EJToday is SEJ's selection of new and outstanding stories on environmental topics in print and on the air, updated every weekday. SEJ also offers a free e-mailed digest of the day's EJToday postings, called SEJ-beat. SEJ members are subscribed automatically, but may opt out here. Non-members may subscribe here. EJToday is also available via RSS feed. Please see Editorial Guidelines for EJToday content.
Column: "Few Rules for Recycling Electronics"
NYTimes, 06/02/2009A company that collects used electronic equipment for "recycling" comes under fire from activists who say the waste is sent to developing countries and mishandled.
"DC Gets Tough On Disposable Bags"
Environment Report, 06/02/2009The District of Columbia's city council is poised to tax disposable plastic and paper bags and to use the revenue to clean up the trash-strewn Anacostia River.
"Toxic Mud, Heading to Texas, Stirs Town"
NYTimes, 06/01/2009The toxic, PCB-laced sediment now being dredged from the Hudson River has to go somewhere -- a landfill in Texas.
"Ash on the Fly"
Chattanooga Times, 05/26/2009Terry and Sandy Gupton are worried for the health of both their cattle and themselves. They live near the stretch of the Emory River clogged with coal ash sludge from a Dec. 22, 2008, spill from a TVA plant.
"Dredging of Pollutants Begins in Hudson"
NYTimes, 05/18/2009After a 25-year delay, dredging has finally begun to remove PCB-laced sediments from the stretch of the Hudson River polluted by a GE plant.
Nations Reach Ship-Breaking Treaty
NYTimes, 05/15/2009After more than five years of negotiations, delegates from 64 countries reached broad consensus in Hong Kong Thursday on a new treaty regulating the recycling of ships.
EPA To Take Over Tennessee Coal-Ash Cleanup
Knoxville News, 05/12/2009EPA announced Monday that it would take over cleanup of the Kingston, Tennessee, fly ash spill from a TVA plant under the Superfund hazardous waste law.
Jury Acquits Grace in Libby Asbestos Case
NYTimes, 05/10/2009"A federal court jury on Friday acquitted the big chemical products company W. R. Grace and three of its former executives on all charges that they had knowingly contaminated the small Montana mining town of Libby with asbestos, then conspired to cover up the deed."
EPA Hid Risks Of Coal Ash: Report
Charleston Gazette, 05/08/2009"The Bush administration kept secret for nearly five years data that showed increased cancer risks from drinking water polluted by coal-ash impoundments...."
NJ To Appeal Kiddie Kollege
Philadelphia Inquirer, 05/08/2009"The New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection announced yesterday that it would appeal a court ruling that the owner of the Kiddie Kollege building in Franklin Township, Gloucester County, is not responsible for its $1 million cleanup."

Advertisements 



