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.
Algae Toxin Found in Redondo Beach Dead Fish
Huffington Post, 03/14/2011"The millions of sardines that were found floating dead in a Southern California marina this week tested positive for a powerful neurotoxin, researchers said Friday."
"Stiffer Pollution Regulations Expected for Great Lakes Ships"
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, 03/09/2011"The federal government has agreed to step up its efforts to force freighters sailing on the Great Lakes to begin treating their biologically contaminated ballast water discharges like any other industrial pollutant."
Fossil-Fuel Economy Threatens World's Ocean Reefs
TIME, 03/07/2011Besides being a keystone of the ocean ecosystem, coral reefs are of huge commercial value. But they are seriously threatened by floods, runoff, rising ocean temperatures and acidity which are all symptoms of our fossil-fuel economy.
"University of Arizona Project Could Bring Clean Water To Navajos"
Green Valley News, 03/04/2011"Instead of going straight to the faucet, many Navajos in northeastern Arizona have to drive 40 miles to haul water from a well back to their homes." Now a University of Arizona project may offer some help.
"First Deep-Water Drilling Permit Issued for Gulf Since BP Oil Spill"
LA Times, 03/01/2011"The new well will track one plugged after a moratorium. Obama administration officials say pressure from courts and Congress did not affect the decision, but that the firm met new safety rules."
"Temporary Truce Reached in California Delta Smelt Water Restrictions"
LA Times, 02/25/2011"Restrictions on water pumping that helps supply Southern California, intended to protect California's delta smelt, will be relaxed through June."
"World's Coral Reefs Facing Serious Threats"
NPR, 02/24/2011"A major new survey of the world's coral reefs finds that they are in trouble. Big trouble"
"GOP Wants EPA to Keep Sitting On Its Ash"
Mother Jones, 02/24/2011After a December 2008 spill of toxic coal ash at the Tennessee Valley Authority's Kingston plant, EPA vowed to bring the ubiquitous waste under regulation. First, industry got to the Obama White House to sandbag the effort. Now, GOP lawmakers heavily funded by electric utilities have slipped a rider into the House stopgap spending bill to quash EPA's effort to protect the public altogether.
Dam's Demolition Begins in Cateechee, SC
Anderson Independent Mail, 02/23/2011The removal of a dam on Twelve Mile Creek in Pickens County, SC, will release a glut of sediment that will bury more deeply PCB-tainted sediments in a reservoir further downstream.
"Miami-Dade County Reevaluating Future Water Plans"
Miami Herald, 02/23/2011"Miami-Dade, amid a changing regulatory environment and slower growth, is looking for cheaper ways to meet future water needs."
"EPA Underreports Radiation in America's Drinking Water"
KHOU, 02/22/2011"Americans remain largely in the dark about their true exposure to a number of radioactive contaminants that could be in their drinking water. Surprisingly, it’s because of intentional decisions by the Environmental Protection Agency, the federal government office that is supposed to protect the nation from contaminated water."
"Danger Pent Up Behind Aging Dams"
NY Times, 02/22/2011"Lake Isabella Dam is just one acute example of a widespread problem: Of the nation’s 85,000 dams, more than 4,400 are considered susceptible to failure, according to the Association of State Dam Safety Officials. But repairing all those dams would cost billions of dollars, and it is far from clear who would provide all the money in a recessionary era."
"Scientist Finds Gulf Bottom Still Oily, Dead Months After BP Spill"
AP, 02/22/2011"Oil from the BP spill remains stuck on the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico, according to a top scientist's video and slides that she says demonstrate the oil isn't degrading as hoped and has decimated life on parts of the sea floor."
"In Md., Felt Boots Blamed for Invasive 'Rock Snot'"
AP, 02/21/2011"As an algae with a gross nickname invades pristine trout streams across the U.S., Maryland is about to become the first state to enforce a ban on a type of footgear the organism uses to hitchhike from stream to stream: felt-soled fishing boots."
"Fighting For Water In The Arid Imperial Valley"
NPR, 02/10/2011"Southern California's Imperial Valley produces about 80 percent of the nation's winter vegetables. But years of drought, and a population boom in the Southwest, now threaten the water supply in the desert region — and all those cheap winter greens."

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