Aloha Wear Orange Friday!
National Gun Violence Day, a nationwide movement that shows
collective power, honors the lives lost on account of gun
violence and those wounded by it. On January 29, 2013, a week
after she had taken part in Barack Obama's second inaugural
parade, Hadiya Pendleton was shot and killed in Chicago at the
age of 15. In response to this tragedy, her friends wore orange
and encouraged others to also do so, in an effort to raise
awareness about gun violence and to fight for a future that is
free of it. They first displayed their orange colors on June 2,
2015, on what would have been Hadiya's 18th birthday. National
Gun Violence Awareness Day was born.
EPA
announces Washington state's water quality standards fail to
protect salmon and Puget Sound orcas
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) took an unusual
step today in issuing a determination that Washington State’s
water quality standards for nine toxic pollutants fail to
adequately protect fish and other aquatic life.
Microplastics
are harming gut health of seabirds: study
Scientists involved in the study say the research also has
implications for human health.
Provinces
and territories commit to national biodiversity strategy —
here’s what it means for nature
Five months after COP15, governments in Canada agree to work
together to protect the country’s lands and waters, but progress
is slow.
WA
AG sues PFAS manufacturers, seeks money for cleanup of
drinking water
The state attorney general’s office has filed a lawsuit against
nearly two dozen manufacturers of so-called “forever chemicals,”
asserting the companies knew about their risks to the
environment and humans for decades but lied and kept that
knowledge hidden from the government and public to protect their
businesses.
B.C.
government to provide additional $25M for marine restoration
projects
This brings its total investment for the Clean Coast, Clean
Waters Initiative Fund to about $50 million.
Washington’s Refinery Communities Just Got a Transition Boost
Over the next two years, Washington will devote a quarter-million
dollars to analyzing the future of the state’s refineries, laying the
groundwork for a clean energy transition that supports workers,
safeguards communities, and protects the environment.
Oregon youths’ climate lawsuit against US government can proceed to trial, judge rules
A federal judge ruled on Thursday that a lawsuit brought by young
Oregon-based climate activists can proceed to trial years after they
first filed the lawsuit in an attempt to hold the nation’s leadership
accountable for its role in climate change.
These news clips are a selection of weekday clips collected in
Salish Sea News and Weather which
is compiled as a community service by Mike Sato. To subscribe at
no cost to the weekday news clips, send your name and email to
mikesato772 at gmail.com. Your email information is never shared
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