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Tribal advocates keep up legal pressure for fair political maps; 12-member jury sworn in for Trump's historic criminal trial; the importance of healthcare decision planning; and a debt dilemma: poll shows how many people wrestle with college costs.

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Civil rights activists say a court ruling could end the right to protest in three southern states, a federal judge lets January 6th lawsuits proceed against former President Trump, and police arrest dozens at a Columbia University Gaza protest.

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Rural Wyoming needs more vocational teachers to sustain its workforce pipeline, Ohio environmental advocates fear harm from a proposal to open 40-thousand forest acres to fracking and rural communities build bike trail systems to promote nature, boost the economy.

Fed Climate Report: Increasing Temperatures and Drought in Southwest

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Wednesday, June 17, 2009   

Las Vegas, NV – Increasing temperatures and more droughts are all in the offing for the Southwest, according to a detailed scientific report released this week by the the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). The report says climate change-related impacts are happening now and can be expected to grow.

For states like Nevada, the report says continued temperature increases combined with river-flow reductions and rapid population growth will increase competition for water supplies. Jane Feldman, conservation chair of the Sierra Club's Southern Nevada Group, says locals already are concerned about increasingly scarce water supplies.

"That's where it gets into Nevada's concerns right now. We have been in the middle of a five- to seven-year drought, and we know that water is going to be hard to come by."

The report says global temperatures have increased over the past 50 years, due mostly to human-induced emissions of heat-trapping gases. Others say the temperature change is part of natural cycles and is not primarily the result of human activity.

The timing of the report could not have been better, Feldman says, because Congress is working on a measure to curb global warming emissions, the "American Clean Energy and Security Act" (HR 2454).

"It's encouraging a switch off of dirty coal, off of nuclear power, and onto clean sources of energy — like solar and wind energy - that we know we can capitalize on here in Nevada."

Feldman urges Congress to stick with the science and not allow industrial polluters to write the rules.

"Global Climate Change Impacts in the United States," issued by the U.S. Global Change Research Program, a NOAA project, is available at www.globalchange.gov/usimpacts.



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