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Thursday, May 15, 2025

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Supreme court to hear arguments in fight over birthright citizenship; Repeal of clean energy incentives would hurt AK economy, families, advocates say; Iowa dairy farm manure spill kills 100,000 fish; Final piece of AL's Sipsey Wilderness protected after 50-year effort.

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House Republicans get closer to enacting billions in Medicaid cuts. The Israeli government says it'll resume humanitarian aid in Gaza, and Montana's governor signs a law tightening the voter registration window.

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Millions of rural Americans would lose programs meant to help them buy a home under the Trump administration's draft 2026 budget, independent medical practices and physicians in rural America are becoming rare, and gravity-fed acequias are a centerpiece of democratic governance in New Mexico.

Environmental coalition works to preserve federal climate data

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Thursday, April 3, 2025   

Since President Donald Trump took office, thousands of public government datasets have been removed from federal websites.

Often, the data involves issues of diversity and inclusion, and environmental justice. Climate data from agencies such as the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, headquartered in Maryland, is of particular concern.

But the Open Environmental Data Project is part of the coalition called Public Environmental Data Partners. The coalition is trying to save government data on climate science and environmental justice.

Katie Hoeberling, director of policy initiatives for the project, said the coalition is trying to save datasets and clone mapping tools and other resources from agency websites.

"This data was paid for with public taxpayer dollars," Hoeberling pointed out. "Everyone who has paid taxes in the last two decades helped create this information, so the fact that it's been taken down, not only is it kind of erasing the history of our country, it feels like theft. It feels like something that we paid for and we are actually not seeing the result."

Hoeberling added data about how to best prepare for climate-related issues are among the most threatened datasets.

She advised people to continue using government databases still on federal websites. Those, she noted, will have the most up-to-date data.

"If people know they can get something from a government website, they should continue getting it from there," Hoeberling recommended. "We are trying to be a backstop, at least for now. We're thinking about improving these tools in the future, but in the short term, we want to be the backup for federal agencies."

In early February, the Trump administration began dismantling environmental justice offices across the federal government. The Department of Justice, too, was ordered to stop all environmental litigation.


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