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.
"Underground Gas Leaks Are Poisoning Long Island's Drinking Reserves"
Long Island Press, 11/06/2009"Hundreds of gasoline spills, which contain carcinogens like benzene, are reported each year in Nassau and Suffolk counties. Countless others go unreported or unnoticed. Cleaning them up can run into the millions and take decades to complete."
"Gas Company Won't Drill in New York Watershed"
NYTimes, 10/28/2009"Bowing to intense public pressure, the Chesapeake Energy Corporation says it will not drill for natural gas within the upstate New York watershed, an environmentally sensitive region that supplies unfiltered water to nine million people."
"Watching the Changes in Narragansett Bay for Half a Century"
Providence Journal, 10/26/2009A trawl survey that has been conducted weekly for some 50 years in Narragansett Bay is finding profound changes in the composition of sea life there. Biologically, the news is bad. Despite huge investments in cleaning up the Bay, climate change seems to be the villain.
"City Awarded $105 Million in Exxon Mobil Lawsuit"
NYTimes, 10/20/2009"A federal jury on Monday found Exxon Mobil liable for contaminating groundwater in New York City and awarded the city $104.7 million in compensatory damages."
New York To Ban Use of Coal Ash at Cement Plant
Albany Times-Union, 10/15/2009"The state is poised to ban the use of mercury-tainted coal fly ash at a Ravena cement plant that is the state's second largest source of airborne mercury pollution."
"Lead Found in Utica’S Elementary Schools"
Utica Observer-Dispatch, 10/14/2009"Twenty percent of the drinking fountains and faucets at Utica elementary schools tested positive for lead, according to results of a voluntary testing program released Tuesday."
"Study Finds Danger in the Air Around Tonawanda Coke"
Buffalo News, 10/12/2009Cancer stories "are numbingly familiar to people who live in the vicinity of Tonawanda Coke Corp. The coke foundry recently was found by the state Department of Environmental Conservation to be emitting benzene, a carcinogen, up to 75 times higher than recommended guidelines. Those levels were up to 2ù times more than what the company reported to regulators."
NY: "State Issues Rules on Upstate Natural Gas Drilling Near City’s Water"
NYTimes, 10/01/2009"After months of deliberations, state environmental regulators on Wednesday released long-awaited rules governing natural gas production in upstate New York, including provisions to oversee drilling operations near New York City’s water supplies."
"Officials Knew for Decades That Park Was Contaminated"
Stamford Advocate, 09/29/2009"In the woods on the northern edge of Scofieldtown Park are remnants of its days as a landfill. Containers lay strewn among the trees -- milk and 7UP bottles that haven't been used since the 1950s. More sinister are rusty paint cans and empty, decaying 55-gallon chemical drums."
"Environment Groups Turn From Corzine"
Philadelphia Inquirer, 09/28/2009"Four years ago, environmental groups hoped Jon Corzine would put the environment high on his list of priorities. today, many of the same groups say Corzine, now seeking a second term as governor, has failed to live up to his promises...."
"Deadly Acid Poses a Safety Issue for Sunoco"
Philadelphia Inquirer, 09/23/2009"Sunoco's use of deadly hydrofluoric acid at its Philadelphia refinery has come under scrutiny after a March accident that sent 13 contract workers to the hospital."
"Explosives, Hazardous Chemicals Cleared From New Jersey Property"
ENS, 09/18/2009"It took a court order, a bomb squad, and seven months of work by U.S. EPA specialists, but the Abrachem Chemical facility in Clifton, New Jersey now is decontaminated."
GOP Lawmaker Key in Passing $5 Billion NY Green Building and Jobs Bill
SolveClimate, 09/14/2009NY state Senator Thomas Moran (R) played a critical role in passage of a $5-billion green jobs and energy bill for the state.
"Ford Settles N.J. Toxic Waste Lawsuit"
AP, 09/07/2009"The Ford Motor Co. has settled a lawsuit filed by residents of a northern New Jersey town over toxic waste dumped there nearly 40 years ago."
"PCB Risk Feared at Older Northeast Schools"
Boston Globe, 09/07/2009"Window and masonry caulking in hundreds of older schools in New England probably contain very high levels of now-banned toxins that can gradually be released into the air, posing a potential health risk to students and staff, environmental specialists say."

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