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Alaska Seeks Data About Possible Windblown Coal Dust from Mine Project
Anchorage Daily News, 10/24/2011"The leaseholder for a controversial coal mine proposed in the Matanuska Valley has withdrawn its application for a state air quality permit for a second time, according to the Department of Environmental Conservation and the company, Usibelli Coal Mine, Inc."
"Vote Targeting Pebble Mine in Alaska Is Over; the Battle Isn't"
LA Times, 10/21/2011"A few hundred voters in the remote hills of western Alaska cast ballots this week -- in one of the most closely watched elections in the country -- to halt big mining projects that might poison fishing streams. That initiative was targeted squarely at the giant Pebble Mine.
"Interior Secretary Ken Salazar To Highlight Tamiami Trail Project"
S. Fla. Sun-Sentinel, 10/20/2011"MIAMI -- Interior Secretary Ken Salazar is in South Florida to learn about the progress of the Tamiami Trail Bridge Project.
A press release says Salazar and U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Director Dan Ashe on Thursday will be highlighting the Department's work to help preserve and protect America's great outdoors."
The South Florida Sun-Sentinel had the story October 20, 2011.
Rare Indian Artifacts Were at Risk in Deteriorating NPS Buildings
Greenwire, 10/14/2011With a $10 billion maintenance backlog, the National Park Service is struggling to make do as aging buildings deteriorate. This week it shuttered the Grand Teton's Indian Arts Museum, because uncontrolled humidity and other conditions there were ruining a world-class collection of ancient Native American artifacts.
"Conservation Funding Sparks Political Battle"
Wash Post, 10/10/2011"MONUMENT, Colo. -- The 50,000 drivers who cruise daily along Interstate 25 between Denver and Colorado Springs drive through ranch and farm land marked by dramatic buttes and the presence of wild animals, a vista that might have been very different but for a little-known federal program. "The Land and Water Conservation Fund, which Congress created in 1965, helped pay for this open space, along with large swaths of land in other areas across the country. But there is a fight looming in Washington as Congress plans to drastically cut the program’s budget, and President Obama, who had accepted cuts in the past, appears ready to oppose them."
"EPA Loses First Round in Mine Permit Crackdown Case"
Coal Tattoo, 10/07/2011"A federal judge in Washington, D.C., has ruled with the coal industry — and the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection — in the first phase of a lawsuit challenging the Obama administration’s crackdown on mountaintop removal mining."
"U.S. Supreme Court Ends Bush-Era Grazing Regulations"
ENS, 10/05/2011"WASHINGTON, DC -- The U.S. Supreme Court [Monday] denied consideration of an appeal by the Public Lands Council of previous federal court decisions overturning Bureau of land Management grazing regulations promulgated during the George W. Bush administration. The decision affects over 160 million acres of public land in 11 western states."
"Molycorp Set to Announce a Rare Earth Rediscovery"
NY Times, 10/05/2011"An all-but-forgotten rocky outcropping in Southern California contains ore that could help break the country’s dependence on China for certain types of rare earth metals, according to the only American producer of rare earths."
"Urban National Wildlife Refuge Approved for Albuquerque"
ENS, 09/30/2011"ALBUQUERQUE -- Acquisition of 570 acres to establish a national wildlife refuge along the Rio Grande in Albuquerque has been approved, Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar announced today in Albuquerque."
Reports of Property Damage from Longwall Coal Mining Mount in Pa.
Greenwire, 09/30/2011"WAYNESBURG, Pa. -- A surge in mining damage to waterways, houses and roads has sparked a fierce debate in southwestern Pennsylvania's coal region about whether regulations are strong enough to protect property and natural resources."
Study Says Global Warming May Wreak Havoc on Yellowstone Region
Bozeman Chronicle, 09/29/2011"The last decade was the greater Yellowstone region's hottest on record, according to a study released Tuesday by a pair of environment-oriented nonprofits."
"The Pawpaw: Foraging For America's Forgotten Fruit"
NPR, 09/29/2011"So what the heck is a pawpaw?"
"Minnesota's Mining Boom: New Riches Or New Threat?"
Minneapolis Star Tribune, 09/29/2011"The North Woods is being targeted for lucrative, but dangerous, mineral mining."
"Insight: Chasing High Corn Prices, U.S. Farmers Skip Rotations"
Reuters, 09/27/2011"Farmer Brian Schaumburg has planted corn for five straight years in some of the thousands of acres he tends in central Illinois."
"New Park Service Review Fuels Battle Over Calif. Oyster Farm"
Greenwire, 09/27/2011"The National Park Service has released a draft assessment of a California oyster farm's impact on a wilderness area, concluding that the farm's continued operations would harm harbor seals."

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