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The gas industry and its political partners are going to great lengths to try to derail and discredit an EPA report that blames Pavillion, Wyoming’s polluted water on hydraulic fracking.
by John Fenton,
Jan 23, 2012
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When pesticide chemicals were found underneath the houses of Barber Orchard, N.C., it aroused fears nationwide about the risks of building on former agricultural land.
by Sarah Gilman,
Dec 05, 2010
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Soil samples from the yards of two Yakima families showed intriguing but not always comforting results.
by Rebecca Clarren,
Dec 05, 2010
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An Idaho couple are getting a lot of sympathy because the EPA has halted construction of their planned home on a wetland, but if the agency would be more open with the facts, it would come out looking better.
by Judith Lewis Mernit,
Jan 26, 2012
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Region 8 EPA official Robbie Roberts retired in June, leaving a legacy of strong critiques of runaway energy development.
by Eric Peterson,
Aug 20, 2008
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Even as the air over power plants clears, the coal
combustion waste on the ground gets worse – and the EPA seems
disinclined to deal with the problem.
by Jonathan Thompson,
Nov 26, 2007
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EPA stymies California’s attempt to cut tailpipe
emissions; the West is growing but not sure where its next meal or
drink of water will come from; increasing amounts of ammonium
– and guns – in the parks; avalanche fatalities are
up.
by Sarah Gilman and Jodi Peterson,
Jan 21, 2008
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A good time to buy a McMansion – cheap; lawmakers
wrangle over development; “eco-terrorism” in suburbia;
EPA head honcho in trouble; cleaning up dirty Western air –
and a few dirty Western politicians.
by Sarah Gilman and Jodi Peterson,
Mar 31, 2008
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Long-banned pesticides linger in the soils of neighborhoods built on former agricultural land in central Washington.
by Rebecca Clarren,
Dec 13, 2010
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Oregon has long refused to regulate sediment runoff from logging roads as pollution under the Clean Water Act. Now, the U.S. Supreme Court will decide what the state should do.
by Joshua Zaffos,
Jul 27, 2012