Energy & Environment |
Energy & Environment |
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EPA chief visits Ohio and vows support after train derailment |
Residents of East Palestine, Ohio are expressing frustration as the Biden administration pledges to address fallout from the crash and chemical spill. |
© AP Photo/Patrick Orsagos |
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Michael Regan, visiting Ohio on Thursday, vowed to "get to the bottom" of the Feb. 3 train derailment in the town and to continually monitor the area for potential health hazards. "The community has questions and we hear you, we see you and … we will get to the bottom of this. Anything the state needs, we will be here to help," Regan said in a press conference. "We are going to get through this as a team, we are absolutely going to hold Norfolk Southern [Railway] accountable." The EPA head said the federal agency's air monitoring efforts have not detected anything to prompt health concerns in the area thus far. Of more than 480 voluntary home screenings, he said, the EPA has not detected vinyl chloride or hydrogen chloride in any of them. His comments come as locals and some environmental advocates express frustration over the response to the incident, saying they've received mixed messages from both federal and state officials about the safety of the area. Gregg Brown, who lives outside the limits of East Palestine but works in the city and has children enrolled in its school district, said residents have been frustrated by the pace and transparency of the response so far. "It's been very poor; I think that's the nicest way to put it," Brown told The Hill. "You have people testing the air and water and you're getting air quality updates and saying this is what we found how many particles are in the air [but] not specifying what they're finding in the air." Read our continuing coverage at TheHill.com. |
Welcome to The Hill's Energy & Environment newsletter, we're Rachel Frazin and Zack Budryk — keeping you up to speed on the policies impacting everything from oil and gas to new supply chains. |
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How policy will affect the energy and environment sectors now and in the future: |
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Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) on Thursday called on Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine (R) to declare a disaster following the derailment in East Palestine of a train containing several cars of hazardous chemicals. |
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A group of 24 Republican-led states is suing the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to try to knock down a rule governing which waters get federal protections. |
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The United Mine Workers of America (UMWA) has cleared members to return to work at Alabama's Warrior Met coal mine after a nearly two-year strike. |
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Branch out with a different read from The Hill: |
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Deep snowpack has continued to accumulate and expand in California, the Great Basin and the Colorado River Basin, federal meteorologists reported Thursday. |
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News we've flagged from other outlets touching on energy issues, the environment and other topics: |
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- Will global warming make temperature less deadly? (The Washington Post)
- Colombia cuts deforestation-reduction target following 2022 increases (Reuters)
- 'The climate I lived in as a kid is long gone': Climate change is stealing New England's winters (The Boston Globe)
- The Ohio Train Derailment Is a Disaster of Misinformation (Gizmodo)
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Two key stories on The Hill right now: |
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(KTLA) — Tesla, Inc. is recalling 362,758 vehicles in the U.S. because its Full Self-Driving Beta software may cause a crash, according to a notice from the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration. Read more |
| A new bill passed by the Oregon state Senate requires landlords to allow childcare services to run out of their rental units. Read more |
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Op-eds related to energy & environment submitted to The Hill: |
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