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.
"New Northwest Salmon Plan Modifies Bush Approach"
LA Times, 09/16/2009"Seattle -- Fisheries managers announced Tuesday that they would enhance but not significantly alter the government's current strategy for saving salmon from extinction in the rivers of the Pacific Northwest, drawing criticism from conservationists."
"Workers Excavate Hanford Pool That Held Spent Fuel"
AP, 09/11/2009"Workers at the nation's most contaminated nuclear site have finished excavating a leaky pool built in the 1950s to hold spent fuel from nuclear reactors."
"Oregon Regulators Drop Support for Cement Plant Rule"
AP, 09/07/2009"Oregon regulators say they will not support an exemption from federal pollution rules for a cement plant in Eastern Oregon that is one of the largest sources of mercury emissions in the nation."
"Restoring the Skagit"
KOUW, 08/28/2009Tidelands in Skagit County are being flooded to help restore the estuary.
"Seattle Voters Don't Buy Shopping-Bag Charge"
Seattle Times, 08/20/2009"Seattle voters have turned down Referendum 1, which aimed to reduce throwaway bag use in Seattle by charging shoppers 20 cents for each disposable plastic or paper shopping bag provided by stores."
"DEQ To Help Polluter Seek Federal Break on Mercury Emission"
Portland Oregonian, 08/20/2009"Oregon's top environmental agency plans to side with one of the state's biggest polluters in its effort to seek an exemption from tough new federal rules controlling the release of toxic mercury."
"Clash Over Rebirth of Mt. St. Helens"
NYTimes, 08/18/2009Should Mt. St. Helens, which erupted almosty 30 years ago, be a National Park? There is a debate over whether the land should be used for recreation or to study how landscapes recover from violent disturbance.
Plastic Industry Tackles Seattle Bag Fee
AP, 08/17/2009"SEATTLE - Leaders of this famously green city last year passed the nation's first grocery-bag fee, and other cities around the nation quickly followed. But the plastics industry has been fighting back, bringing lawsuits, aggressively lobbying lawmakers, and bankrolling a referendum in Seattle that aims to overturn the 20-cent charge. The measure goes before voters Tuesday."
"Revival or Dam-nation?"
High Country News, 08/03/2009"The push for green power could spawn a rush for small hydropower projects in the Northwest."
"Fuel Barges Running Afoul on the Columbia River"
Portland Oregonian, 07/23/2009Fuel barges on the Columbia River are having more accidents, although none so far has resulted in a known spill. The Coast Guard refuses to disclose information about the incidents, citing investigations which it has not completed in periods of up to 16 months.
Puget Sound Enviros Slam WA Industrial Stormwater Permit
ENS, 07/23/2009"A coalition of three nonprofit water protection groups are jointly requesting that the Washington Department of Ecology 'abandon its plans to weaken industrial stormwater protections.'"
"Wood Burning Creates Top Cancer Risk in Oregon's Air, EPA Says"
Portland Oregonian, 07/09/2009"Pollution from burning wood in stoves, fireplaces and elsewhere is the top cancer risk in Oregon's air, according to a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency analysis."
Oregon Legislature Bans Field Burning
Eugene Register-Guard, 06/30/2009The Oregon legislature Monday sent to the governor a bill that would phase out the longstanding practice of burning off agricultural fields growing grass seed.
"Killing Fields: Field Burning'S Deadly Legacy"
Eugene Weekly, 06/19/2009The 1988 highway death of a family in Oregon, blinded by smoke from fields being burned for weed control, was a story so moving that it spawned a novel. Field burning is so common in Oregon that it threatens people's lungs and health. A legislative struggle to ban it remains unresolved.
"Defending Fall Creek"
Eugene Weekly, 06/12/2009Lawsuits and tree-sits are among the tactics that activists in the Eugene, Oregon, area are using to resist clearcutting of a patch of ancient forest under the BLM's Western Oregon Plan Revisions.

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