Saturday, June 16, 2012

Help the EPA send a strong message to Big Coal



Dear Reader,

Take Action!My Neighbor's Well Water
Take Action!
This letter was forwarded for Jimmy Hall, the fifth generation Hall to own property on Mill Creek in Letcher County, KY. His great-great-great grandfather owned the entire mountain range here in the late 1800s. Since then, mountaintop removal coal mining has turned my family's special place into a moonscape. And now mining waste has made our drinking water toxic.

"DON'T DRINK THE WATER" is what the Water Department said when they called us. They found arsenic and lead from nearby mining operations in my well water. It's not just me -- my neighbors have the same problem. Many of them are chronically ill and some have died.

It's gotten so bad that the EPA has vetoed 36 coal permits in the area to keep our water from getting worse. I was glad they decided to help but the State of Kentucky and Big Coal didn't see it that way.


Last week, the EPA held hearings in Kentucky on their plans to protect our water. The Kentucky Coal Association bused hundreds of their supporters to the hearings. They did everything they could to intimidate me and the dozens of other activists who were there to speak out for clean water. They booed, heckled, and kicked us. Someone even threatened the safety of the representatives from the EPA who were there to listen to us.1

Big Coal must be scared. But they can't scare us! Not when the health of our children is on the line. One of my neighbors showed me his well water -- it was rust colored and cloudy. He's forced to use it for drinking, food preparation and to bathe his children.
The EPA passed the Clean Water Act in 1972 to ensure that no one is forced to give their children filthy water to drink.


My courage comes from people like you who stand together to bring these issues like mine to the surface. What the coal companies are doing is wrong, but the state allowing this to continue is just plain criminal. The EPA is our only hope to continue this battle here on our own soil with mountains blowing up all around us, filling the valleys and streams with poison.

If we stand together now and send 30,000 messages to the EPA to protect our water I know we can win.


Thanks for all you do to protect our environment,
Jimmy Hall
Fifth Generation Kentuckian

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[1] Anderson, Chris. Miners get vocal at hearing. Appalachian News Express. June 8, 2012. 

Friday, June 15, 2012

Daredevil completes walk across Niagara Falls

Daredevil completes walk across Niagara Falls | National News - WMUR Home


CT man rescued minutes before search party was to be called off!

Missing CT man found, lucky to be alive
Another reason not to hike alone and having a plan!


BEACON FALLS, CT (NBC) -- A Connecticut man who has been missing for a week has been found safe.
A state worker found Richard Roncarti, 50, around 12:30 p.m. on Thursday in the Beacon Falls section of the Naugatuck State Forest.

He was rescued just minutes before the search was going to be called off, officials said.

Crews said Roncarti was stranded in the Naugatuck State Forest with severe injuries after falling 100 feet and having no food or water for seven days. Emergency crews said he was lucky to be alive.

“He looked like he had been in the weather a few days. He was beat up pretty good,” Chief Michael Pratt, of the Beacon Falls Fire Department, said....

http://www1.whdh.com/news/articles/local/south/12007749039617/missing-ct-man-found-lucky-to-be-alive/

WWF June eNewsletter


WWF June E-newsletter
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Whale shark
Whale sharks, the world’s largest fish, gather
in schools to feed on the plankton where
the river meets the Donsol Bay.
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Fireflies and Whale Sharks

From the flashing dance of the fireflies in the mangroves to the bioluminescence glowing in the river, WWF's Catherine Plume experienced something special one night in Donsol, an island town in the Philippines. Read her first-hand account to find out what links fireflies and whale sharks--and how WWF's conservation activities have the added benefit of helping to generate income for local communities.

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Expert Guide: About Cathy Plume
The Place: The World’s Richest Garden of Corals and Sea Life
Positive Results for People and Wildlife in the Coral Triangle
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Owen and Audrey look west from a ridge in Shenandoah National Park, Virginia.
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How Nature Inspires a Father
and His Family


By Colby Loucks, Director of WWF’s Conservation Science Program

The morning sun will peek over the trees this Father’s Day as I scan the inside of my family’s tent--wondering just how I was elbowed to its very edge while my wife and two children sprawl across the other 90 percent. Since the birth of my daughter Audrey, almost nine years ago, my wife Andrea and I have packed up the car and taken the kids camping for Father’s Day weekend in one of the many state parks, national forests or national parks surrounding our home...

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Protesting Pebble Mine
Bristol Bay's wild salmon fishery provides
more than 14,000 full- and part-time jobs.
© WWF
Help Protect Bristol Bay from Pebble Mine

Bristol Bay is threatened by the possible creation of the largest open pit gold and copper mine in U.S. history, called Pebble Mine. The U.S. EPA states that, if developed, Pebble Mine will have unacceptable adverse effects on the rivers, streams, species and fisheries that have supported the region’s cultures and economy for centuries. Thank the EPA and urge the Obama administration to continue to protect the region from the potentially disastrous Pebble Mine.

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Looking to make Dad smile this Sunday on Father's Day? Tell him that he is the coolest by sending a Father's Day e-card. Sending WWF e-cards is a fun, easy and environmentally friendly way to say that you care. Don't forget all of the fathers, grandfathers and men in your life!

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Gray whale © WWF-US/Colby Loucks
Baja: Among the Great Whales
January 26 - February 2, 2013

Each winter, gray whales journey south from the Arctic to breed in warmer waters. Join WWF on an expedition to Baja California, one of North America's premier whale watching sites, to come face-to-face (and perhaps even eye-to-eye) with this magnificent species. You'll also walk on uninhabited desert islands, and snorkel and kayak in the Sea of Cortez.

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Whale Shark
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Whale Shark (Rhincodon typus)

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Basics: Whale sharks are the world's largest living fish species, reaching up to 45 feet long. They can be found in all temperate and tropical oceans around the world, with the exception of the Mediterranean Sea.

Threats: International demand for their meat, fins and oil; bycatch

Interesting Fact: The whale shark is a filter feeder and eats by sucking water through its mouth and expelling it through the gills, trapping millions of plankton inside.

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Rock risk forces Yosemite closures

Rock risk forces Yosemite closures


By TRACIE CONE
Associated Press

YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK, Calif. (AP) - Falling boulders are the single biggest force shaping Yosemite Valley, one of the most popular tourist destinations in the national park system. Now swaths of some popular haunts are closing for good after geologists confirmed that unsuspecting tourists and employees are being lodged in harm's way.

On Thursday, the National Park Service will announce that potential danger from the unstable 3,000-foot-tall Glacier Point, a granite promontory that for decades has provided a dramatic backdrop to park events, will leave some of the valley's most popular lodging areas permanently uninhabitable.

"There are no absolutely safe areas in Yosemite Valley," said Greg Stock, the park's first staff geologist and the primary author of a new study that assesses the potential risk to people from falling rocks in the steep-sided valley. The highest risk area is family friendly Curry Village, which was hit by a major rock fall several years ago.

A newly delineated "hazard zone" also outlines other areas, including the popular climbing wall El Capitan, where the danger posed by the rock falls is high but risk of injury is low because they aren't continuously occupied.

"Rock falls are common in Yosemite Valley, California, posing substantial hazard and risk to the approximately four million annual visitors to Yosemite National Park," reads the ominous opening line of the report.

The move to close parts of historic Curry Village, a camp of canvas and wooden cabins, comes four years after the equivalent of 570 dump trucks of boulders hit 17 cabins, flattened one and sent schoolchildren scrambling for their lives. The park fenced off 233 of the 600 cabins in the village.

The new report, obtained by The Associated Press, now identifies 18 more that will be closed Thursday.

An examination by the AP after the 2008 fall found park officials were aware of U.S. Geological Survey studies dating back to 1996 that show Glacier Point behind Curry Village was susceptible to rock avalanches. Yet visitors were not warned of the potential danger, and the park service repaired and reused rock-battered cabins.

Rock falls in and around the century-old Curry Village have killed two people and injured two dozen others since 1996. Since officials began keeping track in 1857, 15 people have died throughout the valley and 85 have been injured from falling rocks.

This new study, prompted by the 2008 Curry event, is the first to assess risk to people. Officials say dangers exist in nearly every national park but they are particularly acute in Yosemite given its unstable geology, which causes rock falls weekly. Park officials will use the study to develop policy that guides future planning.

Yosemite Valley is ringed by 3,000-foot walls of granite. Since the last glacier retreated 15,000 years ago, the biggest factor shaping the most popular tourist destinations in the park has been the sloughing of rock when granite heats and cools and eventually breaks along fissures and cracks.

Stock used laser mapping to create the first detailed look at the cliffs, which ultimately could identify which formations are most vulnerable.

The report shows the greatest dangers are within 180 feet of the base of the cliffs. However, there is a 10 percent chance a potentially deadly boulder will fall outside of the zone every 50 years.

With the removal of lodging from highly problematic areas and increased awareness, risk can be reduced by up to 95 percent, Stock said. "That's a huge reduction, but it's not possible to reduce all risk in the park."

Part of Yosemite's charm is the guest cabins and other structures built around boulders, some the size of houses. It was widely assumed that they could have fallen in one cataclysmic event. The new study concluded that the boulders had fallen over time, and the information was used to delineate the most potentially dangerous areas of the valley.

"It's easy now to look around and see all of these rocks and know there's a hazard here, but that hasn't always been the case," said park spokesman Scott Gediman.

In November 1980, falling rocks killed three people and injured 19 more on the trail to Yosemite Falls, the icon of the valley and one of the most popular visitor hikes.

The biggest modern-day rock avalanche occurred in 1987, when an unstable formation called Middle Brother on the north side of the valley launched the equivalent of more than 22,000 dump truck loads of rock onto the main road.

Last year 53 rock falls occurred, including a six-ton boulder that fell in September from the upper Yosemite Falls Trail onto an amphitheater. Fragments hit a footbridge where tourists take photos, but no one was injured.

Park officials said two employee dormitories and parts of three others built in 1999 would be closing, which will further exasperate a critical staff housing shortage.


Read more: http://ow.ly/bzfKg