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.
"As Pheasants Disappear, Hunters in Iowa Follow"
NY Times, 01/02/2013"The pheasant, once king of Iowa’s nearly half-a-billion-dollar hunting industry, is vanishing from the state. Surveys show that the population in 2012 was the second lowest on record, 81 percent below the average over the past four decades."
"In Midwest, Bringing Back Native Prairies Yard by Yard"
YaleE360, 12/21/2012"Across the U.S. Midwest, homeowners are restoring their yards and former farmland to the native prairie that existed in pre-settlement days. The benefits can be substantial -- maintenance that uses less water and no fertilizer, and an ecosystem that supports wildflowers and wildlife."
"DuPont Builds Giant Cellulosic Ethanol Biorefinery in Iowa"
ENS, 12/12/2012"NEVADA, Iowa -- Science and engineering company DuPont has started construction of a large cellulosic ethanol biorefinery in Iowa, with completion expected in mid-2014."
"Wichita Voters Reject Fluoridated Water"
Wichita Eagle, 11/07/2012"Voters in the city of Wichita rejected fluoridated water on Tuesday, as they did in 1964 and 1978."
"Fluoride Fight Has Long Roots, Passionate Advocates"
Wichita Eagle, 10/29/2012"Set aside the science lessons. The fight over fluoride is as much or more a clash of philosophy."
"Oklahoma Dust Storm Shuts Down Portion of Interstate 35"
Huffington Post, 10/19/2012"TULSA, Okla. -- A massive dust storm swirling reddish-brown clouds over northern Oklahoma triggered a multi-vehicle accident along a major interstate Thursday, forcing police to shut down the heavily traveled roadway amid near blackout conditions."
Fort Calhoun, Nebraska Nuclear Plant, Should Remain Closed: Enviros
AP, 09/28/2012"OMAHA, Neb. -- A Nebraska environmental group wants federal regulators to keep the Fort Calhoun nuclear plant shut down because it would be inundated by floodwaters in the unlikely event of a dam failing upstream."
"The Clean Nebraska group said Wednesday that the Nuclear Regulatory Commission's own assessment of the flood threat at the plant about 20 miles north of Omaha predicts all major equipment at Fort Calhoun would be flooded if the Oahe dam on the Missouri River failed.
Illinois DNR Rejects Application for Coal Strip Mine
AP, 08/01/2012"ST. LOUIS -- Illinois rejected an application for a permit for a strip coal mine that opponents claimed would have threatened a tiny village's water supply and various animals in a nearby wildlife area."
"Wichita's Smog Violations Could Lead To EPA Rules"
Wichita Eagle, 07/30/2012"A byproduct of the ongoing heat wave, increased smog, may ultimately bring more and longer-lasting annoyance than the heat itself. The heat wave will eventually break, but Wichita’s smog reports probably already have been damaged to the extent of triggering some mandatory -- and potentially costly and inconvenient -- pollution controls like those in other big cities."
"Taxpayers Foot Bill for Cleanup of Polluted Site in South St. Louis"
St. Louis Post-Dispatch, 07/23/2012Politicians touted the use of tax credits to clean up the long-abandoned Carondelet Coke brownfields site site in St. Louis and turn it into an industrial park. But corner-cutting and lax oversight meant companies would benefit and taxpayers would get a raw deal, an investigation shows.
Compromise KXL Route Around Neb. Sand Hills Still Crosses Sandy Hills
Greenwire, 07/11/2012"STUART, Neb. -- Stepping carefully through a 12-foot-deep canyon gouged into the sandy soil of their family ranch by a long-gone storm, Kurt and Laura Meusch ask a Shakespearean question: What's in a name?"
"Drought Caused Big Drop in Texas Portion of Ogallala"
Texas Tribune, 07/05/2012"The historic Texas drought caused the Ogallala Aquifer to experience its largest decline in 25 years across a large swath of the Texas Panhandle, new numbers from a water district show."
"North Dakota’s Oil Boom Brings Damage Along With Prosperity"
ProPublica, 06/08/2012"Oil drilling has sparked a frenzied prosperity in Jeff Keller's formerly quiet corner of western North Dakota in recent years, bringing an infusion of jobs and reviving moribund local businesses. But Keller, a natural resource manager for the Army Corps of Engineers, has seen a more ominous effect of the boom, too: Oil companies are spilling and dumping drilling waste onto the region's land and into its waterways with increasing regularity."
Sand Dropped by Missouri R. Leaves Iowa, Nebraska Farms a Wasteland
AP, 06/05/2012"Mason Hansen guns his pickup and cranks the steering wheel to spin through sand up to 4 feet high, but this is no day at the beach. Hanson once grew corn and soybeans in the sandy wasteland in western Iowa, and his frustration is clear. Despite months spent hauling away tons of sand dropped when the flooded Missouri River engulfed his farm last summer, parts of the property still look like a desert."
"Lawsuits Over Doe Run Lead Smelter Could Continue for Years"
St. Louis Post-Dispatch, 06/05/2012"In a St. Louis courtroom last month, attorneys geared up for a trial more than a year away that will center on whether 17 children allegedly poisoned by the lead smelter in Herculaneum can prove their ailments deserve compensation."

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