Aloha Star Trek Friday!
Star Trek Day celebrates the premiere of Star Trek: The
          Original Series, but more broadly speaking, it celebrates
        everything in the Star Trek universe. Star Trek
        was created by Gene Roddenberry. What became known as the Star
          Trek: The Original Series debuted on September 8, 1966,
        and ran for three seasons on NBC. (Although, Canadian viewers
        actually saw it on September 6th.) Set in the twenty-third
        century, it followed the Starship USS Enterprise,
        captained by James T. Kirk, who was played by William Shatner. Star
          Trek gained a cult following and Trekkies were born. 
'Light
            of hope': B.C. researchers say some fish surviving heat
            waves better than once thought
        A new study has found bottom-dwelling fish — including flounder,
        halibut, rockfish, and all five Pacific salmon species — are
        defying expectations in the face of heat waves. 
      
Gulf
            Islands’ water woes an ominous omen for the rest of B.C.
        Southern Gulf Islanders have always known their water is a
        precious commodity as their supply depends on the deep,
        broken-rock aquifers that supply most of it. In the second
        straight year of severe drought, worries are creeping in. 
      
Judge:
            Growler flights continue
        U.S. District Judge Richard Jones has ruled that jet training
        flights over Whidbey Island can continue because of national
        security even as he ordered the Navy to redo its environmental
        impact statement concerning the impacts of noise and emissions
        on the area. 
      
Pumped
            storage hydropower is the greenest renewable energy
            technology, study says 
        Researchers with the National Renewable Energy Laboratory said
        closed-loop pumped storage hydropower will have a lower carbon
        footprint throughout the lifecycle of the technology, from
        construction to decommissioning, than other renewable energy
        storage technologies like lithium-ion batteries. 
        
Out of the smokestack, into the state budget
Washington’s cap-and-trade auctions are pulling in money faster than 
expected, spurring new ideas for spending, along with calls to rework 
the program to ease costs for consumers. 
    
    A company was forced to reduce logging in Haida Gwaii’s old-growth forests. Now they’re suing for $75M
The Haida Gwaii Management Council’s decision to protect ancient trees 
meant Teal-Jones could no longer log them. Now, the B.C. Supreme Court 
will decide who pays when conservation cuts into corporate profit. 
  
The Biden administration is ending drilling leases in ANWR, at least for now
The Biden administration is canceling the only seven oil and gas leases 
in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska. The leases were 
originally issued by the Trump administration.
Gitanyow celebrates the return of salmon as B.C. inches toward recognizing the nation’s protected area
Two years after the Gitanyow Hereditary Chiefs declared 54,000 hectares 
of land and water off-limits to industry, the provincial government 
still hasn’t officially acknowledged the Meziadin Indigenous Protected 
Area. 
      
      
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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