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Senate blocks measure to restrict Venezuela strikes after Trump flips two Republicans; PA coal mine reclamation funds at risk as bill seeks to repurpose $500M; U.S. political climate makes jobs tougher to find for trans folks; Proposed federal cuts could mean fewer nurses for MO patients.

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House Dems back an effort to impeach Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem. The Senate GOP blocks an effort to limit executive war powers in Venezuela and a federal judge rejects a Republican plan to overturn California s new congressional maps.

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Rural Appalachia is being eyed for massive AI centers, but locals are pushing back, some farmers say government payments meant to ease tariff burdens won't cover their losses and rural communities explore novel ways to support home-based childcare.

Report: 'Dirty' Energy is Killing our Wildlife

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Thursday, January 19, 2012   

RICHMOND, Va. - From oil spills in the Gulf to coal mining in Appalachia, the quest for energy is impacting wildlife. A report released today highlights 10 cases of birds, plants and fish which are suffering the most - including some in Virginia.

Jan Randall, a professor emeritus at San Francisco State University and a fellow of the California Academy of Science, is a wildlife biologist who contributed to the report for the Endangered Species Coalition.

"Coal, all the oil exploration, development, transportation, the spills, and now there's the shale oil, and then you get into the fracking. We're paying a huge environmental cost."

In Appalachia, the report says, toxic coal waste is dumped into streams, smothering the threatened Kentucky arrow darter and other fish as well as poisoning the drinking water supply for downstream communities.

An example of an endangered animal in Virginia, she says, is the tan riffleshell, a mussel that plays a critical role to the health of Appalachian rivers by filtering pollutants and restoring nutrients to the water. Acidic mine drainage and sedimentation from coal mining are threatening the habitat of this endangered mussel.

"Fossil fuel exploration and extraction - it's just so pervasive and I'm afraid a lot of people think that if it's in the ground we have to get it out, and you have to think of the alternatives."

The report calls for an end to politically charged in-fighting over wildlife protections, and urges lawmakers to honor the intent of the Endangered Species Act while reducing the nation's dependence on dirty fossil fuels.

All species of animals and plants have a function in nature, Randall says, and everything is interconnected, which keeps the environment stable.

The full report, "Fueling Extinction: How Dirty Energy Drives Wildlife to the Brink," is online at fuelingextinction.org.


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