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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.

Kentuckians Show Valentine Love for the Mountains

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Friday, February 12, 2010   

FRANKFORT, Ken. - Hundreds of Kentucky residents, including former coal miners, rallied Thursday at the state Capitol to celebrate the state's mountains and mountain streams, while also criticizing mountain-top removal mining. The I Love Mountain Rally, organized by Kentuckians for the Commonwealth (KFTC), focused on support for a bill before the legislature, called the Stream Saver Bill, which would prohibit the dumping of mine waste into mountain streams.

Inez resident, Mickey McCoy, says the bill is long overdue.

"We've lost so many miles of streams by allowing coal companies to cover them with their waste."

The bill would require coal companies to place mine waste on the abandoned mine site as part of the reclamation process already specified in state and federal law. That would be instead of dumping it onto the side of the hill and into valleys and streams. The legislation is about clean water for people in Eastern Kentucky, says McCoy.

"No one trusts the water, and rightfully so. If you've got half the sense God gave a goose, you won't drink it because it is tainted with heavy metals."

The Kentucky legislature has not acted on similar bills in previous sessions of the general assembly, and there is strong opposition from the mining industry. According to KFTC, more than 1,400 miles of Kentucky streams were buried or significantly damaged by coal mining valley fills betweenn 1981 and 2005.



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