Aloha Bill of Rights Friday!
On December 15, 1791, Virginia ratified the first ten amendments of the Constitution. Known as the Bill of Rights, the first ten amendments outline the rights of citizens vis-à-vis the federal government. They guarantee that citizens have civil rights and liberties such as freedom of speech, press, and religion; they establish rules for due process of law; they confirm that citizens have rights beyond those spelled out in the Constitution; and they affirm that powers not delegated to the federal government are left to the people and states. It is on today's anniversary of the ratification and implementation of the Bill of Rights that we celebrate Bill of Rights Day.
Washington
            State residents ask: What is our wildlife agency for? 
        Public backlash over a new policy reveals a deeper divide over
        the future of conservation. 
        
          How
            WA’s king tides amp up flood risks amid global sea level
            rise 
        Last winter, when the king tide rolled in with heavy rains
        and an extreme low-pressure system, water from the Duwamish
        River rushed into Seattle’s South Park neighborhood, flooding
        homes, sparking broader evacuations and catching the city off
        guard. Decades ago that flood would have been thought unlikely,
        perhaps even statistically impossible, But no more. 
Olympic
            Pipeline leak released 25,000 gallons of gasoline 
        A small tube between the main portion of the Olympic Pipeline
        and a pressure-check valve failed Sunday in the Skagit Valley,
        spilling gasoline into nearby creeks not far from Mount Vernon.
        About 30,660 gallons were released when a tube — 3/8 of an inch
        in diameter — failed.
      
18
            California children are suing the EPA over climate change
        Eighteen California children are suing the Environmental
        Protection Agency, claiming it violated their constitutional
        rights by failing to protect them from the effects of climate
        change. This is the latest in a series of climate-related cases
        filed on behalf of children. 
Dredging
            Neah Bay Entrance Channel will improve Strait of Juan de
            Fuca, Salish Sea oil spill response
        A hydraulic pipeline dredge will deepen the 4,500-foot entrance
        channel to -21 feet from its current depth, allowing
        unrestricted access for ocean-going tugs, barges, and larger
        ships transiting Neah Bay during low tide.
Mlitary
            testing reveals hundreds of drinking water wells
            contaminated with PFAS in WA 
        Hundreds of drinking water wells near military bases or other
        facilities in Washington have been contaminated by per- and
        polyfluoroalkyl substances, or PFAS, according to a Seattle
        Times analysis of the past two years of test results published
          by the military. 
        
Climate
            talks end on a first-ever call for the world to move away
            from fossil fuels
        In the final weeks of the hottest year in recorded history, the
        international body responsible for limiting global warming and
        its disastrous effects called on countries to transition away
        from the chief cause of climate change – fossil fuels – for the
        first time.
Arctic
            "report card" points to rapid and dramatic impacts of
            climate change 
        The Arctic is warming nearly four times faster than the global
        average as a result of human-caused climate change, driven
        primarily by burning fossil fuels, according to the National
        Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's annual Arctic Report
          Card, released Tuesday. 
      
Washington raises $2B in first year of carbon pollution auctions
Washington raised another $373.6 million in its final carbon auction of 
2023, bringing the total to slightly more than $2 billion in the first 
year of the state cap-and-invest program, the Ecology Department 
announced Wednesday. 
    
    The future of ‘cap-and-trade’ carbon markets could hinge on Washington state
Washington state is facing backlash over the program’s perceived 
contribution to high gas prices. A voter initiative that’s likely to be 
on the ballot next year, stoked by anger over prices at the pump, 
threatens to repeal it altogether. 
      
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
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