets -- the United States --
has taken a pass. By John Gartner.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Court: Names Must Be Revealed (Politics Monday)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/politics/0,1283,63926,00.html/wn_ascii

The Supreme Court says people must give their names to cops when they
ask for it, and cops have the right to arrest people who refuse. One
privacy advocate says the government just turned silence into a crime.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Alternative Fuels Cropping Up (Politics Monday)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/politics/0,1283,63930,00.html/wn_ascii

British scientists urge farmers to grow crops that can produce
plastics, oils and other products currently made from fossil fuels.
They say the climate is warming and crude supplies will soon be
exhausted.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Wired News - a must-read for the latest information and commentary on
our rapidly changing digital world.

W I R E D N E W S Top Stories - 07:15AM 19.Jun.04.PDT
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Pentagon Seeks U.S. Spy Powers (Security Blanket 2:00 a.m. PDT)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/privacy/0,1848,63917,00.html/wn_ascii

The Department of Defense is asking for an exemption from the Privacy
Act, which outlaws secret databases on Americans. Civil-rights
activists are asking why the military wants to get into the domestic
spying business. By Ryan Singel.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Costs of Warming on the Rise (Technology 2:00 a.m. PDT)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/technology/0,1282,63895,00.html/wn_ascii

Scientists say climate change is upon us, and the longer we wait to do
something, the more expensive it will be. Also: New York air is getting
worse.... Coral reefs gain protection. By Stephen Leahy.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Voter Drives, Without Politics (Politics 2:00 a.m. PDT)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/politics/0,1283,63902,00.html/wn_ascii

Many special-interest groups, liberal and conservative, have tried to
get more young people to vote, but without much success. So the Soap
Box Coalition is trying a different tack -- by not appealing to
ideology at all. By Jacob Ogles.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Blogs Welcome at Dems' Convention (Culture Sunday)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/culture/0,1284,63920,00.html/wn_ascii

Coverage of this summer's political conventions could be a little more
colorful than in the past: Democrats have invited bloggers to apply for
media credentials for the party's bash. Republicans remain unsure how
to handle the brash voices filling the brave new world of political
blogs.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Galileo: Challenge to U.S. Might? (Technology 2:00 a.m. PDT)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/technology/0,1282,63865,00.html/wn_ascii

Global positioning satellite technology, developed by the U.S.
military, has become so pervasive and vital to national economies that
the Europeans want their own version. But the Europeans have to solve a
lot of problems first, including soothing American generals. By Noah
Shachtman.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Builders in a Strange Land (Technology 2:00 a.m. PDT)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/technology/0,1282,63893,00.html/wn_ascii

The first settlers on Mars probably won't be dragging building
materials to their new home, so people are planning to make buildings
from what's already on the surface. By Mark Baard.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Eco-Terror Cited as Top Threat (Med-Tech Center 2:00 a.m. PDT)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/medtech/0,1286,63812,00.html/wn_ascii

Law enforcement officials warn that biotechnology firms, particularly
those that conduct research on animals, must take greater precautions
against attacks by extremist groups. By Kristen Philipkoski.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

State Sets Standard for E-Voting (Business Tuesday)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/business/0,1367,63869,00.html/wn_ascii

California officials release a set of standards for building touch-
screen voting machines with a voter-verified paper trail mechanism.
Other states, and the feds, may adopt California's standards. By Kim
Zetter.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Calls for Leash on Voter Data (Business Tuesday)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/business/0,1367,63861,00.html/wn_ascii

A California state task force says the state should take more steps to
guard the information that people reveal about themselves on voter
registration forms. By Kim Zetter.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Thousands of Blogs Fall Silent (Culture Tuesday)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/culture/0,1284,63856,00.html/wn_ascii

With the flip of a switch Sunday, Dave Winer closed Weblogs.com
without warning, leaving bloggers in the lurch. Winer cites personal
reasons, but that's not good enough for everyone. By Michelle Delio.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Senate Votes for More Nukes (Politics Tuesday)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/politics/0,1283,63858,00.html/wn_ascii

The U.S. Senate backs the Bush administration's plan to study low-
yield and earth-penetrating nuclear weapons. The administration insists
it has no plans to actually build the weapons -- it just wants to keep
the door open to their development.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Women Vote for Paper Trail (Machine Politics Monday)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/evote/0,2645,63847,00.html/wn_ascii

The League of Women Voters withdraws its support of paperless voting
machines and endorses a resolution in favor of 'voting systems and
procedures that are secure, accurate, recountable and accessible.'
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

New 'Hiccup' for Florida Voters (Machine Politics Monday)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/evote/0,2645,63837,00.html/wn_ascii

The Sunshine State's election controversies continue to unfold: Now
the state admits that a number of e-voting machines have a software
flaw that makes manual recounting impossible. But things will work out,
officials say.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Food Makers Changing Genes (Technology 2:00 a.m. PDT)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/technology/0,1282,63779,00.html/wn_ascii

Better flavor and genetically altered livestock are on the agenda at
the BIO conference. Also: Protestors drop in.... Personalized medicine
not dead yet.... Do-it-yourself DNA extraction. Wired News reports from
San Francisco.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

The Son of Patriot Act Also Rises (Security Blanket 2:00 a.m. PDT)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/privacy/0,1848,63800,00.html/wn_ascii

Legislators attempt to pass Patriot Act II provisions to increase
government power with legislative tricks, adding them to unrelated
must-pass bills. It's a repeat of last year's events, but this time
opponents are watching. By Kim Zetter.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Florida Faces Election Fracas (Machine Politics 2:00 a.m. PDT)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/evote/0,2645,63781,00.html/wn_ascii

Following the disastrous 2000 election snafu, Florida faces another
debacle -- this time over a database that's supposed to keep felons
from voting. But it also contains thousands of names of people who have
every right to vote, critics say. By Jacob Ogles.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Clean Cars Lean on Dirty Old Gas (Autopia 2:00 a.m. PDT)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/autotech/0,2554,63787,00.html/wn_ascii

Researchers have come up with a way for cars to run cleaner -- using
hydrogen pulled from gasoline. There are still plenty of hurdles to
overcome. By Mark Baard.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Powell: Terrorism Report Mistake (Politics Sunday)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/politics/0,1283,63832,00.html/wn_ascii

A State Department report showing that terrorism declined last year
was a big mistake, according to Secretary of State Colin Powell.
Embarassed and apologetic, Powell is trying to determine how the errors
originated.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Infosys: Outsourcing Row Easing (Business Sunday)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/business/0,1367,63830,00.html/wn_ascii

The controversy over sending U.S. jobs overseas is losing steam, says
the CEO of Infosys, India's second largest software exporter. The
election-year issue could spell trouble for tech companies depending on
the low-cost labor.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

New Nuclear Program Sidelined (Politics Thursday)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/politics/0,1283,63795,00.html/wn_ascii

A key congressman moves to withhold funding for the development of new
atomic arms, in a blow to the Bush administration. But the programs
won't go away without a fight. By Noah Shachtman.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Suicide by Pseudoscience (Wired magazine 2:00 a.m. PDT)
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/12.06/view.html?pg=4
Political purges will kill American science. Just ask Trofim Lysenko,
one of Stalin's top scientific stooges. By Bruce Sterling from Wired
magazine.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Weapons Makers Turn to Medicine (Med-Tech Center Tuesday)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/medtech/0,1286,63759,00.html/wn_ascii

Soviet scientists once tasked with making bioweapons find a rewarding
alternative in medicine, with a boost from the U.S. State Department.
Kristen Philipkoski reports from San Francisco.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Diebold Bans Political Donations (Politics Monday)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/politics/0,1283,63753,00.html/wn_ascii

Stung by criticism about its chief executive's political fund raising,
Diebold says it won't let its senior executives make donations to
candidates. Employees at its election systems division also will be
barred.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Senators Back Low-Power Radio (Politics 2:00 a.m. PDT)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/politics/0,1283,63731,00.html/wn_ascii

Sens. John McCain and Patrick Leahy introduce a bill that would allow
low-power radio stations to get licenses to broadcast in big markets.
But commercial radio interests probably won't give up the spectrum
without a fight. By Ryan Singel.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Drowning in an Ocean of Plastic (Technology 2:00 a.m. PDT)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/technology/0,1282,63699,00.html/wn_ascii

Today's World Environment Day focuses on the state of the seas. One of
the biggest concerns is plastic -- it's everywhere, from the surface to
the innards of plankton. By Stephen Leahy.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Gulf Vets Victimized Again (U.S. vs. Them Friday)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/conflict/0,2100,63716,00.html/wn_ascii

Veterans of the first Gulf War, plagued by health problems that appear
to be associated with exposure to chemical agents, may be getting
shortchanged on their treatment due to flawed data gathering by the
Defense Department.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Your Computer Is Bad for You (Technology Friday)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/technology/0,1282,63717,00.html/wn_ascii

Monitors and processors contain residual 'toxic dust,' chemicals that
are linked to various reproductive and neurological problems, a study
concludes. Bit by bit, manufacturers are dealing with the problem.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Cities Say No to the Patriot Act (Security Blanket 2:00 a.m. PDT)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/privacy/0,1848,63702,00.html/wn_ascii

As Bush launches a campaign to promote the Patriot Act and convince
Congress to renew sections set to expire next year, hundreds of cities
across the United States say enough is enough. By Kim Zetter.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Summit: Carbon Dioxide Traders (Technology Sunday)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/technology/0,1282,63739,00.html/wn_ascii

A trade fair for buyers, sellers and brokers of carbon-dioxide
discharge permits convenes in Germany. Getting rid of the waste gas
blamed for global warming is a shell game, and profit may be the key to
reining in emissions.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Solar-Powered Gadgets on the Move (Technology Saturday)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/technology/0,1282,63737,00.html/wn_ascii

In the wilds or on the road, solar panels that fold into notebook-size
cases are charging everything from laptop computers to cameras and Palm
Pilots. But for some, a cell phone that works in the wilderness may not
be a boon.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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Great Lakes News: 22 June 2004
A collaborative project of the Great Lakes Information Network and the Great
Lakes Radio Consortium.

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Great Lakes future under microscope
----------------------------------------
A bill that would radically expand protection for New York wetlands is one
of three events converging in the state this month as part of an
accelerating debate over the fate of the Great Lakes. Source: Rochester
Democrat and Chronicle (6/22)


Downtown Detroit dock to welcome cruise ships
----------------------------------------
Detroit is banking on a $11.25 million passenger dock and terminal on the
Detroit River downtown to return the city to its historic status as a
passenger ship destination. Source: The Detroit News (6/22)


EDITORIAL: Dangerous neglect of water pollutants
----------------------------------------
Contamination of an aquifer with a cancer-causing solvent used by dry
cleaners shows how vulnerable Indiana's groundwater is to pollution -- and
how extensive the consequences. Source: The Indianapolis Star (6/22)


Plant guarantees sunburn
----------------------------------------
The juice of the wild parsnip, an invasive species from Eurasia, acts like a
sunblock in reverse, causing skin to blister when exposed to the juice and
sunshine. Source: The Green Bay News-Chronicle (6/22)


EDITORIAL: No time to carp
----------------------------------------
It's time for the incoming leader of the Council of Great Lakes Governors to
show Wisconsin is a team player in keeping invasive species out of the Great
Lakes. Source: The Ashland Daily Press (6/21)


Lake Superior charter fishing captains ride tourism's waves
----------------------------------------
With the big lake for an office, the 50 or so full-time charter fishing
captains on western Lake Superior live one of the region's more idyllic
business lifestyles. Source: BusinessNorth (6/20)


Glitches mar ferry run
----------------------------------------
The high-speed ferry got off to a slow start on its first day of regular
service Saturday, with computer problems delaying its departure and light
loads of passengers. Source: Rochester Democrat and Chronicle (6/20)


Lake Erie communities ready for annual mayfly infestation
----------------------------------------
With the onset of summer, thousands of mayflies hatch on the bottom of Lake
Erie, swarm over lakeside communities and then die in about 24 hours, making
a mess and leaving a strong fishy smell. Source: The Toledo Blade (6/19)


Decaying algae causes stink
----------------------------------------
Algae is a natural, living thing, but Lake Michigan beachgoers and health
officials have begun to notice a lot more of it . . . some forms of which
can pose health risks. Source: Herald Times Reporter (6/19)

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Did you miss a day of Daily News? Remember to use our searchable story
archive at http://www.great-lakes.net/news/inthenews.html


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Great Lakes Daily News is a collaborative project of the Great Lakes
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Consortium (www.glrc.org), both based in Ann Arbor, Mich.
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Forget the Democrats: Bush Losing Support Among Republicans
By TERESA HAMPTON & DOUG THOMPSON
Jun 18, 2004, 08:20

As President George W. Bush tries to convince an increasingly skeptical American electorate he deserves re-election in November, he also faces declining support among his Republican base amid growing discord over his foreign and domestic policies.

“The gloom among Republicans is deepening as President Bush falls behind Democratic nominee John F. Kerry,” says University of Virginia Political Science Professor Larry J. Sabato. At the heart of the gloom is Iraq. “Bush's presidency is--by his own admission--inextricably bound to Iraq, and things are going very badly there,” Sabato adds.

Bush’s Iraq woes deepened this week when...(Full Story)

Thursday, June 17, 2004

Date: Wed, 16 Jun 2004 14:54:00 -0700 (PDT)
From: Bogdan Bilyk
Subject: This is the Fight of Our Lives

Published on Wednesday, June 16, 2004 by Inequality.org

This is the Fight of Our Lives

by Bill Moyers
Keynote speech
Inequality Matters Forum
New York University
June 3, 2004


"The middle class and working poor are told that what´s happening to them is the consequence of Adam Smith´s ´Invisible Hand.´ This is a lie. What´s happening to them is the direct consequence of corporate activism, intellectual propaganda, the rise of a religious orthodoxy that in its hunger for government subsidies has made an idol of power, and a string of political decisions favoring the powerful and the privileged who bought the political system right out from under us."
-- Bill Moyers, Keynote speech, June 3, 2004

It is important from time to time to remember that some things are worth getting mad about.

Here´s one: On March 10 of this year, on page B8, with a headline that stretched across all six columns, The New York Times reported that tuition in the city´s elite private schools would hit $26,000 for the coming school year -- for kindergarten as well as high school. On the same page, under a two-column headline, Michael Wineraub wrote about a school in nearby Mount Vernon, the first stop out of the Bronx, with a student body that is 97 percent black. It is the poorest school in the town: nine out of ten children qualify for free lunches; one out of 10 lives in a homeless shelter. During black history month this past February, a sixth grader wanted to write a report on Langston Hughes. There were no books on Langston Hughes in the library -- no books about the great poet, nor any of his poems. There is only one book in the library on Frederick Douglass. None on Rosa Parks, Josephine Baker, Leontyne Price, or other giants like them in the modern era. In fact, except for a few
Newberry Award books the librarian bought with her own money, the library is mostly old books -- largely from the 1950s and 60s when the school was all white. A 1960 child´s primer on work begins with a youngster learning how to be a telegraph delivery boy. All the workers in the book -- the dry cleaner, the deliveryman, the cleaning lady -- are white. There´s a 1967 book about telephones which says: "when you phone you usually dial the number. But on some new phones you can push buttons." The newest encyclopedia dates from l991, with two volumes -- "b" and "r" -- missing. There is no card catalog in the library -- no index cards or computer.

Something to get mad about.

Here´s something else: Caroline Payne´s face and gums are distorted because her Medicaid-financed dentures don´t fit. Because they don´t fit, she is continuously turned down for jobs on account of her appearance. Caroline Payne is one of the people in David Shipler´s new book,´ The Working Poor: Invisible in America´. She was born poor, and in spite of having once owned her own home and having earned a two-year college degree, Caroline Payne has bounced from one poverty-wage job to another all her life, equipped with the will to move up, but not the resources to deal with unexpected and overlapping problems like a mentally handicapped daughter, a broken marriage, a sudden layoff crisis that forced her to sell her few assets, pull up roots and move on. "In the house of the poor," Shipler writes "...the walls are thin and fragile and troubles seep into one another."

Here´s something else to get mad about. Two weeks ago, the House of Representatives, the body of Congress owned and operated by the corporate, political, and religious right, approved new tax credits for children. Not for poor children, mind you. But for families earning as much as $309,000 a year -- families that already enjoy significant benefits from earlier tax cuts. The editorial page of The Washington Post called this "bad social policy, bad tax policy, and bad fiscal policy. You´d think they´d be embarrassed," said the Post, "but they´re not."

And this, too, is something to get mad about. Nothing seems to embarrass the political class in Washington today. Not the fact that more children are growing up in poverty in America than in any other industrial nation; not the fact that millions of workers are actually making less money today in real dollars than they did twenty years ago; not the fact that working people are putting in longer and longer hours and still falling behind; not the fact that while we have the most advanced medical care in the world, nearly 44 million Americans -- eight out of ten of them in working families -- are uninsured and cannot get the basic care they need.

Astonishing as it seems, no one in official Washington seems embarrassed by the fact that the gap between rich and poor is greater than it´s been in 50 years -- the worst inequality among all western nations. Or that we are experiencing a shift in poverty. For years it was said those people down there at the bottom were single, jobless mothers. For years they were told work, education, and marriage is how they move up the economic ladder. But poverty is showing up where we didn´t expect it -- among families that include two parents, a worker, and a head of the household with more than a high school education. These are the newly poor. Our political, financial and business class expects them to climb out of poverty on an escalator moving downward.

Let me tell you about the Stanleys and the Neumanns. During the last decade, I produced a series of documentaries for PBS called "Surviving the Good Times." The title refers to the boom time of the ´90s when the country achieved the longest period of economic growth in its entire history. Some good things happened then, but not everyone shared equally in the benefits. To the contrary. The decade began with a sustained period of downsizing by corporations moving jobs out of America and many of those people never recovered what was taken from them. We decided early on to tell the stories of two families in Milwaukee -- one black, one white -- whose breadwinners were laid off in the first wave of layoffs in 1991. We reported on how they were coping with the wrenching changes in their lives, and we stayed with them over the next ten years as they tried to find a place in the new global economy. They´re the kind of Americans my mother would have called "the salt of the earth." They love
their kids, care about their communities, go to church every Sunday, and work hard all week -- both mothers have had to take full-time jobs.

During our time with them, the fathers in both families became seriously ill. One had to stay in the hospital two months, putting his family $30,000 in debt because they didn´t have adequate health insurance. We were there with our camera when the bank started to foreclose on the modest home of the other family because they couldn´t meet the mortgage payments after dad lost his good-paying manufacturing job. Like millions of Americans, the Stanleys and the Neumanns were playing by the rules and still getting stiffed. By the end of the decade they were running harder but slipping behind, and the gap between them and prosperous America was widening.

What turns their personal tragedy into a political travesty is that they are patriotic. They love this country. But they no longer believe they matter to the people who run the country. When our film opens, both families are watching the inauguration of Bill Clinton on television in 1992. By the end of the decade they were no longer paying attention to politics. They don´t see it connecting to their lives. They don´t think their concerns will ever be addressed by the political, corporate, and media elites who make up our dominant class. They are not cynical, because they are deeply religious people with no capacity for cynicism, but they know the system is rigged against them. They know this, and we know this. For years now a small fraction of American households have been garnering an extreme concentration of wealth and income while large corporations and financial institutions have obtained unprecedented levels of economic and political power over daily life. In 1960, the gap in
terms of wealth between the top 20% and the bottom 20% was 30 fold. Four decades later it is more than 75 fold.

Such concentrations of wealth would be far less of an issue if the rest of society were benefiting proportionately. But that´s not the case. As the economist Jeff Madrick reminds us, the pressures of inequality on middle and working class Americans are now quite severe. "The strain on working people and on family life, as spouses have gone to work in dramatic numbers, has become significant. VCRs and television sets are cheap, but higher education, health care, public transportation, drugs, housing and cars have risen faster in price than typical family incomes. And life has grown neither calm nor secure for most Americans, by any means." You can find many sources to support this conclusion. I like the language of a small outfit here in New York called the Commonwealth Foundation/Center for the Renewal of American Democracy. They conclude that working families and the poor "are losing ground under economic pressures that deeply affect household stability, family dynamics, social
mobility, political participation, and civic life."

Household economics is not the only area where inequality is growing in America. Equality doesn´t mean equal incomes, but a fair and decent society where money is not the sole arbiter of status or comfort. In a fair and just society, the commonwealth will be valued even as individual wealth is encouraged.

Let me make something clear here. I wasn´t born yesterday. I´m old enough to know that the tension between haves and have-nots are built into human psychology, it is a constant in human history, and it has been a factor in every society. But I also know America was going to be different. I know that because I read Mr. Jefferson´s writings, Mr. Lincoln´s speeches and other documents in the growing American creed. I presumptuously disagreed with Thomas Jefferson about human equality being self-evident. Where I lived, neither talent, nor opportunity, nor outcomes were equal. Life is rarely fair and never equal. So what could he possibly have meant by that ringing but ambiguous declaration: "All men are created equal"? Two things, possibly. One, although none of us are good, all of us are sacred (Glenn Tinder), that´s the basis for thinking we are by nature kin.

Second, he may have come to see the meaning of those words through the experience of the slave who was his mistress. As is now widely acknowledged, the hands that wrote "all men are created equal" also stroked the breasts and caressed the thighs of a black woman named Sally Hennings. She bore him six children whom he never acknowledged as his own, but who were the only slaves freed by his will when he died -- the one request we think Sally Hennings made of her master. Thomas Jefferson could not have been insensitive to the flesh-and-blood woman in his arms. He had to know she was his equal in her desire for life, her longing for liberty, her passion for happiness.

In his book on the Declaration, my late friend Mortimer Adler said Jefferson realized that whatever things are really good for any human being are really good for all other human beings. The happy or good life is essentially the same for all: a satisfaction of the same needs inherent in human nature. A just society is grounded in that recognition. So Jefferson kept as a slave a woman whose nature he knew was equal to his. All Sally Hennings got from her long sufferance -- perhaps it was all she sought from what may have grown into a secret and unacknowledged love -- was that he let her children go. "Let my children go" -- one of the oldest of all petitions. It has long been the promise of America -- a broken promise, to be sure. But the idea took hold that we could fix what was broken so that our children would live a bountiful life. We could prevent the polarization between the very rich and the very poor that poisoned other societies. We could provide that each and every citizen
would enjoy the basic necessities of life, a voice in the system of self-government, and a better chance for their children. We could preclude the vast divides that produced the turmoil and tyranny of the very countries from which so many of our families had fled.

We were going to do these things because we understood our dark side -- none of us is good -- but we also understood the other side -- all of us are sacred. From Jefferson forward we have grappled with these two notions in our collective head -- that we are worthy of the creator but that power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely. Believing the one and knowing the other, we created a country where the winners didn´t take all. Through a system of checks and balances we were going to maintain a safe, if shifting, equilibrium between wealth and commonwealth. We believed equitable access to public resources is the lifeblood of any democracy. So early on [in Jeff Madrick´s description,] primary schooling was made free to all. States changed laws to protect debtors, often the relatively poor, against their rich creditors. Charters to establish corporations were open to most, if not all, white comers, rather than held for the elite. The government encouraged Americans to own
their own piece of land, and even supported squatters´ rights. The court challenged monopoly -- all in the name of we the people.

In my time we went to public schools. My brother made it to college on the GI bill. When I bought my first car for $450 I drove to a subsidized university on free public highways and stopped to rest in state-maintained public parks. This is what I mean by the commonwealth. Rudely recognized in its formative years, always subject to struggle, constantly vulnerable to reactionary counterattacks, the notion of America as a shared project has been the central engine of our national experience.

Until now. I don´t have to tell you that a profound transformation is occurring in America: the balance between wealth and the commonwealth is being upended. By design. Deliberately. We have been subjected to what the Commonwealth Foundation calls "a fanatical drive to dismantle the political institutions, the legal and statutory canons, and the intellectual and cultural frameworks that have shaped public responsibility for social harms arising from the excesses of private power." From land, water and other natural resources, to media and the broadcast and digital spectrums, to scientific discovery and medical breakthroughs, and to politics itself, a broad range of the American commons is undergoing a powerful shift toward private and corporate control. And with little public debate. Indeed, what passes for ´political debate´ in this country has become a cynical charade behind which the real business goes on -- the not-so-scrupulous business of getting and keeping power in order to
divide up the spoils.

We could have seen this coming if we had followed the money. The veteran Washington reporter, Elizabeth Drew, says "the greatest change in Washington over the past 25 years -- in its culture, in the way it does business and the ever-burgeoning amount of business transactions that go on here -- has been in the preoccupation with money." Jeffrey Birnbaum, who covered Washington for nearly twenty years for the Wall Street Journal, put it more strongly: "[campaign cash] has flooded over the gunwales of the ship of state and threatens to sink the entire vessel. Political donations determine the course and speed of many government actions that deeply affect our daily lives." Politics is suffocating from the stranglehold of money. During his brief campaign in 2000, before he was ambushed by the dirty tricks of the religious right in South Carolina and big money from George W. Bush´s wealthy elites, John McCain said elections today are nothing less than an "influence peddling scheme in which
both parties compete to stay in office by selling the country to the highest bidder."

Small wonder that with the exception of people like John McCain and Russ Feingold, official Washington no longer finds anything wrong with a democracy dominated by the people with money. Hit the pause button here, and recall Roger Tamraz. He´s the wealthy oilman who paid $300,000 to get a private meeting in the White House with President Clinton; he wanted help in securing a big pipeline in central Asia. This got him called before congressional hearings on the financial excesses of the 1996 campaign. If you watched the hearings on C-Span you heard him say he didn´t think he had done anything out of the ordinary. When they pressed him he told the senators: "Look, when it comes to money and politics, you make the rules. I´m just playing by your rules." One senator then asked if Tamraz had registered and voted. And he was blunt in his reply: "No, senator, I think money´s a bit more (important) than the vote."

So what does this come down to, practically?

Here is one accounting:

"When powerful interests shower Washington with millions in campaign contributions, they often get what they want. But it´s ordinary citizens and firms that pay the price and most of them never see it coming. This is what happens if you don´t contribute to their campaigns or spend generously on lobbying. You pick up a disproportionate share of America´s tax bill. You pay higher prices for a broad range of products from peanuts to prescriptions. You pay taxes that others in a similar situation have been excused from paying. You´re compelled to abide by laws while others are granted immunity from them. You must pay debts that you incur while others do not. You´re barred from writing off on your tax returns some of the money spent on necessities while others deduct the cost of their entertainment. You must run your business by one set of rules, while the government creates another set for your competitors. In contrast, the fortunate few who contribute to the right politicians and hire
the right lobbyists enjoy all the benefits of their special status. Make a bad business deal; the government bails them out. If they want to hire workers at below market wages, the government provides the means to do so. If they want more time to pay their debts, the government gives them an extension. If they want immunity from certain laws, the government gives it. If they want to ignore rules their competition must comply with, the government gives its approval. If they want to kill legislation that is intended for the public, it gets killed."

I´m not quoting from Karl Marx´s Das Kapital or Mao´s Little Red Book. I´m quoting Time magazine. Time´s premier investigative journalists -- Donald Bartlett and James Steele -- concluded in a series last year that America now has "government for the few at the expense of the many." Economic inequality begets political inequality, and vice versa.

That´s why the Stanleys and the Neumanns were turned off by politics. It´s why we´re losing the balance between wealth and the commonwealth. It´s why we can´t put things right. And it is the single most destructive force tearing at the soul of democracy. Hear the great justice Learned Hand on this: "If we are to keep our democracy, there must be one commandment: ´Thou shalt not ration justice.´ " Learned Hand was a prophet of democracy. The rich have the right to buy more homes than anyone else. They have the right to buy more cars than anyone else, more gizmos than anyone else, more clothes and vacations than anyone else. But they do not have the right to buy more democracy than anyone else.

I know, I know: this sounds very much like a call for class war. But the class war was declared a generation ago, in a powerful paperback polemic by William Simon, who was soon to be Secretary of the Treasury. He called on the financial and business class, in effect, to take back the power and privileges they had lost in the depression and new deal. They got the message, and soon they began a stealthy class war against the rest of society and the principles of our democracy. They set out to trash the social contract, to cut their workforces and wages, to scour the globe in search of cheap labor, and to shred the social safety net that was supposed to protect people from hardships beyond their control. Business Week put it bluntly at the time: "Some people will obviously have to do with less....it will be a bitter pill for many Americans to swallow the idea of doing with less so that big business can have more."

The middle class and working poor are told that what´s happening to them is the consequence of Adam Smith´s "Invisible Hand." This is a lie. What´s happening to them is the direct consequence of corporate activism, intellectual propaganda, the rise of a religious orthodoxy that in its hunger for government subsidies has made an idol of power, and a string of political decisions favoring the powerful and the privileged who bought the political system right out from under us.

To create the intellectual framework for this takeover of public policy they funded conservative think tanks -- The Heritage Foundation, the Hoover Institution, and the American Enterprise Institute -- that churned out study after study advocating their agenda.

To put political muscle behind these ideas they created a formidable political machine. One of the few journalists to cover the issues of class -- Thomas Edsall of The Washington Post -- wrote: "During the 1970s, business refined its ability to act as a class, submerging competitive instincts in favor of joint, cooperate action in the legislative area." Big business political action committees flooded the political arena with a deluge of dollars. And they built alliances with the religious right -- Jerry Falwell´s Moral Majority and Pat Robertson´s Christian Coalition -- who mounted a cultural war providing a smokescreen for the class war, hiding the economic plunder of the very people who were enlisted as foot soldiers in the cause of privilege.

In a book to be published this summer, Daniel Altman describes what he calls the "neo-economy -- a place without taxes, without a social safety net, where rich and poor live in different financial worlds -- and [said Altman] it´s coming to America." He´s a little late. It´s here. Says Warren Buffett, the savviest investor of them all: "My class won."

Look at the spoils of victory:

Over the past three years, they´ve pushed through $2 trillion dollars in tax cuts -- almost all tilted towards the wealthiest people in the country.

Cuts in taxes on the largest incomes.

Cuts in taxes on investment income.

And cuts in taxes on huge inheritances.

More than half of the benefits are going to the wealthiest one percent. You could call it trickle-down economics, except that the only thing that trickled down was a sea of red ink in our state and local governments, forcing them to cut services for and raise taxes on middle class working America.

Now the Congressional Budget Office forecasts deficits totaling $2.75 trillion over the next ten years.

These deficits have been part of their strategy. Some of you will remember that Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan tried to warn us 20 years ago, when he predicted that President Ronald Reagan´s real strategy was to force the government to cut domestic social programs by fostering federal deficits of historic dimensions. Reagan´s own budget director, David Stockman, admitted as such. Now the leading rightwing political strategist, Grover Norquist, says the goal is to "starve the beast" -- with trillions of dollars in deficits resulting from trillions of dollars in tax cuts, until the United States Government is so anemic and anorexic it can be drowned in the bathtub.

There´s no question about it: The corporate conservatives and their allies in the political and religious right are achieving a vast transformation of American life that only they understand because they are its advocates, its architects, and its beneficiaries. In creating the greatest economic inequality in the advanced world, they have saddled our nation, our states, and our cities and counties with structural deficits that will last until our children´s children are ready for retirement, and they are systematically stripping government of all its functions except rewarding the rich and waging war.

And they are proud of what they have done to our economy and our society. If instead of practicing journalism I was writing for Saturday Night Live, I couldn´t have made up the things that this crew have been saying. The president´s chief economic adviser says shipping technical and professional jobs overseas is good for the economy. The president´s Council of Economic Advisers report that hamburger chefs in fast food restaurants can be considered manufacturing workers. The president´s Federal Reserve Chairman says that the tax cuts may force cutbacks in social security - but hey, we should make the tax cuts permanent anyway. The president´s Labor Secretary says it doesn´t matter if job growth has stalled because "the stock market is the ultimate arbiter."

You just can´t make this stuff up. You have to hear it to believe it. This may be the first class war in history where the victims will die laughing.

But what they are doing to middle class and working Americans -- and to the workings of American democracy -- is no laughing matter. Go online and read the transcripts of Enron traders in the energy crisis four years ago, discussing how they were manipulating the California power market in telephone calls in which they gloat about ripping off "those poor grandmothers." Read how they talk about political contributions to politicians like "Kenny Boy" Lay´s best friend George W. Bush. Go on line and read how Citigroup has been fined $70 Million for abuses in loans to low-income, high risk borrowers - the largest penalty ever imposed by the Federal Reserve. A few clicks later, you can find the story of how a subsidiary of the corporate computer giant NEC has been fined over $20 million after pleading guilty to corruption in a federal plan to bring Internet access to poor schools and libraries. And this, the story says, is just one piece of a nationwide scheme to rip off the government
and the poor.

Let´s face the reality: If ripping off the public trust; if distributing tax breaks to the wealthy at the expense of the poor; if driving the country into deficits deliberately to starve social benefits; if requiring states to balance their budgets on the backs of the poor; if squeezing the wages of workers until the labor force resembles a nation of serfs -- if this isn´t class war, what is?

It´s un-American. It´s unpatriotic. And it´s wrong.

But I don´t need to tell you this. You wouldn´t be here if you didn´t know it. Your presence at this gathering confirms that while an America with liberty and justice for all is a broken promise, it is not a lost cause. Once upon a time I thought the mass media -- my industry -- would help mend this broken promise and save this cause. After all, the sight of police dogs attacking peaceful demonstrators forced America to recognize the reality of racial injustice. The sight of carnage in Vietnam forced us to recognize the war was unwinnable. The sight of terrorists striking the World Trade Center woke us from a long slumber of denial and distraction. I thought the mass media might awaken Americans to the reality that this ideology of winner-take-all is working against them and not for them. I was wrong. With honorable exceptions, we can´t count on the mass media.

What we need is a mass movement of people like you. Get mad, yes -- there´s plenty to be mad about. Then get organized and get busy. This is the fight of our lives.

Tenacious D
Against all odds, Dennis Kucinich plans to make his presence felt through next month’s Democratic National Convention and beyond
BY ADAM REILLY


FOR A CANDIDATE who failed to win a single presidential primary, Dennis Kucinich has an impressively healthy sense of his own importance. Last month, Kucinich — the only Democrat other than John Kerry still actively running — opened his Democratic National Convention headquarters in a cramped fourth-floor office on Temple Place, just off Boston Common. Addressing his assembled supporters by speakerphone from Oregon, where he was campaigning in the run-up to the May 18 primary, the Ohio congressman promised to push the party to the left when the convention opens in July. "We’ll have dozens of delegates inside the convention, but we’ll have thousands of people in the streets of Boston," Kucinich declared. "We can put pressure on the party to take the right positions on civil liberties, health care, Iraq, and the Patriot Act. We’re going to be the conscience of the party. And that will help the Democrats win."

Strong words, coming from someone who's heading into the convention with 68 of the party's more than 4300 delegates. When the battle for the Democratic nomination was still going strong and televised debates gave Kucinich regular access to a national audience, few voters saw his agenda — which includes immediate American withdrawal from Iraq and NAFTA, and the establishment of a cabinet-level Department of Peace — as viable. There’s no reason that should change during a convention focused on selling John Kerry as an electable centrist. But Kucinich’s self-assurance is equaled — and perhaps enabled — by his distinct lack of pragmatism. In a recent phone interview, I asked Kucinich if any Democratic leaders had urged him to quit campaigning. He answered with a loud guffaw and a prickly, pedantic rejoinder that spoke volumes about how and why he persists. "Never," Kucinich said after he finished laughing. "I mean, not at all. I don’t even think in those terms. If you don’t think in those terms, somehow it just doesn’t happen to you." After a pause, he continued: "I want you to think about that now. I don’t live in a world like that. Maybe other people do."

IT WAS CLEAR early in the Democratic-primary campaign that Kucinich faced long odds (see "Running on Ideas," News and Features, October 3, 2003). Some of his problems were substantive: when Howard Dean seized the anti-war mantle, Kucinich — who co-chairs the Congressional Progressive Caucus and led opposition to the Iraq-war resolution in the House — saw his most appealing stand co-opted by a competitor. Low poll numbers, small fundraising totals, and a string of poor finishes didn’t help his cause, either. Other problems, however superficial in nature, were no less damaging. Kucinich is a small man with lank, unkempt hair and large ears; rather than fitting the standard image of a presidential candidate, he looks like a dour elf — one whose manner is often brittle and who, for good measure, just happens to be a vegan.

Still, Kucinich persevered. And though few pundits or voters ever saw him as a serious contender, his doggedness earned the grudging respect of some once-skeptical observers. Kucinich’s shining moment came in a University of New Hampshire debate last December, when he scolded moderator Ted Koppel for his fixation on inside-baseball questions and was cheered by a grateful audience. The relentlessly idealistic congressman also engaged in some old-fashioned horse-trading in the Iowa caucuses, engineering a vote swap with North Carolina senator John Edwards that added intrigue to the event and may have helped Edwards, who finished second, increase his margin over the third-place Dean. And in the "Who Wants To Be a First Lady" contest sponsored by PoliticsNH.com, Kucinich signaled a William Shatner–esque willingness to refashion himself as an ironic pop icon. (See "Five Notable Kucinichian Moments," below.)

Kucinich wasn’t the only long-shot candidate in the Democratic field, which included the Reverend Al Sharpton and former ambassador Carol Moseley Braun. But he never seemed to realize that he almost certainly wouldn’t be the nominee. Quite the contrary — on the day of the Iowa caucuses, Kucinich pondered a scenario in which he would emerge from a deadlocked convention as the Democratic Party’s nominee, telling the Associated Press: "It is inevitable, really." As other, more viable candidates bowed out, Kucinich stuck around, only conceding after Super Tuesday that he would not, in fact, become president.

The cynical explanation for Kucinich’s persistence is that he came to crave the media spotlight and the adulation showered on him by die-hard supporters, and merely said what was necessary to justify his continued presence in the race. "This is a guy who would eat publicity morning, noon, and night," says University of Virginia political scientist Larry Sabato. "I like to call him the House equivalent of John McCain. He can’t get enough press or enough TV time." Even some of Kucinich’s ideological compatriots were annoyed by his apparent obliviousness. "The thing that bothered me about Dennis was that he would never admit the unreality of what he was doing," says former Nation editor Micah Sifry. "Had he done that, he would have been more real right away — ‘You know what, folks, this is a long-shot bid. I know how hard this may be, and we may not get there.’ But he was always saying he was going all the way, that he was going to be the next nominee. And it made a lot of people say, ‘This guy is nuts.’"

(Full Story)

Wednesday, June 16, 2004

ENN Environmental News Network
E-mail Edition 06/16/2004

EarthTalk: What happened to the "paperless office"?
The paperless office does appear to still be a distant dream. A recent University of California, Berkeley study found that, worldwide, the amount of printed matter generated between 1999 and 2002 not only did not decrease: It grew by 36 percent.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-16/s_24625.asp

World's land turning to desert at an alarming speed, warns United Nations
The world is turning to dust, with land the size of Rhode Island becoming desert wasteland every year and the problem threatening to send millions of people fleeing to greener countries, the United Nations says.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-16/s_24932.asp

U.S. Senate backs Bush on new nuclear weapons
The U.S. Senate Tuesday backed the Bush administration's plan to study a new generation of low-yield and earth-penetrating nuclear weapons, rejecting concerns that the research could spur an arms race.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-16/s_24931.asp

Research indicates endangered mouse never actually existed
Amy and Steve LeSatz want to be able to teach their clients the finer points of riding and roping without having to trailer their animals 25 miles to the nearest public indoor arena whenever the weather turns miserable.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-16/s_24892.asp

Ukraine announces it will continue to destroy rocket fuel
Ukraine will destroy thousands of tons of rocket fuel from nuclear missiles that were voluntarily decommissioned by the former Soviet republic, an official said Tuesday.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-16/s_24934.asp

Australia unveils multimillion-dollar energy plan to help environment
Australia's government, which has refused to ratify the Kyoto protocol to reduce the world's greenhouse gas emissions, announced a new fund Tuesday to boost research into cleaner energy sources.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-16/s_24935.asp

Carmakers may sue California on new emissions plan
Automakers are considering challenging in court California's plan to require vehicles sold in the state to cut greenhouse gas emissions almost 30 percent, an industry group said Tuesday.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-16/s_24930.asp

Climate change experts despair over U.S. attitude
Climate change experts said Tuesday they are frustrated the U.S. government and the public are not taking the risk of global warming seriously.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-16/s_24928.asp

Chevron demands that Petroecuador pay costs from lawsuit
ChevronTexaco Corp. demanded Tuesday that Ecuador's state oil company cover costs incurred during its defense in a decade-old lawsuit over environmental damage in the country's Amazon jungle.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-16/s_24923.asp

U.S. House takes aim at Senate with energy bills
House Republicans launched a debate Tuesday to build new oil refineries and open an Alaskan wildlife refuge to drilling in an attempt to goad the Senate to act on a stalled energy bill.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-16/s_24927.asp



Environmental Marketplace Updates (Become a Member)

We'd like to encourage you to visit our Environmental Marketplace where you'll learn about some amazing environmentally-focused businesses. A few examples:

Adventure Life Journeys - an unusual travel company. Adventure Life takes a holistic approach to travel and is dedicated to expanding ecological and cultural awareness. Visit them on the web at http://www.adventure-life.com/index.html.

Alternative Energy Store - retailer for solar panels, windmills/wind turbines, inverters, solar water pumps, solar home heating systems and other solar and wind electric power systems for your home or business. Visit them on the web at http://www.altenergystore.com.

Environmental Construction Outfitters of New York - For over 15 years ECO of NY has been monitoring the issues related to safer, healthier, and environmentally responsible building products and systems. Visit them on the web at http://www.environmentaldepot.com.

Garden Kids - a children's clothing manufacturer dedicated to providing superior quality clothing using environmentally friendly products and socially responsible business practices. Visit them on the web at http://www.gardenkids.com.







Today's Press Releases (Become an Affiliate)
Direct from non-profit environmental and educational organizations.

Atlantic Salmon Federation:
INTERNATIONAL MEETING OFFERS HOPE FOR WILD SALMON

Sustainable Forestry and Certification Watch:
ForestLeadership Inaugural Conference Date Announced

Natural Resources Defense Council:
Honda Says It Could Meet Global Warming Requirements

World Land Trust:
New Diploma Course in Conservation - a First for the World Land Trust

Marine Stewardship Council:
Alaska Pollock Recommended for Environmental Certification

Monterey Bay Aquarium:
Monterey Bay Aquarium Creates Center For Future Of The Oceans

European Anglers´ Alliance:
NASCO 21st Annual Meeting; NGOs stimulate review for future of international salmon management

Sustainable Energy Coalition:
27 Sustainable Energy Groups Urge Senate to Enact McCain-Lieberman Climate

WWF-US Communications:
WWF Supports Newly Issued Recommendation for Certification of Alaska's Bering Sea/Aleutian Islands Pollock Fishery

Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society:
Quebec is lagging behind ...

IUCN - The World Conservation Union:
Experts Gather to Assess Status of North & Central American Sharks and Rays

University of North Carolina at Wilmington:
Aquarius mission studies how upwelling impacts Florida's coral reefs

Sustainable Energy Coalition:
Business, Environmental Groups Urge Bipartisan Support

ENN Environmental News Network
E-mail Edition 06/15/2004

Obesity is about far more than body image
We're too fat. There, I said it. Now let the letters fly. It seems that every time I write a column about obesity, I get letters from readers disappointed by how I've fallen prey to a culture obsessed with one image of beauty: a thin image.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-15/s_24725.asp

Environmental groups lose case over off-road vehicles
The Supreme Court on Monday blocked a lawsuit that accused the federal government of doing too little to protect undeveloped Western land from off-road vehicles.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-15/s_24886.asp

World Bank ponders its role in the environment
With the World Bank facing a decision on whether it should continue backing oil and mining projects, its chief environmental official says it should stay involved to ensure high standards of environmental protection.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-15/s_24882.asp

Nigerian well leaks tons of oil on villages
Suspected oil thieves unleashed tons of crude oil on villages in oil-rich southern Nigeria after tapping an abandoned well belonging to oil giant Royal Dutch/Shell (RD.AS)(SHEL.L), a company spokesman said.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-15/s_24881.asp

Sea protection costs less than fish subsidies, says study
Protecting the world's oceans will cost governments far less than the amount they spend on subsidies for fishing fleets and will lead to bigger catches in the long run, according to a new study.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-15/s_24883.asp

Oil-rich leaders turn tap on one of the largest investment projects in sub-Saharan Africa
Central African leaders officially opened the taps recently on one of the largest private investments in sub-Saharan Africa: a 663-mile, $3.7 billion pipeline snaking from Chad through virgin rain forests to the Atlantic.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-15/s_24891.asp

U.S. senator seeks Halliburton special counsel
Attorney General John Ashcroft should appoint a special counsel to investigate whether Vice President Dick Cheney helped his old firm Halliburton get lucrative deals in Iraq, a senior Democratic senator said Monday.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-15/s_24879.asp

Flood-menaced population to double by 2050, says U.N.
The number of people vulnerable to floods is expected to double to 2 billion worldwide by 2050 due to global warming, deforestation, rising sea levels, and population growth in flood-prone areas, U.N. researchers warned Sunday.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-15/s_24877.asp

Jakarta begins construction of monorail
Jakarta on Monday began construction on a multimillion-dollar monorail project that officials hope will help overcome the city's chronic traffic jams and pollution.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-15/s_24890.asp

Disease, hunger dog Haiti flood victims
Doctors are fighting to prevent multiple epidemics among survivors from the drowned Haitian town of Mapou, one of the worst-hit areas in floods that killed about 2,600 people three weeks ago.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-15/s_24878.asp



Environmental Marketplace Updates (Become a Member)

We'd like to encourage you to visit our Environmental Marketplace where you'll learn about some amazing environmentally-focused businesses. A few examples:

Adventure Life Journeys - an unusual travel company. Adventure Life takes a holistic approach to travel and is dedicated to expanding ecological and cultural awareness. Visit them on the web at http://www.adventure-life.com/index.html.

Alternative Energy Store - retailer for solar panels, windmills/wind turbines, inverters, solar water pumps, solar home heating systems and other solar and wind electric power systems for your home or business. Visit them on the web at http://www.altenergystore.com.

Environmental Construction Outfitters of New York - For over 15 years ECO of NY has been monitoring the issues related to safer, healthier, and environmentally responsible building products and systems. Visit them on the web at http://www.environmentaldepot.com.

Garden Kids - a children's clothing manufacturer dedicated to providing superior quality clothing using environmentally friendly products and socially responsible business practices. Visit them on the web at http://www.gardenkids.com.







Today's Press Releases (Become an Affiliate)
Direct from non-profit environmental and educational organizations.

Sustainable Forestry and Certification Watch:
ForestLeadership Inaugural Conference Date Announced

Atlantic Salmon Federation:
INTERNATIONAL MEETING OFFERS HOPE FOR WILD SALMON

Monterey Bay Aquarium:
Monterey Bay Aquarium Creates Center For Future Of The Oceans

Marine Stewardship Council:
Alaska Pollock Recommended for Environmental Certification

World Land Trust:
New Diploma Course in Conservation - a First for the World Land Trust

European Anglers´ Alliance:
NASCO 21st Annual Meeting; NGOs stimulate review for future of international salmon management

ENN Environmental News Network
E-mail Edition 06/11/2004

Cuba's new environmentalism faces challenges
The students of the escuela primeria in Los Tumbos, a village nestled deep within the rich agricultural province of Pinar Del Río, constantly hover around the computer awarded to the school a year ago. Their computer runs off of two small solar panels that gleam in the sun when not subjected to occasional rain showers in early summer.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-11/s_23757.asp

U.S. city's lights-out policy saves migrating birds
Turning out the lights of city skyscrapers is helping to save the lives of thousands of birds migrating across North American cities to their spring breeding grounds.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-11/s_24795.asp

California seen readying plan to cut auto emissions
California regulators will unveil a plan Monday that would require automakers to reduce vehicle emissions by as much as 30 percent on cars sold in the state by 2015, a San Francisco environmental group said Wednesday.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-11/s_24800.asp

Report says sage grouse are holding their own but face serious threats
The sage grouse, a once-abundant game bird under consideration for federal protection, faces serious threats to its survival, a new report says.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-11/s_24808.asp

Mendocino's GMO vote sparks action
This spring Mendocino County, California, voters banned production of genetically modified (GMO) crops and animals there. Mendocino is the first county in the United States to implement such a ban, inspiring people across the country and the world to follow suit.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-11/s_22782.asp

China's pandas are procreating but not out of the woods
China's giant pandas are rebounding from the brink of extinction, thanks to an improved and expanded habitat, but they are not out of the woods yet, forestry officials said on Thursday.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-11/s_24796.asp

Urban firefighters are learning to battle growing threat of wildfires
Urban firefighters are learning tactics for battling wilderness blazes as cities and suburbs increasingly encroach upon undeveloped wooded areas.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-11/s_24804.asp

Government proposes more Alaskan land for oil and gas drilling
The federal governments wants 387,000 more acres available for oil and gas drilling in Alaska, a proposal criticized by environmentalists.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-11/s_24807.asp

Australian rock star to run for parliament
The former singer of Australian protest rock band Midnight Oil joined opposition Labor on Thursday to help attract the green and youth vote ahead of an election expected within months.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-11/s_24801.asp

California farms' dependence on delta water highlighted by levee failure
The levee that broke in the heart of the state's complex irrigation system put 1 million acres of irrigated Central Valley farmland on alert for possible water cutbacks, just as peak irrigation season begins.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-11/s_24805.asp

Southeast Asian nations are becoming dumping ground for toxic waste, says Greenpeace
Recent illegal shipments of toxic waste from Taiwan to Malaysia reinforce the urgent need for Southeast Asian countries to agree on regulations to stop richer countries from using the region as a dumping ground, Greenpeace said Thursday.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-11/s_24803.asp

Indian, Pakistani officials to discuss controversial dam in Indian-held Kashmir, says report
Indian and Pakistani officials will meet this month on a dispute over a dam that India is building in its portion of disputed Kashmir and that Pakistan fears will deprive its farmers of water, a news report said Thursday.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-11/s_24806.asp

"Doggie, speak" has new meaning in language study
A clever border collie who can fetch at least 200 objects by name may be living proof that dogs truly understand human language, German scientists reported Thursday. The dog, named Rico, can fetch a newly introduced object when asked, even if he has never heard the name of the object before, the researchers say.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-11/s_24799.asp



Environmental Marketplace Updates (Become a Member)

We'd like to encourage you to visit our Environmental Marketplace where you'll learn about some amazing environmentally-focused businesses. A few examples:

Adventure Life Journeys - an unusual travel company. Adventure Life takes a holistic approach to travel and is dedicated to expanding ecological and cultural awareness. Visit them on the web at http://www.adventure-life.com/index.html.

Alternative Energy Store - retailer for solar panels, windmills/wind turbines, inverters, solar water pumps, solar home heating systems and other solar and wind electric power systems for your home or business. Visit them on the web at http://www.altenergystore.com.

Environmental Construction Outfitters of New York - For over 15 years ECO of NY has been monitoring the issues related to safer, healthier, and environmentally responsible building products and systems. Visit them on the web at http://www.environmentaldepot.com.

Garden Kids - a children's clothing manufacturer dedicated to providing superior quality clothing using environmentally friendly products and socially responsible business practices. Visit them on the web at http://www.gardenkids.com.







Today's Press Releases (Become an Affiliate)
Direct from non-profit environmental and educational organizations.

The Trust for Public Land:
Endangered Salamander Habitat Protected (CA)

The Trust for Public Land:
Watershed Land Near Hiram College Protected (OH)

American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy:
Coalition Calls for a New Energy-Saving Standard

United Nations Environment Programme:
Global clean-up of toxic PCBs promoted by UNEP

Great Ape Trust of Iowa:
Great Ape Trust of Iowa unveiled

Center for Environmental Economic Development (CEED):
Province Moves Toward 100% Electricity from Wind Power

ENN Environmental News Network
E-mail Edition 06/10/2004

New Partnership Brings Sustainable Forest and Farm Products to Market
The Rainforest Alliance has partnered with the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) to establish the Certified Sustainable Products Alliance, a three-year effort to significantly promote and increase the sale of sustainably produced certified timber, banana, and coffee from Central America and Mexico.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-10/s_24522.asp

Army to begin destroying deadly nerve agent at Indiana depot
In a cavernous, pipe-filled structure known simply as the Utility Building, Army contractors are getting ready to destroy a Cold War–era concoction so lethal it could kill untold millions.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-10/s_24736.asp

African ape havens to release more animals into wild
Sanctuaries caring for orphaned African apes plan to release more of their charges back into the wild in a bid to save them from extinction, primate experts said Wednesday.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-10/s_24733.asp

U.S. House panel votes to block new nuclear weapons
A House subcommittee defied the Bush administration Wednesday and slashed funds to study a new generation of deep-earth-penetrating nuclear weapons and so-called low-yield nuclear weapons.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-10/s_24727.asp

The dimming of the light and other stories
Since the 1950s Earth has become a darker place. Sunlight levels have dropped by up to 3 percent per decade, reports Atsumu Ohmura of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-10/s_24207.asp

Scientists dig and fly over Angkor in search of answers to golden city's fall
After resisting Siamese invaders for years, Cambodia's greatest city and civilization — the temple-studded Angkor — was dealt a death blow with its final sacking in 1431. Or so say the history books.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-10/s_24741.asp

Brazil inaugurates DNA bank for endangered flora
Brazil's government on Wednesday inaugurated its first DNA bank to preserve genetic codes of endangered plant life in a nation known as the most biodiverse on the planet.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-10/s_24739.asp

Nevada nuclear waste project faces budget problems, possible delay
A House panel approved only a fraction of the money the administration says it needs to keep a proposed nuclear waste project in Nevada on schedule, jeopardizing its planned completion by 2010.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-10/s_24738.asp

Lax U.S. power plant rules are killing thousands, says study
More than 90 percent of the 23,600 annual deaths caused by pollution from aging coal-fired power plants could be prevented if the U.S. government adopted stricter rules, according to a study by environmental groups.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-10/s_24732.asp

FDA is considering phasing out certain asthma inhalers
The government is asking asthma patients and doctors for help in deciding if it is time to gradually pull off the market certain asthma inhalers that pollute the environment.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-10/s_24737.asp

Venezuela calls alert as plant clogs oil-hub lake
Venezuela has declared a state of emergency in its western Lake Maracaibo to combat a fast-breeding aquatic plant that is clogging waterways and threatening fishing in one of South America's largest bodies of water, officials said Wednesday.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-10/s_24729.asp

Two Indonesian volcanoes spew more smoke, hot ash
Hot ash and thick smoke spewed out of two Indonesian volcanoes on Wednesday, a day after an eruption from one killed two tourists and rumblings at the other forced thousands of people to evacuate.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-10/s_24734.asp

Weather forecast: warm for the next 15,000 years
Weather for about the next 15,000 years should be warm and stable — barring human interference — according to scientists Wednesday.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-10/s_24731.asp



Environmental Marketplace Updates (Become a Member)

We'd like to encourage you to visit our Environmental Marketplace where you'll learn about some amazing environmentally-focused businesses. A few examples:

Adventure Life Journeys - an unusual travel company. Adventure Life takes a holistic approach to travel and is dedicated to expanding ecological and cultural awareness. Visit them on the web at http://www.adventure-life.com/index.html.

Alternative Energy Store - retailer for solar panels, windmills/wind turbines, inverters, solar water pumps, solar home heating systems and other solar and wind electric power systems for your home or business. Visit them on the web at http://www.altenergystore.com.

Environmental Construction Outfitters of New York - For over 15 years ECO of NY has been monitoring the issues related to safer, healthier, and environmentally responsible building products and systems. Visit them on the web at http://www.environmentaldepot.com.

Garden Kids - a children's clothing manufacturer dedicated to providing superior quality clothing using environmentally friendly products and socially responsible business practices. Visit them on the web at http://www.gardenkids.com.







Today's Press Releases (Become an Affiliate)
Direct from non-profit environmental and educational organizations.

Save Our Wild Salmon:
Bush Administration Spurns Science and Sacrifices Wild Salmon Again

The Trust for Public Land:
Key Acquisition for Egan, MN, Greenway

The Trust for Public Land:
Endangered Salamader Habitat Protected (CA)

The Trust for Public Land:
Watershed Land Near Hiram College Protected (OH)

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Great Lakes News: 16 June 2004
A collaborative project of the Great Lakes Information Network and the Great
Lakes Radio Consortium.

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Kirk asks feds to probe beach closings
----------------------------------------
An Illinois congressman is requesting a National Oceanic & Atmospheric
Administration study on whether bacteria in sewage dumped into Lake Michigan
in Milwaukee is responsible for beach closings in Illinois. Source: Chicago
Sun-Times (6/16)


CATS balks at ferry pilot fees
----------------------------------------
Canadian American Transportation Systems doesn't want to pay some
government-imposed pilotage fees on its new high-speed ferry, saying the
charges are unjust and could jeopardize the service. Source: Rochester
Democrat and Chronicle (6/16)


Doyle rejects funding plea for Asian carp barrier
----------------------------------------
Wisconsin Gov. Jim Doyle has turned down a request for the state to chip in
toward the construction of an electric barrier designed to keep Asian carp
out of the Great Lakes. Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinal (6/16)


Funds sought to clean up local water supplies
----------------------------------------
Most of Wisconsin's top federal lawmakers made a unified plea Tuesday for
federal funds to help dozens of communities bring municipal water systems
into compliance with federal clean water standards. Source: Milwaukee
Journal Sentinel (6/16)


Milwaukee receives $1.8 million in EPA grants
----------------------------------------
Wisconsin and the Redevelopment Authority of the City of Milwaukee will
share in $75.4 million being awarded by the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency to fund the assessment and cleanup of brownfields sites. Source: The
Milwaukee Business Journal (6/15)


Ohio plant OK'd despite environmental concerns
----------------------------------------
Despite concerns from Michigan environmental regulators, the Ohio
Environmental Protection Agency has granted permission to build a coke
factory near Toledo. Source: Detroit Free Press (6/15)


Port-of-call idea slows due to budget constraints
----------------------------------------
Budget woes and personnel issues are slowing an idea to make Michigan City a
stop for one of the few passenger ships that cruise the Great Lakes. Source:
The Northwest Indiana Times (6/15)


Dunes are being shortchanged
----------------------------------------
Visitors to the Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore likely do not notice
short-term effects of federal funding cuts, but officials say maintaining
the park's resources is becoming more difficult. Source: The Indianapolis
Star (6/15)


Future weather hot, wet
----------------------------------------
Climate change is producing extreme weather - multiday downpours and more
extremely hot days in Wisconsin and other parts of the Great Lakes,
scientists say. Source: Madison Capital Times (6/15)


Lawn companies sue over fertilizer ban
----------------------------------------
Several Wisconsin lakefront communities have banned certain lawn
fertilizers. Now, some lawn care companies are challenging the ban in court.
Source: Great Lakes Radio Consortium (6/14)

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Did you miss a day of Daily News? Remember to use our searchable story
archive at http://www.great-lakes.net/news/inthenews.html


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Eco-Economy Update 2004-10
For Immediate Release
Copyright Earth Policy Institute 2004
June 16, 2004


DEAD ZONES INCREASING IN WORLD'S COASTAL WATERS
http://www.earth-policy.org/Updates/Update41.htm

Janet Larsen


As summer comes to the Gulf of Mexico, it brings with it each year a giant
"dead zone" devoid of fish and other aquatic life. Expanding over the past
several decades, this area now can span up to 21,000 square kilometers,
which is larger than the state of New Jersey. A similar situation is found
on a smaller scale in the Chesapeake Bay, where since the 1970s a large
lifeless zone has become a yearly phenomenon, sometimes shrouding 40
percent of the bay.

Worldwide, there are some 146 dead zones--areas of water that are too low
in dissolved oxygen to sustain life. Since the 1960s, the number of dead
zones has doubled each decade. Many are seasonal, but some of the
low-oxygen areas persist year-round.

What is killing fish and other living systems in these coastal areas? A
complex chain of events is to blame, but it often starts with farmers
trying to grow more food for the world's growing population. Fertilizers
provide nutrients for crops to grow, but when they are flushed into rivers
and seas they fertilize microscopic plant life as well. In the presence of
excessive concentrations of nitrogen and phosphorus, phytoplankton and
algae can proliferate into massive blooms. When the phytoplankton die,
they fall to the seafloor and are digested by microorganisms. This process
removes oxygen from the bottom water and creates low-oxygen, or hypoxic,
zones.

Most sea life cannot survive in low-oxygen conditions. Fish and other
creatures that can swim away abandon dead zones. But they are still not
entirely safe--by relocating they may become vulnerable to predators and
face other stresses. Other aquatic life, like shellfish, that cannot
migrate in time suffocate in low-oxygen waters.

Dead zones range in size from small sections of coastal bays and estuaries
to large seabeds spanning some 70,000 square kilometers. Most occur in
temperate waters, concentrated off the east coast of the United States and
in the seas of Europe. Others have appeared off the coasts of China,
Japan, Brazil, Australia, and New Zealand.

The world's largest dead zone is found in the Baltic Sea, where a
combination of agricultural runoff, deposition of nitrogen from burning
fossil fuels, and human waste discharge has overfertilized the sea.
Similar problems have created hypoxic areas in the northern Adriatic Sea,
the Yellow Sea, and the Gulf of Thailand. Offshore fish farming is another
growing source of nutrient buildup in some coastal waters.

Forty-three of the world's known dead zones occur in U.S. coastal waters.
The one in the Gulf of Mexico, now the world's second largest, disrupts a
highly productive fishery that provides some 18 percent of the U.S. annual
catch. Gulf shrimpers and fishers have had to move outside of the hypoxic
area to find fish and shrimp. Landings of brown shrimp, the most
economically important seafood product from the Gulf, have fallen from the
record high in 1990, with the annual lows corresponding to the highly
hypoxic years.

Excess nutrients from fertilizer runoff transported by the Mississippi
River are thought to be the primary cause of the Gulf of Mexico's dead
zone. Each year some 1.6 million tons of nitrogen now enter the Gulf from
the Mississippi basin, more than triple the average flux measured between
1955 and 1970. The Mississippi River drains 41 percent of the U.S.
landmass, yet most of the nitrogen originates in fertilizer used in the
productive Corn Belt.

Worldwide, annual fertilizer use has climbed to 145 million tons, a
tenfold rise over the last half-century. (See data at
http://www.earth-policy.org/Updates/Update41_data.htm ) This coincides
with the increase in the number of dead zones around the globe. And not
only has more usable nitrogen been added to the environment each year, but
nature's capacity to filter nutrients has been reduced as wetlands are
drained and as areas along riverbanks are developed. Over the last
century, the world has lost half its wetlands.

In the United States, some of the key farming states like Ohio, Indiana,
Illinois, and Iowa have drained 80 percent of their wetlands. Louisiana,
Mississippi, Arkansas, and Tennessee have lost over half of theirs. This
lets even more of the excess fertilizer farmers apply flow down the
Mississippi River to the gulf.

There is no one way to cure hypoxia, as the mix of contributing factors
varies among locations. But the keys are to reduce nutrient pollution and
to restore ecosystem functions. Fortunately, there are a few successes to
point to. The Kattegat straight between Denmark and Sweden had been
plagued with hypoxic conditions, plankton blooms, and fish kills since the
1970s. In 1986, the Norway lobster fishery collapsed, leading the Danish
government to draw up an action plan. Since then, phosphorus levels in the
water have been reduced by 80 percent, primarily by cutting emissions from
wastewater treatment plants and industry. Combined with the
reestablishment of coastal wetlands and reductions of fertilizer use by
farmers, this has limited plankton growth and raised dissolved oxygen
levels.

The dead zone on the northwestern shelf of the Black Sea peaked at 20,000
square kilometers in the 1980s. Largely because of the collapse of
centralized economies in the region, phosphorus applications were cut by
60 percent and nitrogen use was halved in the Danube River watershed and
fell similarly in other Black Sea river basins. As a result, the dead zone
shrank. In 1996 it was absent for the first time in 23 years. Although
farmers sharply reduced fertilizer use, crop yields did not suffer
proportionately, suggesting they had been using too much fertilizer
before.

While phosphorus appears to have been the main culprit in the Black Sea,
nitrogen from atmospheric sources--namely, emissions from fossil fuel
burning--seems to be the primary cause of the dead zones in the North and
Baltic seas. Curbing fuel use through efficiency improvements,
conservation, and a move toward renewable energy can diminish this cause
of the problem.

For the Gulf of Mexico, curbing nitrogen runoff from farms can shrink the
dead zone. Applying fertilizer to match crop needs more precisely would
allow more nutrients to be taken up by plants instead of being washed out
to sea. Preventing erosion through conservation tillage and changing crop
rotations, along with wetland restoration and preservation, can also play
a part.

Innovative programs such as the American Farmland Trust's Nutrient Best
Management Practices Endorsement can reduce the common practice of using
too much fertilizer. Farmers who follow recommendations for fertilizer
application and cut their use are guaranteed financial coverage for
potential shortfalls in crop yields. They save money on fertilizer
purchases and are insured against losses. Under test programs in the
United States, fertilizer use has dropped by a quarter.

With carefully set goals and management, it is possible for some dead
zones to shrink in as little as a year. For other hypoxic areas
(especially in the Baltic, a largely enclosed sea with slower nutrient
turnover), improvement may take longer, pointing to the need for early
action. For while dead zones shrink or grow depending on nutrient input
and climatic conditions, the resulting fish dieoffs are not so easily
reversed.


# # #

Additional data and information sources at www.earth-policy.org or contact
jlarsen(at)earth-policy.org
For reprint permission contact rjkauffman(at)earth-policy.org

If you find this Update useful, please feel free to share it with friends
and colleagues, to post on your website, or to distribute on your listserv.

Tuesday, June 15, 2004

ENN Environmental News Network
E-mail Edition 06/10/2004

New Partnership Brings Sustainable Forest and Farm Products to Market
The Rainforest Alliance has partnered with the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) to establish the Certified Sustainable Products Alliance, a three-year effort to significantly promote and increase the sale of sustainably produced certified timber, banana, and coffee from Central America and Mexico.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-10/s_24522.asp

Army to begin destroying deadly nerve agent at Indiana depot
In a cavernous, pipe-filled structure known simply as the Utility Building, Army contractors are getting ready to destroy a Cold War–era concoction so lethal it could kill untold millions.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-10/s_24736.asp

African ape havens to release more animals into wild
Sanctuaries caring for orphaned African apes plan to release more of their charges back into the wild in a bid to save them from extinction, primate experts said Wednesday.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-10/s_24733.asp

U.S. House panel votes to block new nuclear weapons
A House subcommittee defied the Bush administration Wednesday and slashed funds to study a new generation of deep-earth-penetrating nuclear weapons and so-called low-yield nuclear weapons.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-10/s_24727.asp

The dimming of the light and other stories
Since the 1950s Earth has become a darker place. Sunlight levels have dropped by up to 3 percent per decade, reports Atsumu Ohmura of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-10/s_24207.asp

Scientists dig and fly over Angkor in search of answers to golden city's fall
After resisting Siamese invaders for years, Cambodia's greatest city and civilization — the temple-studded Angkor — was dealt a death blow with its final sacking in 1431. Or so say the history books.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-10/s_24741.asp

Brazil inaugurates DNA bank for endangered flora
Brazil's government on Wednesday inaugurated its first DNA bank to preserve genetic codes of endangered plant life in a nation known as the most biodiverse on the planet.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-10/s_24739.asp

Nevada nuclear waste project faces budget problems, possible delay
A House panel approved only a fraction of the money the administration says it needs to keep a proposed nuclear waste project in Nevada on schedule, jeopardizing its planned completion by 2010.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-10/s_24738.asp

Lax U.S. power plant rules are killing thousands, says study
More than 90 percent of the 23,600 annual deaths caused by pollution from aging coal-fired power plants could be prevented if the U.S. government adopted stricter rules, according to a study by environmental groups.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-10/s_24732.asp

FDA is considering phasing out certain asthma inhalers
The government is asking asthma patients and doctors for help in deciding if it is time to gradually pull off the market certain asthma inhalers that pollute the environment.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-10/s_24737.asp

Venezuela calls alert as plant clogs oil-hub lake
Venezuela has declared a state of emergency in its western Lake Maracaibo to combat a fast-breeding aquatic plant that is clogging waterways and threatening fishing in one of South America's largest bodies of water, officials said Wednesday.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-10/s_24729.asp

Two Indonesian volcanoes spew more smoke, hot ash
Hot ash and thick smoke spewed out of two Indonesian volcanoes on Wednesday, a day after an eruption from one killed two tourists and rumblings at the other forced thousands of people to evacuate.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-10/s_24734.asp

Weather forecast: warm for the next 15,000 years
Weather for about the next 15,000 years should be warm and stable — barring human interference — according to scientists Wednesday.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-10/s_24731.asp



Environmental Marketplace Updates (Become a Member)

We'd like to encourage you to visit our Environmental Marketplace where you'll learn about some amazing environmentally-focused businesses. A few examples:

Adventure Life Journeys - an unusual travel company. Adventure Life takes a holistic approach to travel and is dedicated to expanding ecological and cultural awareness. Visit them on the web at http://www.adventure-life.com/index.html.

Alternative Energy Store - retailer for solar panels, windmills/wind turbines, inverters, solar water pumps, solar home heating systems and other solar and wind electric power systems for your home or business. Visit them on the web at http://www.altenergystore.com.

Environmental Construction Outfitters of New York - For over 15 years ECO of NY has been monitoring the issues related to safer, healthier, and environmentally responsible building products and systems. Visit them on the web at http://www.environmentaldepot.com.

Garden Kids - a children's clothing manufacturer dedicated to providing superior quality clothing using environmentally friendly products and socially responsible business practices. Visit them on the web at http://www.gardenkids.com.







Today's Press Releases (Become an Affiliate)
Direct from non-profit environmental and educational organizations.

Save Our Wild Salmon:
Bush Administration Spurns Science and Sacrifices Wild Salmon Again

The Trust for Public Land:
Key Acquisition for Egan, MN, Greenway

The Trust for Public Land:
Endangered Salamader Habitat Protected (CA)

The Trust for Public Land:
Watershed Land Near Hiram College Protected (OH)

ENN Environmental News Network
E-mail Edition 06/09/2004

EarthTalk: How can I reduce the number and amount of toxins to which my new baby is exposed?
Since babies are so much smaller and their metabolism rates are so much higher than those of adults, proportionately they are exposed to higher doses of toxins from everyday foods and consumer products.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-09/s_24374.asp

The Grand Canyon is ailing, but panel can't agree on a prescription
It's hard to get the sense anything is wrong in the Grand Canyon while floating through it. On a recent spring morning, the Colorado River was cool and calm. Trout leapt, splashing back into the river with a plop. Stands of salt cedar lined the banks, offering shade from the desert heat.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-09/s_24692.asp

Environmentalists seek ban on bottom trawl fishing
Environmental groups urged the United Nations this week to ban so-called bottom trawl fishing in international waters, calling the practice the most destructive fishing practice on the high seas.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-09/s_24697.asp

Polystyrene foam from old boat docks is becoming a significant source of pollution
Every spring, as scores of volunteers scour the shorelines of the Lake of the Ozarks looking for trash, much of their haul is chunks of floating, dingy blobs.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-09/s_24694.asp

Norwegians use popcorn to simulate a massive oil spill
A major exercise focused on cleaning up ocean oil spills is bound to be popular with the wildlife of a Norwegian fjord. Instead of creating a mess of sticky crude, the experts are dumping popcorn.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-09/s_24693.asp

U.K. scientists say uncultivated patches could help skylarks
Leaving patches of farmland uncultivated could help reverse the dramatic decline in Britain's skylark population, scientists said Tuesday.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-09/s_24695.asp

New space shot aims for insight into ozone layers
A new satellite blasts off this month with the dual goals of gaining key information on the Earth's ozone layers and creating a blueprint for the search for other life-bearing planets, scientists said Tuesday.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-09/s_24696.asp

Farmington, Maine–area residents oppose planned wind-turbine generators
Opponents of a wind farm that would put up to 40 turbines along the tops of its two mountain peaks in unorganized townships in the Carrabassett Valley region asked county commissioners recently to join them in their fight to stop the project in this pristine region.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-09/s_24698.asp



Environmental Marketplace Updates (Become a Member)

We'd like to encourage you to visit our Environmental Marketplace where you'll learn about some amazing environmentally-focused businesses. A few examples:

Adventure Life Journeys - an unusual travel company. Adventure Life takes a holistic approach to travel and is dedicated to expanding ecological and cultural awareness. Visit them on the web at http://www.adventure-life.com/index.html.

Alternative Energy Store - retailer for solar panels, windmills/wind turbines, inverters, solar water pumps, solar home heating systems and other solar and wind electric power systems for your home or business. Visit them on the web at http://www.altenergystore.com.

Environmental Construction Outfitters of New York - For over 15 years ECO of NY has been monitoring the issues related to safer, healthier, and environmentally responsible building products and systems. Visit them on the web at http://www.environmentaldepot.com.

Garden Kids - a children's clothing manufacturer dedicated to providing superior quality clothing using environmentally friendly products and socially responsible business practices. Visit them on the web at http://www.gardenkids.com.







Today's Press Releases (Become an Affiliate)
Direct from non-profit environmental and educational organizations.

Natural Resources Defense Council:
Supreme Court Allows Old Mexican Trucks to Pollute U.S. Communities

Ocean Futures Society:
First Floating AOTE Program To Be Launched By Ocean Futures Society & Radisson Seven Seas Cruises In Polynesia

National Arbor Day Foundation:
Builders and Developers Recognized in Building With Trees Award Program

Save Our Wild Salmon:
Bush Administration Spurns Science and Sacrifices Wild Salmon Again

The Trust for Public Land:
Key Acquisition for Egan, MN, Greenway

Monday, June 14, 2004

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Great Lakes News: 14 June 2004
A collaborative project of the Great Lakes Information Network and the Great
Lakes Radio Consortium.

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Few ships checked for invasive species
----------------------------------------
Invading creatures from abroad still can reach the Great Lakes -- on
oceangoing ships that don't get tested. Source: Star Tribune (6/14)


Ferry goes for a spin
----------------------------------------
The new Lake Ontario cross-lake ferry Spirit of Ontario wowed a few hundred
politicians, dignitaries and community leaders over the weekend. Source:
Rochester Democrat and Chronicle (6/14)


Parks dig up sediment solution
----------------------------------------
Soil being washed from farmland and construction sites is clogging up many
rivers and lakes around the Great Lakes region, but now the state of
Illinois is finding new uses for the unwanted sludge. Source: Great Lakes
Radio Consortium (6/14)


COMMENTARY: Norton: Feds lack grasp on Great Lakes
----------------------------------------
U.S. Interior Secretary Gale Norton suggests that Uncle Sam's right hand
doesn't know what the left is doing on the Great Lakes. Source: The Detroit
News (6/13)


The control of sea lampreys is down to a science
----------------------------------------
The plastic tube snaking into the Fox River looked like an I.V. on a
hospital patient as it pumped a dark yellow liquid into the slow-moving
stream. But it was injecting poison, not medicine, into the waters. Source:
Star Tribune (6/13)


Bottled water war can leave many dry
----------------------------------------
Great Lakes states long have worried about Asian supertankers scooping up
the region's coveted fresh water or thirsty western states siphoning it away
in massive pipelines. Instead, it's leaving in millions of tiny plastic
bottles. Source: Chicago Tribune (6/13)


Truce possible in dispute over channel sediment
----------------------------------------
The open-lake disposal controversy that has pitted state and federal
officials against each other since the mid-1980s may be on the verge of a
one-year truce that could benefit Lake Erie. Source: The Toledo Blade (6/13)


Mercury exposure linked to high rate of hospitalization for cerebral palsy
----------------------------------------
Three Ontario communities that have had large industrial releases of mercury
have hospitalization rates for cerebral palsy among boys and men that are up
to five times higher than the average in the rest of the province, a new
research paper shows. Source: The Globe and Mail (6/12)


Feds raise alarm over Toledo coke plant
----------------------------------------
Environment Canada expressed concern Friday over the approval of a permit to
be granted Monday for a new coke plant outside Toledo they fear will add
high levels of pollutants to the air and waterways of Windsor and Essex
County. Source: The Windsor Star (6/12)


Great Lakes govs urged to fund another carp barrier
----------------------------------------
Wisconsin Gov. Jim Doyle, incoming chairman of the Great Lakes Council of
Governors, says the funding is clearly a federal responsibility. Source:
Madison Capital Times (6/12)


Michigan, federal officials consider landfill cleanup
----------------------------------------
Plans for dealing with radioactive waste that's stewing in an old landfill
near Saginaw Bay may be discussed during public hearings next month. Source:
The Bay City Times (6/12)

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Did you miss a day of Daily News? Remember to use our searchable story
archive at http://www.great-lakes.net/news/inthenews.html


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Information Network (www.glin.net) and the Great Lakes Radio
Consortium (www.glrc.org), both based in Ann Arbor, Mich.
TO SUBSCRIBE and receive this Great Lakes news compendium daily, see
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THERMOACOUSTIC CYCLE (TAC) GENERATORS

These generators convert waste heat directly into useable electricity.

Interesting...

http://www.io.com/~frg/

Blue collar defines life of Kucinich
The Daily Grind

It's no surprise that former Cleveland Mayor Dennis Kucinich has emerged in 2004 as a workingman's hero.

It's also no surprise that he is the keynote speaker at Saturday's AFL-CIO Labor Council's 35th annual Cope Dinner.

Past speakers have include former Democratic Senators Howard Metzenbaum and John Glenn and former Cincinnati Mayor Jerry Springer.

They all had seven-figure bank accounts. Not so for Kucinich.

Three decades is a long time to bear the torch for working people everywhere, said Dan Radford, AFL-CIO executive secretary-treasurer in Greater Cincinnati.

Congressman Kucinich, the latest Buckeye-born politician in a long line to run for president, is the only guy in the 2004 race who doesn't have a silk-stocking pedigree and the checking account of a millionaire.

And he's the only guy in the race who worked his way through high school and college - not because it was optional or character-building but because it was his only shot at a decent life.

Work and the needs of working people mean a lot to Kucinich, Radford said.

Kucinich was born into poverty, and on the campaign stump, he often talks about falling asleep at night to the sound of his parents counting pennies on the kitchen table: click, click, click.

"He is very popular among labor folks," Radford said.

"And we think it's important that his voice is out there. It's why we...(Full Story)

Friday, June 11, 2004

ENN Environmental News Network
E-mail Edition 06/08/2004

Designer ecosystems are now in vogue
We have designer clothes and designer perfumes. Now we need designer ecosystems — at least according to a group of scientists writing a report in the journal Science.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-08/s_24520.asp

Alternative energy on Beyond Organic
On this week's radio program Beyond Organic, join host Jerry Kay — publisher of the Environmental News Network (ENN.com) — as we explore wind power and the opportunities therein with guests Peter Asmus, Chuck Koch, and Dan Juhl.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-08/s_24626.asp

Supreme Court rules U.S. can skip environmental study, let Mexican trucks roll
The Supreme Court removed the last legal roadblock to Mexican trucks rolling across U.S. roadways, siding with the Bush administration Monday in a long-running dispute among labor union officials, environmentalists, and consumer advocates.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-08/s_24628.asp

U.N. urges fish havens as world marks Environment Day
The United Nations urged the creation of ocean parks to protect depleted fish stocks recently, as activists marked World Environment Day by freeing turtles, planting trees, and decrying global warming.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-08/s_24637.asp

Anger against wolf-reintroduction suspected in western U.S. dog poisonings
It had been a tranquil visit below the snowcapped peaks of Grand Teton National Park. Then Jim and Nancy Barrus' black lab began drooling, retching, and quivering uncontrollably.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-08/s_24629.asp

Taiwanese company accused of illegally shipping toxic waste to Malaysia
A Taiwanese company used a forged permit to ship 12,000 metric tons (13,200 short tons) of toxic industrial waste to Malaysia during the past year, the government said Monday.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-08/s_24632.asp

Galapagos fishers call off sea cucumber protest
Fishers in Ecuador's pristine Galapagos Islands Monday called off a protest demanding more leeway in lucrative sea cucumber fishing after the government agreed to hold talks on new rules limiting their catch.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-08/s_24636.asp

Newspaper reports that pollution may delay sale of former El Toro Marine base
As much as one-quarter of the former El Toro Marine base is so polluted it cannot be immediately sold for development, a newspaper reported Sunday.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-08/s_24633.asp

Can solar power work? Pioneering community answers yes and no
This old mill city built prosperity from the force of its waterways. So there was a legacy of renewable energy when the local electrical utility sought to thrust Gardner into the age of inexhaustible sun power, ahead of everyone.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-08/s_24634.asp

Washington is worried about faltering energy tie with Moscow
The United States is worried that the much-touted energy cooperation between Moscow and Washington might be faltering, a senior U.S. energy official said Monday.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-08/s_24631.asp



Environmental Marketplace Updates (Become a Member)

We'd like to encourage you to visit our Environmental Marketplace where you'll learn about some amazing environmentally-focused businesses. A few examples:

Adventure Life Journeys - an unusual travel company. Adventure Life takes a holistic approach to travel and is dedicated to expanding ecological and cultural awareness. Visit them on the web at http://www.adventure-life.com/index.html.

Alternative Energy Store - retailer for solar panels, windmills/wind turbines, inverters, solar water pumps, solar home heating systems and other solar and wind electric power systems for your home or business. Visit them on the web at http://www.altenergystore.com.

Environmental Construction Outfitters of New York - For over 15 years ECO of NY has been monitoring the issues related to safer, healthier, and environmentally responsible building products and systems. Visit them on the web at http://www.environmentaldepot.com.

Garden Kids - a children's clothing manufacturer dedicated to providing superior quality clothing using environmentally friendly products and socially responsible business practices. Visit them on the web at http://www.gardenkids.com.







Today's Press Releases (Become an Affiliate)
Direct from non-profit environmental and educational organizations.

Ocean Futures Society:
First Floating AOTE Program To Be Launched By Ocean Futures Society & Radisson Seven Seas Cruises In Polynesia

National Arbor Day Foundation:
Builders and Developers Recognized in Building With Trees Award Program

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Great Lakes News Late Press: 11 June 2004
A collaborative project of the Great Lakes Information Network and the Great
Lakes Radio Consortium.

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Federation to Sponsor Study of Great Lakes Coastal Wetland Protection
http://www.lakemichigan.org/news/press.3.asp
Lake Michigan Federation (2004-06-10)

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Did you miss a day of Daily News? Remember to use our searchable story
archive at http://www.great-lakes.net/news/inthenews.html


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Great Lakes Daily News is a collaborative project of the Great Lakes
Information Network (www.glin.net) and the Great Lakes Radio
Consortium (www.glrc.org), both based in Ann Arbor, Mich.
TO SUBSCRIBE and receive this Great Lakes news compendium daily, see
www.glin.net/forms/dailynews_form.html or send an e-mail message to
majordomo@great-lakes.net with the command 'subscribe dailynews' (minus
the quotes) in the body of the message.
TO UNSUBSCRIBE: Send a message to majordomo@great-lakes.net with the
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Great Lakes News: 11 June 2004
A collaborative project of the Great Lakes Information Network and the Great
Lakes Radio Consortium.

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Ferry under a new cloud
----------------------------------------
With less than a week before the Spirit of Ontario starts service, there
remains a stumbling block that could scuttle Rochester's newest tourist
attraction. Source: Rochester Democrat and Chronicle (6/11)


COMMENTARY: Waterway system depends on environmentally safe solutions
----------------------------------------
Sustaining our Great Lakes waterway system requires win-win solutions --
those that possess both economic and environmental benefits. Source:
Detroit Free Press (6/11)


$1B in roadwork for Ontario highways
----------------------------------------
The Ontario government is embarking on a $1-billion bid to fix the
province's highways that will create more than 20,000 construction jobs
across the province, sources said Thursday. Source: Canadian National Post
(6/11)


Free fishing reels in local anglers
----------------------------------------
Avid anglers will have company Saturday and Sunday on Michigan waters, and
fishing stores are reeling in the benefits. Source: The Port Huron Times
Herald (6/11)


Weekend of water fun in Washburn June 17-20
----------------------------------------
Kayaking, sailing, rowing, hiking and motoring on or near Lake Superior are
all part of the Inland Sea Kayak Symposium, a 15-year-old event taking place
in Washburn June 17-20. Source: The Ashland Daily Press (6/11)


EDITORIAL: Action on lakes' troubles should not be delayed
----------------------------------------
Members of Congress at a congressional forum this week began pushing for
real action to head off growing problems with the Great Lakes, and to them
we say, "Amen." Source: Port Clinton News Herald (6/10)


Effort to increase sturgeon gets a boost
----------------------------------------
About 200 yearling lake sturgeon were released Thursday into the Milwaukee
River at Lime Kiln Park with the goal of restoring a spawning population of
this fish in the river, a state wildlife official said. Source: Milwaukee
Journal Sentinel (6/10)


World sailing duo comes ashore in Port Huron
----------------------------------------
A German couple on a six-year journey along the world's waterways will be
embarking soon for lakes Huron, Michigan, Superior and Lake Huron's Georgian
Bay. Source: The Port Huron Times Herald (6/10)


Odor returns to Milwaukee's beaches
----------------------------------------
The odor that people have complained about for years at Lake Michigan
beaches in Milwaukee is back. Source: Yahoo News (6/9)

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Did you miss a day of Daily News? Remember to use our searchable story
archive at http://www.great-lakes.net/news/inthenews.html


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Information Network (www.glin.net) and the Great Lakes Radio
Consortium (www.glrc.org), both based in Ann Arbor, Mich.
TO SUBSCRIBE and receive this Great Lakes news compendium daily, see
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Thursday, June 10, 2004

NEWS: GLIN Daily News needs your support!

Hello! Let us introduce ourselves. We're the folks who provide you with your daily dose of Great Lakes headlines.

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www.great-lakes.net/news/sponsor

GreenBiz.com's GreenBuzz - Published Weekly June 1, 2004

Taking Care of Business

Please indulge us for a brief moment to take care of our business.

We're proud to bring you this newsletter each week, as well as the more than 8,000 resources to be found on GreenBiz, ClimateBiz, GreenerBuildings, and GreenBizLeaders. We strive to keep it informative and fresh -- and to keep it free to all users.

But it's not free to us. And while we enjoy the support of several leadership companies and organizations, like most nonprofits, our ambitions far outstrip our financial means. That's why we're asking for your help.

We've just launched our first-ever fundraising drive, asking you to contribute however you can. (Donations go to our parent organization, NEETF) No donation is too small -- and all are tax-deductible. Collectively, the contributions of GREENBUZZ readers can have a big impact as we continue to grow.

Thank you in advance for your help.

And now, back to your business . . .

-----------------------------------

Headlines
The Latest News on Business and the Environment



Honda Invests in Greener Auto Plant
Honda of America has unveiled plans to construct a $123 million paint facility at its Marysville Auto Plant. It is the largest single investment among a series of renovations and expansions at Honda's two auto plants in Ohio, according to the company.

Better Motors Could Save 100 Million Tons of CO2, Study Finds
European industry could save over 200bn kilowatt hours (KWh) of electricity per year by using more energy-efficient electrical motors, a study published by the European Copper Institute has shown.

Tour Operators Commit to Responsible Tourism
Members of the Federation of Tour Operators have signed a document committing them to responsible tourism practices.

New Service Makes It Profitable to Keep Used Cell Phones from the Trash
Since cell phone "number portability" began last November, at least 2.6 million U.S. wireless customers have found themselves with an unused cellular phone and no idea what to do with it, according to the Federal Communications Commission.

School Graduates First 'Sustainable Business' MBAs
Bainbridge Graduate Institute recently granted MBAs in Sustainable Business to its first-ever graduating class.

Put GreenBiz news on your site for free! Learn more...

More Headlines...

-----------------------------------

Resources and Tools
A Wealth of Hands-On Help

Sink or Swim: A Fresh Approach to Business and Water in Tomorrow's Companies
Report from the World Business Council for Sustainable Development offers long-range approaches to water conservation in the business sector.

Plant-Wide Energy Assessments
Online collection of 25 manufacturers' plant-wide assessments document nearly $107 million in annual energy savings.

Healthy Building Network
Site offers information on green alternatives to some traditional -- and potentially harmful -- building materials.

More Tools... | More Web Sites...

-----------------------------------

Columns and Features
Insight and Inspiration from the Experts

Pulp and Paper Products: Sustainability by the Numbers
To more easily identify companies with sustainable processes, procurement professionals have asked, "Is there a way to rank a paper product that represents to what level a company works at sustainability?" It's called the Sustainability Index. By Archie Beaton

Wanna write for GreenBiz?Let us know if you'd like to write a guest column or feature reflecting your experiences or opinions in the environmental business world. Send a brief query to Editor@greenbiz.com | Read our editorial guidelines

More Columns... | More Features...

GreenBiz.com's GreenBuzz - Published Weekly May 24, 2004

Taking Care of Business

This week's feature, "What Matters Most: Shell Oil's CSR Crisis in the North Sea," takes in-depth look at how Shell handled the protests and boycotts resulting from its decision to dispose of an oil storage tanker in the North Sea back in 1991. The feature is an excerpt from the excellent book "What Matters Most: How a Small Group of Pioneers Is Teaching Social Responsibility to Big Business, and Why Big Business Is Listening," by Jeffrey Hollender and Stephen Fenichell.

Also: Experts Steve Rice and Richard MacLean weigh in on the best Ph.D. programs in environmental management. For more on academic programs focusing on sustainable business, visit our Education Directory.

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Headlines
The Latest News on Business and the Environment


Report: Growing Political Support Powers Renewable Energy into the Mainstream
With oil and gas prices soaring amid deepening instability in the Middle East, renewable energy is emerging as a bright spot in the global energy economy -- and is poised for a worldwide takeoff, according to a new study.

Toxics Coalition Ranks Top PC Makers
The Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition sees some bright spots but a long journey ahead for electronics companies on environmental and public health concerns.

Investors Rate 500 Largest Companies on Climate
A new survey of the world's largest companies reveals that companies are paying increasing attention to climate change.

Johnson & Johnson Recognizes Environmental Excellence Around the World
As part of the company's commitment to environmental excellence, Johnson & Johnson recognized 14 of its companies, facilities, teams and individuals that have demonstrated significant progress toward achieving the corporation's Environmental Strategic Vision.

Shareholder Coalition Makes a Dent in Mountain of E-Waste
A coalition of investors has announced a key milestone in their electronic waste initiative as Dell Inc. became the first U.S. computer company to publicly release a global recycling goal.

Put GreenBiz news on your site for free! Learn more...

More Headlines...

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Resources and Tools
A Wealth of Hands-On Help

Convention Industry Council Green Meetings Report
A series of guidelines for event organizers and event suppliers on running environmentally friendly events.

Sustainable Markets Intelligence Center
Informative, easily navigable site tracks market trends for sustainable products, arranged by sector and product category.

Alternative Energy Tools
Calculators, models, and databases for gauging your company's energy use.

More Tools... | More Web Sites...

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Great Lakes News: 08 June 2004
A collaborative project of the Great Lakes Information Network and the Great
Lakes Radio Consortium.

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Sewage floods metro waterways
----------------------------------------
Five billion gallons of treated and untreated sewage and rainwater was
released into the Detroit River, the Rouge River, Lake St. Clair and other
waterways during the late May rainstorms that caused widespread flooding in
Metro Detroit. Source: The Detroit News (6/8)


Pols rip Milwaukee over 'cheesehead sewer water'
----------------------------------------
At Monday's congressional meeting on the Great Lakes, two Illinois
congressmen pummeled the city of Milwaukee for dumping 4.6 million gallons
of raw sewage into Lake Michigan during the month of May. Source: Chicago
Sun-Times (6/8)


CAA plans to end gridlock
----------------------------------------
The Canadian Automobile Association is trying to enlist commuters in its
push for new expressways as part of a comprehensive transportation plan to
relieve congestion in gridlocked Toronto. Source: The Toronto Star (6/8)


Newest state park on Erie shoreline
----------------------------------------
About 12 miles west of the city of Erie, you can find scenic 90-foot bluffs,
rocky beach, old growth forest, significant archaeological sites, rare and
endangered species and Pennsylvania's newest state park. Source: Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette (6/8)


EDITORIAL: More heat than light
----------------------------------------
Opponents of a new coking plant wish unrealistically for life without risk,
while plant developers tax credibility with their elusiveness about what
pollutants will spew from their state-of-the-art, well-scrubbed smokestacks.
Source: The Toledo Blade (6/8)


Beetlemania - hungry insects will target weedy plant
----------------------------------------
Purple loosestrife plants haven't had natural predators in North America
until recently. But in recent years, scientists have found two beetle
species that eat the weedy invader and don't have a taste for other plants.
Source: Merrillville Post-Tribune (6/8)


Aggressive and messy, gulls are the new urban menace
----------------------------------------
Like something out of a Hitchcock movie, gulls are everywhere - and so are
their droppings. Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (6/8)


MDEQ critics want to strip its power
----------------------------------------
Michigan's Department of Environmental Quality faces sweeping budget cuts
that could eliminate its hazardous waste program and shift responsibility
for dioxin cleanup into federal hands. Source: The Saginaw News (6/7)


Communities target debris washing into area rivers
----------------------------------------
Under the Clean Water Act, smaller urban areas are faced with the challenge
of controlling the everyday litter, motor oil, fertilizers, soil sediment,
pet waste and other items that add up to big pollution headaches when
carried by rainstorms into public drains, rivers and, eventually, into the
Great Lakes. Source: Lansing State Journal (6/7)


Satellite imaging tracks algae blooms
----------------------------------------
For years, NASA satellites and computer models have helped scientists
measure algae levels in oceans. Now, a new study is showing which models
will work in the Great Lakes. Source: Great Lakes Radio Consortium (6/7)

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Did you miss a day of Daily News? Remember to use our searchable story
archive at http://www.great-lakes.net/news/inthenews.html


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Great Lakes News: 09 June 2004
A collaborative project of the Great Lakes Information Network and the Great
Lakes Radio Consortium.

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Lake views
----------------------------------------
Residents from Washburn to Grand Marais have the chance to get out on Lake
Superior and learn from researchers what problems the big lake faces.
Source: Duluth News Tribune (6/9)


Proposed factory sparks concerns
----------------------------------------
A proposed factory near Toledo is drawing fire from Michigan regulators and
environmentalists who fear pollutants will harm Lake Erie and degrade
Michigan's air quality. Source: Detroit Free Press (6/9)


Ferry may soon fly U.S. flag
----------------------------------------
The Bahamian flag will fly over the stern of the Spirit of Ontario on its
maiden passenger voyage, but that foreign flag may come down soon for an
American one. Source: Rochester Democrat and Chronicle (6/9)


Ohio eagle population soars
----------------------------------------
It has been another record year in Ohio for bald eagle chicks, despite
spring storms that toppled seven nests. Source: The Akron Beacon Journal
(6/9)


Powerboat race can raise city's prospects
----------------------------------------
The Port Huron Offshore Grand Prix will feature high-speed vessels racing
through a five-mile course in Lake Huron north of the Blue Water Bridge.
Source: The Port Huron Times Herald (6/9)


Air pollution may slightly increase SIDS risk
----------------------------------------
High levels of common air pollutants may cause a slight increase in the risk
of sudden infant death syndrome, or SIDS, new research shows. Source:
Reuters (6/9)


Congressional forum focuses on need to protect Great Lakes
----------------------------------------
Some members of Illinois' congressional delegation say the time for studying
the problems of the Great Lakes is over and it's time to act. Source: The
Northwest Indiana Times (6/8)


COMMENTARY: Learn scuba and explore Michigan's underwater world
----------------------------------------
More and more, those with a sense of adventure, from 10-year-olds to
octogenarians, have discovered the thrill of exploring a tranquil
environment away from busy schedules and cell phones. Source: Detroit Free
Press (6/8)


Boron found in water wells of Lake Michigan town
----------------------------------------
Higher than normal levels of boron have been discovered in the well water of
eight homes in the town along Lake Michigan. Source: WHAS11.com (6/7)


Sleuths hunt pollution source
----------------------------------------
Sewer sleuths will be heading back into drains in Warren, Sterling Heights
and St. Clair Shores as early as this week, trying to track down the source
of bacterial pollution that contributed to the closing of Lake St. Clair
beaches in the aftermaths of recent storms. Source: The Detroit News (6/6)

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Did you miss a day of Daily News? Remember to use our searchable story
archive at http://www.great-lakes.net/news/inthenews.html


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Great Lakes News: 10 June 2004
A collaborative project of the Great Lakes Information Network and the Great
Lakes Radio Consortium.

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

EDITORIAL: Give beach-grooming rules a chance to work
----------------------------------------
Now that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has finally simplified the permit
process for resort beach grooming along exposed bottomlands in Grand
Traverse and Saginaw bays, everyone needs to give it a chance to work.
Source: Detroit Free Press (6/10)


Ferry-dock gambling sought
----------------------------------------
Not only does the private company launching a ferry service here want
gambling on the ship, but it also is seeking to install video gaming
machines inside the city's new $16 million ferry terminal. Source:
Rochester Democrat and Chronicle (6/10)


Cicada invasion is 3 years away
----------------------------------------
Despite rumors to the contrary, the 17-year cicadas won't emerge from
underground in northern Illinois until the year 2007. Source: Pioneer Press
Online (6/10)


Project to shore up Parma stream
----------------------------------------
The once healthy, meandering stream flowing through the Stearns Homestead, a
48-acre farm in the heart of Parma, is now more like an open storm drain, a
transformation that is endangering nearby ecological communities. Source:
The Plain Dealer (6/10)


Kayaking close to home
----------------------------------------
Dave Howell never thought much about the Detroit River until a few years
ago, when he read about the fight by conservationists to stop the
development of Humbug Marsh. Source: Detroit Free Press (6/10)


High tide for beach closings
----------------------------------------
Each year tens of millions of people plop onto America's beaches to bask and
bake in the sun, but the question they increasingly face is: "Do I dare go
into the water?" Source: The Christian Science Monitor (6/10)


UW study blames deer for decline in native plants
----------------------------------------
Scientists at the University of Wisconsin-Madison have found significant
losses of native plant species in northern Wisconsin forests over the past
50 years - a trend that could have a profound effect on the future landscape
of the state. Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (6/9)


Conference looks at protecting watersheds
----------------------------------------
Environmental, government, business, and academic leaders are nearing the
end of a six-day conference at Valparaiso University exploring emerging
trends in watershed management and brainstorming how precious natural
resources can be protected in the face of growth as well as decay. Source:
Chesterton Tribune (6/9)


Officers flooded with reports of illegal catches
----------------------------------------
Reports of anglers catching more fish than the law allows continue pouring
in to Minnesota conservation officers statewide despite the generally slow
fishing around the state. Source: Duluth News Tribune (6/9)


Kalamazoo River cleanup
----------------------------------------
The Kalamazoo River Watershed Council believes the Environmental Protection
Agency isn't living up to its promises to remove the pollution from sections
of the river between the city of Kalamazoo and Lake Michigan. Source: Fox
17 News (6/8)

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Did you miss a day of Daily News? Remember to use our searchable story
archive at http://www.great-lakes.net/news/inthenews.html


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From Progressive Engineer Online:

In Search of Alternatives

Engineers and scientists at the National Renewable Energy Lab seek ways to wean us from fossil fuels by developing more environmentally friendly and sustainable energy sources such as solar, wind, biomass, and hydrogen

By Ken Freed

Engineers at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) in Golden, Colorado go to work every day knowing their efforts help the world develop viable options to replace fossil fuels. "The high cost of fossil fuels is driving development of alternatives fuel sources like biomass," says John Sheehan, senior engineer at the National Bioenergy Center, based in the Alternative Fuels User Facility, one of almost 20 buildings on the main NREL campus.

(Full Story)

Wednesday, June 09, 2004

I’m protecting Kerry’s left flank, says Kucinich
By James Kirchick

As he continues his quixotic campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination, Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio) is positioning himself as the man who can protect Sen. John Kerry’s (D-Mass.) left flank from Ralph Nader.

“It’s important that Democrats know that there are people, leading spokespersons in the party, for peace, for civil liberties, for healthcare, fair trade … so that they can’t say, ‘The Democrats don’t represent me,’” Kucinich said in a wide-ranging interview with The Hill last week.

patrick g. ryan
Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio)

“Well, I’m a Democrat and I speak to those issues and I think what I’m giving the party is an ability to bring people in who might otherwise be inclined to not support Democrats.”

Kucinich added, “Isn’t it much better to have [liberal ideas] expressed through the person of another Democrat than to have it expressed through the person of a third-party candidate? I mean, this is where it makes a difference, and this is where it could make all the difference in the general election.”

(Full Story)

Tuesday, June 08, 2004

Generation Vexed
Can hip-hop attitude be harnessed as a political force?

BY ERIC K. ARNOLD
eric.arnold@eastbayexpress.com

Backstage at Berkeley's Ashkenaz nightclub one evening in February, a circle of rapt hip-hop artists stood crowded around a man speaking his mind. The scene resembled an MC battle, except that the man in the center was a middle-aged white guy in a suit, who looked more like TV comedian Ray Romano than underground battle-rapper C-Rayz Walz. He didn't possess any discernible freestyle rhyming skills, though his mere presence in "the cipher" impressed many of the onlookers. After all, what other 2004 presidential candidate had bothered to show any interest in hip-hop political activism, much less put himself in the thick of an MC circle?

The man in the suit was Dennis Kucinich, and the setting was a local stump speech/performance entitled "Bands Against Bush," in which the Ohio congressman and progressive Democratic presidential hopeful shared a bill with some of the Bay's most talented underground DJs and MCs -- including turntablist crew DJs of Mass Destruction, which provided equal time for the opposition with an "Emcee Dubya" collage of George Bush quotes, laced with big beats and DJ cuts.

Despite looking awkwardly out of place, the candidate tried to relate. Hip-hop, he told the MCs, "is about the heart and spirit. It's the truth. That I get." But if anyone was expecting him to drop any hip-hop knowledge, they were sadly misled. "I can't tell you that I listen to hip-hop all the time," the politician conceded. "I don't."

When someone asked Kucinich for his favorite hip-hop song, the candidate hesitated a moment. "Anything by Tupac," he replied. The vague response still earned him an appreciative "Ooohhh!" from every non-journalist in the room, the same reaction a freestyle MC gets for a particularly devastating couplet. Pressed for specifics, Kucinich couldn't actually name one of Tupac's songs, but he did explain why he's feeling 'Pac's vibe: "He has an elegant dissatisfaction with the situation."

Again, that evasive-politician thing, but it was enough to impress one dreadlocked rapper: "We appreciate that you understand that," he said.

"Why are you still in the race?" a more cynical voice demanded. "Well, I gotta stay in it to win it," Kucinich responded, earning another "Ooohh!" despite his blatant jacking of the Lotto slogan. He then quoted Khalil Gibran, whose concept of "spirit rebellious," the candidate explained, "is what hip-hop's about."

And just how did he plan to bring the more apolitical members of the hip-hop generation into the fold? "What I'm doing is reaching out," Kucinich said. "You gotta keep reaching out."

Kucinich might just go down in history as the first big-time politician to actively reach out to the "hip-hop generation," a term that can refer to African Americans born between 1965 and 1984, or to a far broader cross section of hip-hop consumers of all races, depending on whom you ask. But that a mainstream candidate even made the effort demonstrates just how far hip-hop culture has progressed since rappers first began laying their tales of harsh ghetto realities on wax.

While major labels, under political pressure from DC heavyweights, have steered clear of controversial rappers since the early 1990s -- Paris, for instance, was dropped by Time-Warner subsidiary Tommy Boy before his song "Bush Killa" could be released -- the hip-hop underground has always maintained some level of political awareness.

Now, however, something unprecedented is happening. In recent years a fresh surge of indignation among underground hip-hoppers here and elsewhere -- spurred by what some call the War on Youth, as well as an erosion of civil liberties related to the War on Terror, and the ever-deteriorating situation in Iraq -- has manifested itself in an unforeseen level of political activity. Up-and-coming artists have increasingly turned toward lyrical activism, lent their skills to political rallies and benefits, and become personally involved in social issues. Indie rap labels are pumping out themed compilations attacking the criminal justice system and the government's warmongering. And grassroots activists are amping up outreach efforts at the street level, in an attempt to channel the hip-hop generation's angst into something more meaningful.

Some in the rap community, from grassroots proletarians to millionaire moguls, are even starting to fathom the unfathomable: (Read the rest of this stump-pulling article on Raptivism at: http://www.eastbayexpress.com/issues/2004-06-09/feature.html)

Opinion on various energy carriers and their utility in a renewable energy future:

Mr. Beyer,

I must agree with you in regards to a hydrogen economy as currently proposed, fueled by centralized production plants running on the same old fossil fuels. This approach does nothing but move the point where carbon and other pollutants are dumped into the atmosphere.

Certainly many biomass fuels are very useful and these include both the methane and methanol you mention, ethanol, vegetable oils and biodiesel, as well as waste wood, fall leaves, and other plant "waste".

Looking at transportation energy carriers, biodiesel (www.biodiesel.org) is the most likely to make fast inroads into the existing transportation infrastructure because it can be used in existing diesel engines as-is provided that the seals used in the engines are the more modern types that biodiesel does not act as a solvent upon.

Hydrogen has it's own attractions because of the lack of emissions in the exhaust stream. While biomass fuels as energy carriers do not release carbon that has been buried underground for eons, simply recycling carbon pulled out of the atmosphere by the plants they rely on, these fuels also have other combustion byproducts that are not very desirable such as fomeldahyde, particulates, and nitrous oxide. Of these, hydrogen only produces nitrous oxide. Granted, many biomass fuels produce far less of such pollutants than current petroleum use does. Any displacement of petroleum by these fuels is desirable.

Moving beyond transportation, hydrogen is desirable for several reasons. It can be piped through a similar infrastructure to the existing natural gas pipelines, and once delivered, is able to produce either heat or electricity or both plus basically distilled water, and a byproduct of it's production would be oxygen for use in hospitals, industrial welding applications, etc.

My personal belief based on years of reading on these subjects is that the end result will be some mixture of all of the above, as well as wind, hydro, and both ocean thermal energy conversion and wave power systems will lead us out of the age of petroleum and coal. I very sincerely doubt our energy future will ever be limited to one specific mode or source.

In the end, hydrogen will find it's natural place where it is the best tool for the job at hand, as will the forms of energy transport you mention and others I have brought into the discussion. Diversification in our energy infrastructure is something I perceive to be a positive goal in many respects, but in the end, it is economics and technical capability that will determine to what extent any specific technology or fuel is used in a given application or region. Politics may distort the picture for a time, but in the long term even that will bow to economic forces.

I would like to thank you sir, for the interesting discussion and the frank viewpoint. It is my intention to promote all renewable energy technologies, even though I have the strongest fascinations with wind and hydrogen.

Sincerely,

Dan Stafford



Jim Beyer wrote:

Great Lakes Zephyr,

I was interested in hydrogen power and researched it fairly carefully. After some work, I found that a hydrogen economy would not make sense, and will not give us better access to alternative energy sources, nor will it help with global warming issues. Others (The National Academy of Sciences, Former Under Secretary of DOE Joseph Romm, and 1994 Nobel Prize Chemist George Olah, to name a few) have also come out being critical of hydrogen, but do not clarify what an alternative strategy might be.

I can clarify such an alternative strategy.

The alternative is methane, also a gas, or methanol, a liquid. Both can be created from alternative/renewable sources, and both have already been integrated into our energy system, at least much more than hydrogen. Both also have much greater energy densities than hydrogen, an important feature of any proposed fuel. I personally prefer methane over methanol, but can understand the arguments for a liquid fuel.

A hydrogen infrastructure would be very costly to develop, with no added benefit compared with methane/methanol. Even worse, the hydrogen economy, as proposed, favors FOSSIL FUELS over alternative energy sources (wind, solar, biomass) for hydrogen production. A system of CH4/CO2 would favor the alternative sources over fossil fuels. The system is explained more fully in our press release:

http://www.emediawire.com/releases/2003/10/prweb84970.htm

Sincerely,

Jim Beyer

UW-Madison News Release--Clean air

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
6/8/2004
CONTACT: Rob Kennedy, (608) 263-3027, rkennedy@fpm.wisc.edu

UW-MADISON JOINS DANE COUNTY PARTNERSHIP IN CLEAN AIR EFFORT

MADISON - A campuswide drive to prevent air pollution - involving steps ranging from buying more alternative fuel vehicles to hand trimming shrubbery on days when ozone could reach high levels -- was outlined Tuesday by UW-Madison Chancellor John D. Wiley.

The university is part of the Dane County Clean Air Coalition, which announced Tuesday that Clean Air Action Days will be used for the first time this summer when air quality and weather conditions show ozone levels could be elevated.

During the alerts, government agencies, businesses and citizens are asked to voluntarily take action to reduce ground-level ozone and keep Dane County's air healthy.

"The university is committed to working on every front to prevent air quality from deteriorating," Wiley says. "From changing our heating plant operations to alternative fuels for fleet use to free bus passes for students, faculty and staff, we will continue to be active in the coalition."

Wiley says the university will give employees advance notice of Clean Air Action Days, with specific recommendations, such as avoiding fueling and travel if possible.

In addition, the schedules of grounds crews will be changed to ensure that mowing will be done using equipment with better emissions ratings and incinerators will not be operated on Clean Air Action Days.

Employees will be instructed to postpone travel, keep tight seals on solvents, turn off delivery vehicles at every stop, and avoid "jack-rabbit" starts. Signs will be posted on fuel pumps urging postponement of fill-ups, if possible.

Grounds crews will refrain from chipping mulch and using chain saws, delay hedge-trimming or use hand tools, and limit mowing and using power equipment with two-stroke gasoline-powered engines.

Additionally, floor-stripping, waxing and painting with solvent-based paints will be delayed.

When the natural gas-powered West Campus Cogeneration Facility comes online in summer 2005, university officials will have the chance to change how existing heating plants on Charter Street and Walnut Street are operated to balance fuel costs and lower air emissions.

Wiley says that traditional gasoline-powered powered fleet vehicles used in Madison and around campus need to be phased out. Decisions on what fuels to use will be made along with coalition partners to gain economies of scale and enable sharing of alternative fueling stations.

Clean Air Action Days will also provide an opportunity to promote awareness of a number of existing campus programs which encourage use of more environmentally friendly means of transportation.

For example, all UW-Madison faculty, staff and students are eligible for Madison Metro bus passes that allow them unlimited bus rides. The university also provides a park and ride program, car and van pools, a free on-campus bus, flex parking, a bicycle program and a partnership with Community Car for a car-sharing option.

For more information on Clean Air Action Days and the coalition, visit www.cleanairdane.org.
###
--Dennis Chaptman, (608) 262-9406







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500 Lincoln Drive
Madison, WI 53706

Phone: (608) 262-3571
Fax: (608) 262-2331

Monday, June 07, 2004

Green Buzz from www.greenbiz.com:

Taking Care of Business

This week, the nonprofit Climate, Community & Biodiversity Alliance welcomes your two cents on a first-of-its-kind endeavor -- a set of certification standards governing land use projects that reduce global warming while conserving the environment and alleviating poverty. The standards, available online, were opened up for peer review and comment just this morning.

Also: If you're planning to take a break from the office sometime this summer, research your options with the EcoTour Directory, an online listing of ecotour operators throughout the world.

--------------------

Headlines

The Latest News on Business and the Environment


First-Ever Standards Set for Land Use Projects Targeting Climate Change
The first-ever set of standards certifying land use projects that reduce global warming will be opened up for global peer review and comment next week by the Climate, Community & Biodiversity Alliance.

World Bank Pledges Hikes in Renewable-Energy Investments
The World Bank Group has committed to an average growth rate of 20% per year over the next five years in its annual financial commitments for renewable energy and energy efficiency projects.

Sony and Matsushita Help Expand Web Tool to Manage High-Tech Product Compliance
The electronics industry is being confronted with strict environmental requirements that impact the way that products are designed and sold in global markets.

Twenty Honored as Innovative California Energy-Savers
The California nonprofit Flex Your Power has announced the winners of its 2003 Flex Your Power Energy Efficiency Awards.

New Partnership Brings Sustainable Forest and Farm Products to Market
The Rainforest Alliance has partnered with the United States Agency for International Development to establish the Certified Sustainable Products Alliance, a three-year effort to significantly promote and increase the sale of sustainably produced certified timber, banana, and coffee from Central America and Mexico.

Put GreenBiz news on your site for free! Learn more...

More Headlines...

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Resources and Tools
A Wealth of Hands-On Help

Tectonic Studio
An online resource library for commercial interior finishes.

Travel Matters
Site features an emissions calculator that shows how an individual's travel patterns translate to greenhouse gas emissions.

EcoTour Directory
An independent listing of ecotour operators large and small.

More Tools... | More Web Sites...

--------------------------------

Columns and Features
Insight and Inspiration from the Experts

Aveda Find Sustainability from Within
For those who believe that beauty is only skin deep, meet Dominique Conseil, a native Frenchman who now heads the Minnesota-based Aveda Corp, a manufacturer, wholesaler and retailer of personal care and lifestyle products and services. By Penny Bonda and Katie Sosnowchik

Wanna write for GreenBiz?Let us know if you'd like to write a guest column or feature reflecting your experiences or opinions in the environmental business world. Send a brief query to Editor@greenbiz.com | Read our editorial guidelines

More Columns... | More Features...

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Great Lakes News: 07 June 2004
A collaborative project of the Great Lakes Information Network and the Great
Lakes Radio Consortium.

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Granholm paddles to peddle the state
----------------------------------------
To promote Michigan tourism, the state''s governor will spend the week
kayaking, bike riding, rafting, camping and even taking a high-speed ride
around Michigan International Speedway with racer Jeff Gordon. Source: Booth
Newspapers (6/7)


Anglers competing with cormorants
----------------------------------------
The cormorant population is booming in the Great Lakes region, but some
anglers say there's too many of the birds eating too many fish. Source:
Great Lakes Radio Consortium (6/7)


Ferry follows in venerable wake
----------------------------------------
Rochester's new high-speed ferry recalls an era when the port bustled with
passenger service. Source: Rochester Democrat and Chronicle (6/7)


Budget cuts hurt the preservation of history and the pursuit of science in
national parks
----------------------------------------
Tight budgets are putting pressure on Isle Royale National Park and
everything else under the federal government's natural resources and history
divisions, such as the Forest Service, Fish and Wildlife Service, and the
Smithsonian. Source: The Racine Journal Times (6/7)


Ruling allows beach property owners to draw a line in the sand
----------------------------------------
The Michigan Court of Appeals has ruled that public access to private
beaches is confined to the water itself. Source: The Holland Sentinel (6/7)


Port Authority recommends Cleveland-to-Canada ferry
----------------------------------------
A Cleveland-to-Canada ferry could be commercially viable and in two years
could be carrying more than 800 passengers and 400 cars per trip, according
to a new study. Source: Ohio News Network (6/7)


Comments sought on navigation study
----------------------------------------
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the Canadian Department of
Transportation are seeking pubic input on what's needed to maintain the
Great Lakes-St. Lawrence navigation system. Source: Great Lakes Radio
Consortium (6/7)
----------------------------------------


Mayor Heartwell advocates Great Lakes cleanup
----------------------------------------
Grand Rapids, Mich., has become the first inland city to join the Great
Lakes Cities Initiative, a coalition of mayors in 45 U.S. and Canadian
cities along the shores of the Great Lakes. Source: The Grand Rapids Press
(6/7)


Michigan stops printing fish alerts
----------------------------------------
Budget cuts have forced the Michigan Department of Community Health to stop
printing warnings about the toxic chemicals that may be found in fish.
Source: The Bay City Times (6/7)


Local agencies receive erosion-prevention grants
----------------------------------------
Projects along the North Shore in Minnesota, include construction site
erosion and sediment control courses for contractors, real estate broker
education, and a sediment collection demonstration project. Source: Duluth
News Tribune (6/5)

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Did you miss a day of Daily News? Remember to use our searchable story
archive at http://www.great-lakes.net/news/inthenews.html


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Consortium (www.glrc.org), both based in Ann Arbor, Mich.
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Also from Alt Power Digest:

Message: 5
Date: Mon, 07 Jun 2004 02:06:07 -0000
From: "k_mcd2004"
Subject: Wind, sea and sun to fuel revolution

So why doesn't the US get going on some similar plan?

BRITAIN is on the cusp of an energy revolution in the race to replace
oil. Within a generation, according to some, power for our homes and
vehicles will be harnessed from the wind, sea, sun and the land.

"It will be unrecognisable from today," said Chris Ballance, a Green
MSP and member of the Parliament’s energy enterprise committee.

Oil, coal and nuclear power will play a role, but with diminished
importance.

There are five main alternatives: hydro, wind, sun, biomass and
hydrogen. Hydro is a proven renewable and provides 11 per cent of our
energy. Wind, meanwhile, supplies 2 per cent, but that will increase
to 8 per cent in six years.

full article text can be found here:

http://news.scotsman.com/topics.cfm?tid=605&id=633972004

Fro Alt Power Digest on Yahoo! Groups:

Message: 2
Date: Sun, 6 Jun 2004 08:47:48 -0500
From: "P. Neuman self only"
Subject: Fw: Gas May Have Spurred Ancient Global Warming-Nature

June 2, 2004
...
In an article in the science journal Nature, Norwegian researchers said
they had found traces of thousands of hydrothermal vents in lava off
Norway that could have been the source of a rise in greenhouse gases 55
million years ago. Until now, scientists have been at a loss to explain
the trigger for a 5-10 Celsius (10-20 F) global warming over about 10,000
years in the Eocene -- a blink in geological time.
...
The scientists said the annual rate of modern human emissions of
greenhouse
gases to the atmosphere in the 1990s -- from fossil fuels burnt in cars,
factories and power plants -- was 35 to 360 times as fast as the pace of
the Eocene gas buildup.

Faster now

"We can cause the same amount of global warming ourselves in a few
hundred years at current rates," Svensen said. Scientists say that gases
linked to human activity could bring disaster with more storms, floods
and higher sea levels. The Eocene global warming theory outlined in
Nature bolsters the idea that a buildup of gases can disrupt the climate,
as forecast by U.N. models. A U.N. panel of scientists has predicted a
1.4 to 5.8 Celsius rise in temperatures by 2100.
...
OSLO, Norway
By Alister Doyle (Reuters) --
http://www.cnn.com/2004/TECH/science/06/03/environment.warming.reut/index.html


Pat N

Kucinich taps Corvallis High grad

Jess DeGroot will serve as a delegate at Democratic National Convention

By BENNETT HALL
Gazette-Times business editor

Jess DeGroot plans to major in politics when he enrolls at Whitman College in Walla Walla, Wash., this fall. Over the summer, he'll be doing a little independent study.

DeGroot will travel to Boston next month to attend the Democratic National Convention — not as an observer, but as a delegate for presidential candidate Dennis Kucinich.

The 18-year-old Kucinich supporter, who helped organize the candidate's appearance at Corvallis High School in April, graduates today. On Saturday, he was elected to serve as a Kucinich delegate from Oregon's 4th Congressional District during a convention of district Democrats in Cottage Grove.

(Full Story)

Wars Put Strain On National Guard
Fire, Flood Relief Efforts Threatened

By Thomas E. Ricks
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, June 6, 2004; Page A01

With almost 40,000 troops serving in the unexpectedly violent and difficult occupation of Iraq, the National Guard is beginning to show the strain of duty there, according to interviews and e-mail exchanges with 23 state Guard commanders from California to Maine.

The Iraq mission is placing new stress on the active-duty Army as it leans more heavily than it has in decades on the Guard -- which, with 350,000 troops, rivals the active force in size. That new reliance, in turn, is raising concerns about the Guard's long-term ability to recruit and retain troops, and it is provoking more immediate worries in states that rely on the Guard to deal with fires, floods, hurricanes, tornadoes and earthquakes.

(Full Story)

Saturday, June 05, 2004

From GRACE:

webmaster@gracelinks.org

Alert (US): Use your Citizen Power to Stop Factory Farms

As you know, our nation's corporate farm system has been producing unwholesome food and driving family farmers out of business. To change the system, we need to elect government leaders who will do the right thing.

Given the importance of citizen participation in elections, GRACE would like to encourage you and your family members to register to vote.

If you are not yet registered to vote, or need to update your address or party affiliation, please take a moment to complete an online voter registration form at the Working Assets Your Vote Matters website which was featured in the action section of The Meatrix.

Just go to:
https://www.workingforchange.com/vote/index.cfm?ms=GRC001

Already registered? Great! Forward this email to your family and friends and encourage them to register to vote as well.

Progressive change will not occur on its own- register to vote and help make it happen!


==============================================
For more action alerts, go to: http://www.gracepublicfund.org/

Posted on Sat, Jun. 05, 2004

Kucinich's populist message fires up Moorestown students

By Elisa Ung

Inquirer Staff Writer

So it turns out Dennis Kucinich is still running for president.

The U.S. congressman from Ohio is talking to half-empty auditoriums of senior citizens and tossing off one-liners: "I wouldn't buy a used car from this administration, let alone a used war." He autographs high-schoolers' casts and sounds vaguely insulted when asked whether he's going to run again in 2008.

After all, Kucinich will remind you he is still one of three other Democrats challenging front-runner John Kerry on the June 8 New Jersey primary ballot.
(Full Story)

ENN Environmental News Network
E-mail Edition 06/04/2004

Hippos beat the Sun's blistering rays and other stories
Though as bare-skinned as humans, hippos avoid burning up in the hot equatorial sun. Now researchers have demonstrated that hippos beat the heat by sweating out their own brand of sunscreen.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-04/s_24373.asp

U.S. Senate approves change in defense nuclear cleanup requirements
The U.S. Senate on Thursday agreed to ease cleanup requirements for tanks holding millions of gallons of highly radioactive waste from Cold War-era bomb making.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-04/s_24527.asp

Car owners are turning to vegetable oil as cleaner, cheaper fuel alternative
As car owners across the country grapple with pumped-up gas prices, some are turning to their favorite restaurants for a solution: recycled vegetable oil.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-04/s_24528.asp

Twenty-seven dead from contaminated water in southern Pakistan
Contaminated water from a public reservoir is believed to have killed as many as 27 people and sickened more than 3,000 over the past two weeks in the southern city of Hyderabad, health authorities said in a statement Thursday.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-04/s_24531.asp

"Toxic dust" on computers has chemicals linked to diseases, says study
"Toxic dust" found on computer processors and monitors contains chemicals linked to reproductive and neurological disorders, according to a new study by several environmental groups.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-04/s_24526.asp

Biologists alarmed at disease outbreak in Klamath River salmon
California fisheries officials are worried that a parasite killing young salmon and steelhead migrating down the Klamath River to the ocean could kill hundreds of thousands of the fish in coming weeks.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-04/s_24534.asp

Ailing Alaska killer whales to get protection
U.S. officials said Thursday they are granting special protection to a small group of Alaska killer whales that has dwindled in number since some members were seen swimming through oil from the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-04/s_24536.asp

Regulators reject government plan for removing highly radioactive waste from Ohio facility
Federal environmental regulators have rejected a government plan to begin removing highly radioactive waste from a former uranium-processing plant in Ohio.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-04/s_24524.asp

New Zealand to ask tiny Palau to support South Pacific whale sanctuary
New Zealand wants the tiny Pacific state of Palau to end its opposition to the creation of a whale sanctuary in the South Pacific Ocean.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-04/s_24533.asp

Nuclear reprocessing plant resumes storage of radioactive nuclear waste from Japan's reactors
A closely watched nuclear fuel reprocessing plant in northern Japan received a shipment of high-level radioactive waste Thursday, triggering protests a year-and-a-half after it was closed for safety failures.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-04/s_24532.asp

Brazil defends Amazon protection efforts
Brazil on Thursday defended its efforts to fight destruction of the Amazon rain forest despite delays in creating reserves to protect the world's largest jungle.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-04/s_24535.asp

ENN Environmental News Network
E-mail Edition 06/03/2004

"Low-carb" diet can trim U.S. fuel costs, says study
Just as low-carbohydrate diets are trimming the American waistline, more judicious use of hydrocarbon-based fossil fuels would reduce U.S. energy consumption by 33 percent and save consumers $438 billion a year by 2014, according to an analysis by Cornell University ecologists.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-03/s_24279.asp

Deadly floods force tough talk about Haiti's deforestation
Named after a sacred tree in the Voodoo religion, this Haitian village has few remaining mapou trees and a scant number of others on its surrounding mountains. When floods tore through town last week, many survived by clinging to roots, branches, and trunks ? but it was the overall absence of trees that made the onslaught so deadly.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-03/s_24484.asp

Bad air causes heart disease, says U.S. heart group
Air pollution causes heart disease, the American Heart Association said this week. While pollution does not cause as many heart attacks as high blood pressure, for example, it is a serious risk factor, the group said in a statement.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-03/s_24490.asp

Australian PM says Schwarzenegger response "positive" on gas plan
On his first leg of a U.S. visit, Australian Prime Minister John Howard made a personal appeal to Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to back an Australian company's plan to build a liquefied natural gas terminal off the Southern California coast.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-03/s_24483.asp

Gas may have spurred ancient global warming, says Nature
A vast belch of gas from beneath the North Atlantic 55 million years ago may have warmed the planet and holds clues to threats from an even faster modern surge in greenhouse gases, scientists said Wednesday.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-03/s_24489.asp

RWE Thames Water pulls out of Shanghai treatment plant project
RWE Thames Water, the world's third-biggest water supply company, has withdrawn from a water treatment project in Shanghai after the government changed rules on the rate of return for such investments.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-03/s_24487.asp

Power plants top North American air polluters, says watchdog
Coal and oil-fired power plants are the top air polluters in the United States and Canada according to most recent data, the Commission for Environmental Cooperation said Wednesday.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-03/s_24492.asp

Open USDA biopharm permit process to the public, says study
The U.S. Agriculture Department's process for approving permits to grow biopharmaceutical crops is "shrouded in secrecy," making it difficult to know if the crops pose a risk to humans or the environment, a study said Wednesday.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-03/s_24488.asp

E.U. Commission sees U.S. return to Kyoto fold
The United States will eventually join other industrial nations in signing up to the Kyoto global warming pact, despite its current opposition to the agreement, Europe's environment chief said Wednesday.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-03/s_24491.asp

ENN Environmental News Network
E-mail Edition 06/02/2004

Cities intensify climate problems
Living in cities, it's easy to forget about our connection to the natural world. In human-created environments, surrounded by concrete and asphalt, we often feel isolated and insular, as though we are protected from the forces of nature.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-02/s_24280.asp

Three-fourths of oil and gas leases on federal lands aren't producing
Nearly three-fourths of the 40 million acres of public land currently leased for oil and gas development in the continental United States outside Alaska isn't producing any oil or gas, federal records show, even as the Bush administration pushes to open more environmentally sensitive public lands for oil and gas development.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-02/s_24439.asp

Soap and water cuts diarrhea in refugee slum, says study
Simple hand washing cut in half the rate of often deadly diarrhea among refugee children in Pakistan, researchers reported Tuesday in an experiment that showed small changes can make big health differences.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-02/s_24432.asp

Court upholds snowmobile pollution rule
Federal appeals court judges upheld tougher pollution controls on snowmobiles Tuesday but asked why the Environmental Protection Agency rule would exempt almost one-third of newly built snowmobiles.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-02/s_24437.asp

Jordan appeals for international help to save the Dead Sea
Jordan appealed on Tuesday for international assistance to help save the ecosystem of the Dead Sea, whose water level is dropping.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-02/s_24438.asp

Latvian nuclear reactor to be decommissioned with U.S. funds
A nuclear reactor in this Baltic state will be decommissioned and its uranium sent to neighboring Russia under the auspices of a new U.S. program to stem the availability of material that could be used in dirty bombs, officials said Tuesday.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-02/s_24440.asp

Japan considers stricter car fuel efficiency rules in environment policy revision
Japan is considering stricter fuel efficiency standards for cars as part of sweeping revisions in environmental policy to curb pollution and climate change, an official said Tuesday.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-02/s_24441.asp

Antifire chemical spurs toxic fears in Arctic
Chemicals widely used as flame retardants in homes have been found in polar bears and birds in the Arctic, raising fears that they could pose a health hazard, Norwegian scientists said on this week.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-02/s_24433.asp

Iceland to catch fewer whales
Iceland has pulled back on plans to kill hundreds of whales over a two-year period Tuesday in a move hailed by conservation groups which want to see it promote the mammals as a tourist attraction.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-02/s_24435.asp

Rival ethnic militants pledge peace in Nigeria's oil "hot zone"
Rival ethnic militants in Nigeria's troubled oil-rich southern delta pledged peace Tuesday after the killings of two American oil workers prompted a government crackdown on a yearlong spree of bloodletting.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-02/s_24436.asp

ENN Environmental News Network
E-mail Edition 05/25/2004

EarthTalk: What happens to drugs when they leave our systems?
Every time you swallow a pill, some of that medicine follows a circuitous path through your body, down the toilet, through the sewage treatment plant (where if is often resistant to traditional treatments) and into the nearest river or lake, where it is eventually tapped again for the public drinking water supply.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-05-25/s_23967.asp

Despite traditions and bloodlines, government says some tribes don't exist
The fog dips low into the snowcapped mountains as the emerald McCloud River meanders through the valley, a silent guardian over the graves and culture of the Winnemem Wintu tribe.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-05-25/s_24218.asp

Climate change: Boom or bust for biodiversity?
Will climate change trigger mass extinctions or will new life bloom in its wake? Some of the scientific scenarios are apocalyptic and see a warmer world leading to the most profound changes since the demise of the dinosaurs.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-05-25/s_24213.asp

"Grandma Osprey" moves ospreys back from the brink
From her tiny log cabin on a bluff overlooking a lake, the old lady warbles a love song as she rocks in her chair and peers through binoculars at the object of her affection. High above, a lone bird soars, wings outstretched, in a blaze of brown and white.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-05-25/s_24219.asp

Divers assess fuel leakage from sunken car carrier off Singapore
Salvage divers jumped into deep, murky waters off Singapore on Monday to assess whether a ship that sank with 4,000 cars on board after colliding with an oil tanker has spilled any of its 990 tons (1,090 U.S. tons) of fuel oil, officials said.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-05-25/s_24216.asp

Japan mulls market to let companies trade rights to pollute
Japan is considering setting up a market that would let companies trade the right to pollute, as Tokyo looks for ways to lower overall emissions and meet its targets for the Kyoto treaty on climate change.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-05-25/s_24215.asp

U.S. agency calls for closer look at drugs in animals
Federal agencies looking at the issue of antibiotics in livestock need to focus their efforts, work faster, and back up any recommendations with better research, congressional investigators said Monday.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-05-25/s_24214.asp

Fast Arctic thaw is a sign of global warming, says report
Global warming is hitting the Arctic more than twice as fast as the rest of the planet in what may be a portent of wider, catastrophic changes, the chairman of an eight-nation study said Monday.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-05-25/s_24212.asp

Maverick environmentalist's conference to list solutions to global ills
A maverick environmentalist brought together eight prominent economic experts recently for a conference aimed at finding cost-effective solutions to the world's most urgent woes, including climate change, conflict, disease, and malnutrition.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-05-25/s_24217.asp

Humans, nature mix things up in Day After Tomorrow
To hear director Roland Emmerich tell it, there may be no May 29 or, for that matter, May 30. And this Monday's Memorial Day holiday in the United States: Kiss that one goodbye too.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-05-25/s_24210.asp

ENN Environmental News Network
E-mail Edition 05/20/2004

Forest Plan Spells Extinction For Marbled Murrelet and other stories
The marbled murrelet, a threatened Pacific seabird, has proven a mighty force in forest conservation. Because it nests in old-growth trees, the murrelet has helped turn back chainsaws and logging trucks from Northern California to Washington state.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-05-20/s_23659.asp

Conservationists ask Koizumi to stop U.S. military base relocation to save endangered dugongs
Conservationists have asked Japan to halt plans to relocate a U.S. Marine Corps air base, saying the facility might threaten endangered dugongs, or sea cows, that live in nearby waters.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-05-20/s_24070.asp

JP Morgan Chase deflects criticism with new environmental policies
In the latest in a series of 2004 shareholder proxy successes, JPMorgan Chase has agreed to take steps to increase its emphasis on environmental risk management. As a result of this positive response from JPMorgan Chase, Christian Brothers Investment Services, Inc. (CBIS) and other concerned shareholders are withdrawing a related shareholder proposal.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-05-20/s_23660.asp

Greenpeace cleared in U.S. ship-boarding case
A U.S. judge acquitted environmental protection group Greenpeace Wednesday on charges it conspired to break the law by sending activists aboard a freighter carrying illegally felled mahogany two years ago.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-05-20/s_24063.asp

International protection given to New Zealand marine reserve area
Large ships will be banned from approaching the Poor Knights Islands off New Zealand's east coast following an unprecedented ruling aimed at protecting ecologically sensitive areas, maritime authorities said Wednesday.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-05-20/s_24072.asp

Washington hopes chemical will end lead woes
Authorities in Washington said Wednesday they will add an anticorrosion agent to the city's water supply starting next month, which they say should reduce unprecedented levels of lead in the city's water.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-05-20/s_24068.asp

Bush invokes war on terror in U.S. energy debate
President Bush said Wednesday he would not release strategic oil stocks to curb record gasoline prices while he was waging war on terror and accused Democrats of playing politics on energy.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-05-20/s_24067.asp

Uranium mining company may face criminal charges for water contamination, Australian minister says
A mining company may face criminal charges after the water supply at its mine was contaminated with uranium, a senior official said Wednesday.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-05-20/s_24071.asp

A shocker for Americans: $2-a-gallon gasoline
Rising fuel prices gave Americans a shock as more than a few drivers spent $60 Wednesday just filling their gasoline tank.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-05-20/s_24065.asp

Thaw of icy gas may worsen global warming, says report
A thawing of vast, icelike deposits of gas under oceans and in permafrost could sharply accelerate global warming in the 21st century, British-based scientists said Wednesday.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-05-20/s_24062.asp

Activists and MPs renew call for British hunt ban
Animal welfare activists and backbench members of parliament called on Britain's government Wednesday to reopen the long-running debate on banning hunting with dogs.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-05-20/s_24066.asp

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Great Lakes News: 04 June 2004
A collaborative project of the Great Lakes Information Network and the Great
Lakes Radio Consortium.

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Pilots on the lookout for raise
----------------------------------------
Great Lakes pilots of foreign ships say they're overdue for a pay increase,
and that the delay, caused by the U.S. Coast Guard, threatens security.
Source: Duluth News Tribune (6/4)


Sewer inspectors head east
----------------------------------------
Under orders in January from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
Duluth must stop sewage overflows, which accompany heavy rainfall and stream
into Lake Superior, because the problem causes environmental and public
health concerns. Source: Duluth News Tribune (6/4)


Trash burning is left off renewable energy list
----------------------------------------
Burning garbage should not be considered a resource on par with wind and
waves as New York increases its reliance on renewable energy, a state
official recommended Thursday. Source: Times Union (6/4)


Boehlert, Quinn, Walsh, McHugh announce $178,000 for Seaway Trail
----------------------------------------
U.S. Reps. Sherwood Boehlert, Jack Quinn, James Walsh, and John M. McHugh
announced that the Seaway Trail, a National Scenic Byway Trail running
through much of Upstate New York has received $178,508 in a federal
transportation discretionary grant. Source: Oswego Daily News (6/4)


Rosy Mound Natural Area ready for dedication
----------------------------------------
On June 15, after years of complicated land acquisitions and property
transfers, officials will dedicate the Rosy Mound Natural Area as the
county's newest park and name its main trail to Lake Michigan. Source: The
Muskegon Chronicle (6/3)


Big perch take lots of bites on Ontario side of Lake Erie
----------------------------------------
Spring is one of the best times for perch fishing on Lake Erie since the
fish concentrate along reefs and ledges after spawning, forming large
schools that roam along the Canadian coastline in search of food. Source:
Detroit Free Press (6/3)


New Michigan walleye rules hurt, businesses say
----------------------------------------
A shortened walleye fishing season in Michigan waters of Lake Erie has
reduced the net incomes of charter boat operators, bait vendors and others
who depend on spending by anglers. Source: The Akron Beacon Journal (6/3)


Ferry makes maiden voyage
----------------------------------------
The first high-speed ferry on the Great Lakes sailed off Tuesday in clear,
sunny skies on its maiden voyage. Source: The Detroit News (6/3)


Despite record rain, Michigan county urges conserving water
----------------------------------------
Officials say that despite the showers, there isn't nearly enough capacity
in pumping stations, reservoirs or transmission lines to handle summer
demand for water from Lake Huron. Source: The Flint Journal (6/3)

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Did you miss a day of Daily News? Remember to use our searchable story
archive at http://www.great-lakes.net/news/inthenews.html


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Information Network (www.glin.net) and the Great Lakes Radio
Consortium (www.glrc.org), both based in Ann Arbor, Mich.
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Great Lakes News Late press: 04 June 2004
A collaborative project of the Great Lakes Information Network and the Great
Lakes Radio Consortium.

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

IJC launches on-line bulletin board to discuss review of the GL Water
Quality Agreement

http://www.ijc.org/rel/news/040426_e.htm
Source: International Joint Commission (2004-06-02)

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

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archive at http://www.great-lakes.net/news/inthenews.html


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Kucinich picks Soloflex founder for platform panel

From Bend.com news sources
Posted: Friday, June 4, 2004 10:58 AM
Reference Code: PR-15957

June 4 - Democratic Presidential candidate Dennis Kucinich announced Friday the appointment of Oregon entrepreneur Jerry Wilson as his representative to the Platform Drafting Committee of the Democratic National Committee.

Wilson will join 16 other members of the committee Saturday in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, for a hearing on national security. He will also participate on Kucinich's behalf in platform drafting meetings in Columbus, Ohio; Sante Fe, New Mexico; and Miami, Florida.

"Jerry Wilson brings an unusual combination of abilities to the Platform Drafting Committee. He is a genius from whom powerful ideas cascade rapidly. His business acumen and his practical political sense will add great strength to the Platform Drafting Committee," Kucinich said. "I am grateful for his willingness to...(Full Story)

Bush more than Kerry is unifying state Democrats

By David Postman and Ralph Thomas
Seattle Times Olympia bureau

TACOMA — It appears the man doing the most to unify Democrats this election year is President Bush, not U.S. Sen. John Kerry.

As Democratic Party activists from across the state gathered yesterday for their three-day state convention, their collective disdain for Bush was obvious. And it was fueled further last night when former Vice President Al Gore delivered a scathing indictment of Bush's record as president.

Some Democrats remain lukewarm about Kerry, the party's presumptive nominee...(Full Story)

W I R E D N E W S Top Stories - 09:15AM 2.Jun.04.PDT
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Wanted: Drugs to Fight Bioterror (Med-Tech Center 2:00 a.m. PDT)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/medtech/0,1286,63655,00.html/wn_ascii

Armed with $5.6 billion, the U.S. government wants to woo
pharmaceutical companies to develop drugs and vaccines to combat
bioterrorism. But the money may be just a drop in the bucket. By Randy
Dotinga.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Big Bucks for Biometric Screening (Security Blanket Tuesday)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/privacy/0,1848,63683,00.html/wn_ascii

The Department of Homeland Security awards a $10 billion contract to a
group of companies, led by Accenture, to build a system to screen and
track foreign visitors to the United States.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

You, Too, Can Be a Comics Whiz (Culture 2:00 a.m. PDT)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/culture/0,1284,63691,00.html/wn_ascii

Like video games? Can't draw? Want to start a Web comic anyway? Join
the throngs creating new comics from classic video-game graphics. Just
don't expect the game companies to approve. By Lore Sjöberg.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

How Tough Are the Crop Cops? (Med-Tech Center Wednesday)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/medtech/0,1286,63689,00.html/wn_ascii

The USDA says it's stepping up efforts to regulate drugs grown in
crops, and let the public in on those regulations. But environmental
groups are unconvinced. By Kristen Philipkoski.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Robots to Hubble's Rescue? (Technology Wednesday)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/technology/0,1282,63686,00.html/wn_ascii

NASA's chief administrator earns wild applause after telling the
American Astronomical Society that the space agency is actively seeking
a robot able to repair the Hubble Space Telescope.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Preaching to the Anti-Corp Choir (DAT's Entertainment 2:00 a.m. PDT)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/digiwood/0,1412,63704,00.html/wn_ascii

A documentary called The Corporation says big business is about to
collapse under the weight of its costs to humans and the environment.
Make no mistake, the film is pure agitprop. But does it have a point? A
review by Jason Silverman.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Renewable Energy Gathers Steam (Technology 2:00 a.m. PDT)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/technology/0,1282,63701,00.html/wn_ascii

More countries are getting serious about using alternative energy
sources, even going so far as setting concrete goals. Also: Hollywood
eco-disaster drama plays out in real life.... Americans want more done
to preserve the environment. By Stephen Leahy.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Thursday, June 03, 2004

For also-ran Kucinich, the campaign goes on in last primaries

By GEOFF MULVIHILL
Associated Press Writer

June 4, 2004, 4:44 PM EDT

MOORESTOWN, N.J. -- The last-in-the-nation primaries next week in New Jersey and Montanta are academic for presumptive Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry, but they're getting the full attention of also-ran candidate Dennis Kucinich.

Kucinich, an Ohio congressman and the former mayor of Cleveland, on Friday started two days of stumping in the Garden State. From here, he'll head to a rally in Pittsburgh, then off to Montana for two days of campaigning there.

Kucinich stood out among the members of Congress who were in the presidential race last year and earlier this year because he was the only one of them to vote against invading Iraq...(Full Story)

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Great Lakes News Late Press: 02 June 2004
A collaborative project of the Great Lakes Information Network and the Great
Lakes Radio Consortium.

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Research grants will help stem threat from mercury, other toxics
http://www.glc.org/announce/04/06glad.html
Source: Great Lakes Commission (2004-06-01)

Keeping an eye on Lake St. Clair
http://www.glc.org/announce/04/06stclair.html
Source: Great Lakes Commission (2004-06-01)

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

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archive at http://www.great-lakes.net/news/inthenews.html


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Great Lakes News: 02 June 2004
A collaborative project of the Great Lakes Information Network and the Great
Lakes Radio Consortium.

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

EDITORIAL: Write for lakes: Panel needs all ideas for protecting waterways
----------------------------------------
At hearings starting this week, a binational panel will begin gathering
comments on its Great Lakes St. Lawrence Seaway Study. Source: Detroit Free
Press (6/2)


Levels rise, but boaters slow to return
----------------------------------------
Memorial Day weekend, considered the official start of the boating season,
was uneventful and extremely quiet on many inland lakes and along Lake
Michigan. Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (6/2)


Probe says plane that crashed off Pelee Island was overloaded
----------------------------------------
The single-engine Cessna that crashed off of Pelee Island into ice-covered
Lake Erie on Jan. 17 killing all 10 people aboard was carrying too much
weight, officials said Tuesday at a press briefing in Kingsville, Ontario.
Source: The Plain Dealer (6/2)


North Shore resorts struggle to survive
----------------------------------------
Rising property values, high taxes and environmental restrictions have
forced some resorts along Lake Superior to shut down. Source: KDLH-TV -
Duluth, MN (6/1)


Michigan lighthouses could be national draw
----------------------------------------
Michigan's members of Congress want to direct federal officials to inventory
the state's lighthouses and maritime resources and develop a plan to
preserve and promote them. Source: Booth Newspapers (5/31)


It's key season at the Soo Locks
----------------------------------------
There are legions of boat watchers on the Great Lakes, and they're in their
element at the Soo Locks, the bottleneck through which every Lake
Superior-bound boat must pass. Source: Detroit Free Press (5/30)


Report re-affirms road salt's impact on environment
----------------------------------------
Road salt from highways has been identified as the culprit in the deaths of
blueberry bushes in Michigan's Ottawa County, but the salt saturation
problem reaches beyond the farm fields. Source: The Holland Sentinel (5/30)


Michigan cuts fish-advisory program
----------------------------------------
The Michigan Department of Community Health (MDCH) is going out of the
fish-advisory business. Source: The Grand Rapids Press (5/29)


City changing beach guidelines for summer
----------------------------------------
Swimmers may find Racine, Wis., beaches open more often this summer and the
city of Racine is likely to save some money, because of a new method for
monitoring water quality in Lake Michigan. Source: The Journal Times (5/29)


Officials expect tourism boost from Milwaukee-Muskegon ferry
----------------------------------------
Government and travel officials in Michigan say they believe the Lake
Express ferry will boost tourism and economic development in Muskegon and
the state's southwestern region. Source: The Detroit News (5/29)

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Did you miss a day of Daily News? Remember to use our searchable story
archive at http://www.great-lakes.net/news/inthenews.html


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Great Lakes News Late press: 03 June 2004
A collaborative project of the Great Lakes Information Network and the Great
Lakes Radio Consortium.

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Great Lakes Commission awards $1.9 million to benefit water quality through
soil erosion, sediment control

http://www.glc.org/announce/04/06glbp.html
Source: Great Lakes Commission (2004-06-01)

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Did you miss a day of Daily News? Remember to use our searchable story
archive at http://www.great-lakes.net/news/inthenews.html


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Great Lakes News: 03 June 2004
A collaborative project of the Great Lakes Information Network and the Great
Lakes Radio Consortium.

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

EPA faces lawsuit over emissions
----------------------------------------
Environmental and health groups said Wednesday they will sue the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency over emissions from four coal-fired power
plants in the Chicago area. Source: Chicago Sun-Times (6/3)


Indian Act is racist: Fontaine
----------------------------------------
The federal Indian Act is an "archaic, discriminatory and racist" piece of
legislation, Phil Fontaine said yesterday in a lengthy, unscripted address
before the Anishinabek Grand Council Assembly. Source: The Globe and Mail
(6/3)


Oregon coke plant debate simmers
----------------------------------------
Fifteen environmental groups from Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York,
and Ontario have urged the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency to deny U.S.
Coking Group LLC its permit to construct the facility. Source: The Toledo
Blade (6/3)


A growing thirst for groundwater
----------------------------------------
Where water demand outpaces supply, times warrant a fresh look at a resource
considered unfathomable and unending. Source: Wisconsin Natural Resources
Magazine (6/3)


Exotic species threatening native Lake Erie fish
----------------------------------------
Fisheries biologists call them exotics, invasive species and non-native
species, but by any name, they're big trouble for America's freshwater
rivers and lakes. Source: The Plain Dealer (6/3)


Wisconsin seeks volunteers' hair for mercury study
----------------------------------------
A state agency is seeking 2,000 volunteers for a study that will examine the
levels of mercury in people, particularly those who often eat fish. Source:
Duluth News Tribune (6/3)


Experts say flooding leaves perfect conditions for mosquitoes
----------------------------------------
Many rains that flooded rivers, basements and shallow areas across northern
Illinois contain generations of floodwater mosquito larvae that only need a
spell of warm weather to mature and begin buzzing around, experts say.
Source: The Northwest Indiana Times (6/3)


Invasive plant is in Burt Lake
----------------------------------------
An invasive exotic plant species is threatening more than one regional lake,
and area preservationists are taking note. Source: Cheboygan Daily Tribune
(6/3)


DNR set to take action against MMSD
----------------------------------------
State regulators today are expected to set into motion punishment against
the Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage District for its enormous dumping of raw
sewage in May. Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (6/2)


Nuclear plant bans draw anglers' ire
----------------------------------------
Ever since the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, the water and shore
around the Kewaunee and Point Beach nuclear power plants have been off
limits to anglers and boaters. Source: Green Bay Press-Gazette (6/2)

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Did you miss a day of Daily News? Remember to use our searchable story
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Wednesday, June 02, 2004

Illinois PIRG asks you to help reduce global warming

Dear Illinois PIRG supporter,

You've probably seen or heard about the movie "The Day After Tomorrow." The movie is a dramatization of the worst-case, scariest scenario in the event of rapid climate change.

Although the movie is fiction, global warming is very real. Burning dirty fossil fuels (oil, coal and gas) to power cars and homes releases heat-trapping global warming gases into the atmosphere, which alters the climate of the planet and throws weather systems out of balance.

The good news is that this is a disaster we can prevent. We already have technologies available to start addressing this problem, we just need the will to start acting now.

Please take a moment to ask the presidential candidates to explain their plans to protect the environment and consumers by reducing global warming pollution. Then, ask your family and friends to help by forwarding this e-mail to them.

To take action, click on the link below or paste it into your web browser:
http://www.wecanstopglobalwarming.org


Background

During Memorial Day weekend, Fox Studios released the movie "The Day After Tomorrow" nationwide. The movie is a dramatization of the worst-case, scariest scenario in the event of rapid climate change, complete with grapefruit-sized hail pummeling Tokyo and Manhattan drowning in the ocean before freezing. To see the latest trailer of the film, go to: www.thedayaftertomorrowmovie.com

Although the movie is fiction, global warming is very real. Burning dirty fossil fuels (oil, coal and gas) to power cars, homes and industry releases heat-trapping global warming gases into the atmosphere, which alters the climate of the planet and throws weather systems out of balance. Scientists warn that doing nothing to reduce global warming pollution will increase the frequency and severity of costly extreme weather events such as drought, floods, and hurricanes. Although it is unlikely to happen overnight the way it does in the movie, we will still experience huge personal and economic losses, in addition to severe degradation of our environment. Extreme weather events cost Americans nearly $20 billion in 2002, a cost that could increase if the U.S. does nothing to curb global warming.

The good news is that this is a disaster we can prevent. We already have technologies available to start addressing this problem. We just need the will to start acting now. We should start at the top and request that our presidential candidates outline their plans of action to tackle global warming, and that they discuss their plans in the upcoming presidential debates.

Please take a moment to ask the presidential candidates to explain their plans to protect the environment and consumers by reducing global warming pollution. Then ask your family and friends to help by forwarding this e-mail to them.

To take action, click on the link below or paste it into your web browser:
http://www.wecanstopglobalwarming.org

Sincerely,

Diane E. Brown
Illinois PIRG Executive Director
DianeB@illinoispirg.org
http://www.IllinoisPIRG.org

P.S. Thanks again for your support. Please feel free to share this e-mail with your family and friends.

W I R E D N E W S Top Stories - 09:15AM 1.Jun.04.PDT
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Biodiesel Boom Well-Timed (Autopia 2:00 a.m. PDT)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/autotech/0,2554,63635,00.html/wn_ascii

As the price of gas continues to climb, the appeal of an alternative
domestic fuel is growing. Biodiesel fueling stations, new EPA emissions
standards and a pending tax credit may help tip the balance toward
renewable fuel. By John Gartner.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Energy Gets Jolt of Venture Cash (Business 2:00 a.m. PDT)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/business/0,1367,63639,00.html/wn_ascii

Motorists are feeling plenty of pain at the pump, but venture
capitalists who follow the energy business find rising fuel costs
attractive. Investments in power conservation and alternative fuels are
increasingly attractive. By Joanna Glasner.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Drivers Want Code to Their Cars (Autopia 2:00 a.m. PDT)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/autotech/0,2554,63615,00.html/wn_ascii

Today's cars have 1,000 times more computing horsepower than the moon
rocket. But automakers resist letting car owners access diagnostic
tools. Why? Because dealers can charge $100 just to turn off the Check
Engine light. By Julia Scheeres.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Smarter Than the CEO (Wired magazine 2:00 a.m. PDT)
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/12.06/view.html?pg=2
Success, most corporations assume, depends on the efforts of a few
superlative individuals. As a result, they treat their CEOs as
superheroes. In doing so, firms are neglecting their most valuable
resource: the collective intelligence of the organization as a whole.
By James Surowiecki from Wired magazine.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Arctic Getting Warmer Faster (Technology 2:00 a.m. PDT)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/technology/0,1282,63626,00.html/wn_ascii

Melting icecaps trigger a vicious cycle, making the Arctic heat up
quicker than the rest of the planet. Also: Fresh water supplies shrink
... male fertility drops ... and formaldehyde is unleashed. By Stephen
Leahy.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Earth Shines Its Bright Light (Technology Thursday)
http://go.hotwired.com/news/technology/0,1282,63632,00.html/wn_ascii

Scientists say the planet reflected more light into space from 2001 to
2003 after a dim period between 1984 and 2001. The shift could be proof
of climate change, although more research is needed.

Tuesday, June 01, 2004

ENN Environmental News Network
E-mail Edition 06/01/2004

EarthTalk: Is the world running out of oil?
Many experts say that evidence points to a declining world oil supply. According to renowned petroleum geologist Colin Campbell, who has worked for Texaco, BP, Shell, and other major oil companies, world oil discovery peaked in the 1960s, while world production is set to peak about six years from now. Campbell predicts "the onset of a chronic long-term shortage" by 2010.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-01/s_24208.asp

Soaring U.S. gas prices spur interest in hybrids
Hybrid vehicles made headlines in March after movie stars like Will Ferrell, Robin Williams, and Tim Robbins used the Toyota Prius to get to the Academy Awards show.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-01/s_24379.asp

Salmon protection dodges bullet with revised plan
Federal officials scaled back plans recently to reduce protections for endangered Northwest U.S. salmon but proposed boosting wild salmon populations with salmon raised in hatchery tanks, a move that environmentalists said could harm wild stocks.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-01/s_24377.asp

African experts meet to negotiate new agreement to replace 75-year old Nile River colonial treaty
Experts from African countries that share the Nile River's waters began another round of talks on Monday intended to help draw up a new agreement on how the vast resource is utilized.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-01/s_24387.asp

Feeling the heat
The disaster movie The Day After Tomorrow has been dismissed by some scientists and environmentalists as too extreme and spectacular to be credible.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-01/s_24375.asp

Drought is changing the way farmers do business
A nearly decade-long drought is changing the way Frank Martin does business at Crooked Sky Farms.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-01/s_24386.asp

Iraqi water sector undermined by crippled infrastructure, absence of security, minister says
Iraq has sufficient water resources from lakes and rivers, but the vital sector is undermined by impotent infrastructure and lack of security in post-war Iraq, Iraqi Water Resources Minister Abdul Latif Jamal Rashid said this week.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-01/s_24388.asp

Hunt for Haiti flooding victims widens
Relief workers already feeding and sheltering thousands of Haitians Monday widened searches to outlying areas for more survivors of flooding and mudslides that killed about 2,000 people.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-01/s_24376.asp

Waning earthshine on Moon signals pollution, says study
The light the Earth casts on the dark side of the Moon is waning, perhaps a signal of climate change or worsening pollution, scientists reported recently.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-01/s_24381.asp

Oil giants outside Middle East struggle to offset rising global crude prices
Leading oil exporters outside the Middle East have pledged to boost production to offset soaring world prices, but it could be months or years before Russia, Nigeria, and Mexico really manage to open their taps.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-01/s_24385.asp

Germany sees conference strengthening industrialized world's commitment to renewable energy
An international conference this week will send a signal that industrialized countries are committed to developing renewable energies as "a serious pillar of our energy supplies," Germany's environment minister said in an interview broadcast this week.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-01/s_24389.asp

West's spies missed Libya nuke shipment from Turkey
As U.S., British, and U.N. experts were busy disarming Libya, a shipment of nuclear-bomb-related machinery from Turkey slipped past Western intelligence agencies into Libya in March, an atomic expert said recently.
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-06-01/s_24380.asp

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Great Lakes News: 01 June 2004
A collaborative project of the Great Lakes Information Network and the Great
Lakes Radio Consortium.

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

Plenty of riders set for ferry's debut
----------------------------------------
The high-speed ferry Lake Express is carrying paying passengers for the
first time today, making the 2 1/2-hour trip from Milwaukee, Wis., to
Muskegon, Mich. Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (6/1)


Asian carp: Lakes' delegation campaigns for ban
----------------------------------------
Nearly everyone in the Great Lakes region's congressional delegation has
rejuvenated a 2002 effort to ban at least three of four Asian carp species.
Source: The Toledo Blade (6/1)


Power line debate is moving south
----------------------------------------
A high-voltage debate is underway regarding two two major power line
projects intended to improve electric reliability in Wisconsin, which
currently has relatively few connections to the nation's power grid. Source:
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (6/1)


Small municipalities brace for costly water upgrades
----------------------------------------
More than three-quarters of small and mid-sized Ontario municipalities must
make costly upgrades to their water systems in the next year in order to
meet new provincial requirements spurred by the Walkerton tragedy. Source:
The London Free Press (6/1)


Group trying to stage comeback for fish extinct in Michigan
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The grayling, a once-abundant fish that gave its name to a northern Michigan
city, vanished from state waters more than 70 years ago, but it will be back
if a private group has its way. Source: Detroit Free Press (6/1)


Gardeners have hand in invasive species control
----------------------------------------
Gardeners have been ordering new plants and digging in the dirt this spring.
But if they're not careful, they could be introducing invasive plants that
can cause havoc with the native ecosystem. Source: Great Lakes Radio
Consortium (5/31)


Finding sea lampreys a shocking experience
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Every year, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service surveys dozens of streams
that flow into the Great Lakes for juvenile sea lampreys burrowed in the
silt. Source: Booth Newspapers (5/31)


Record beach closings on Lake Michigan
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Communities in the Lake Michigan basin reported more than 1,400 beach
closings last year, the most in seven years of record-keeping by the Lake
Michigan Federation. Source: Great Lakes Radio Consortium (5/31)


Beach walkers lose ground to homeowners
----------------------------------------
These days, the public's right to walk on the beach and a landowner's right
to claim trespassing is not a line in the sand. It's the edge of the water,
no matter how much the lakes rise or recede. Source: The Detroit News (5/28)

For links to these stories and more, visit http://www.great-lakes.net/news/

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archive at http://www.great-lakes.net/news/inthenews.html


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Students walk for peace
Monday, May 31, 2004

SANTA CLARA -- Nearly two dozen students spent their Memorial Day weekend walking nearly 50 miles from Santa Clara to San Francisco to promote peace.

The students from the University of California, Santa Cruz began the march Saturday and planned to arrive at House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi's office by Tuesday morning.

They hope to encourage the San Francisco legislator to support a bill introduced by long-shot Democratic presidential candidate Rep. Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio, that would create a Department of Peace.

The agency would shape policy and promote peace in America and abroad. Among other things, the legislation would create a Peace Academy to train students to resolve disputes in nonviolent ways...(Full Story)