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The latest on the Key Bridge collapse, New York puts forth legislation to get clean energy projects on the grid and Wisconsin and other states join a federal summer food program to help feed kids across the country.

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Republicans float conspiracy theories on the collapse of Baltimore's Key Bridge, South Carolina's congressional elections will use a map ruled unconstitutional, and the Senate schedules an impeachment trial for Homeland Secretary Mayorkas.

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Historic wildfires could create housing and health issues for rural Texans, a Kentucky program helps prison parolees start a new life, and descendants of Nicodemus, Kansas celebrate the Black settlers who journeyed across the 1870s plains seeking self-governance.

Calls for Oil, Gas Testing in Atlantic Draw Fire

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Wednesday, March 11, 2015   

NEW YORK - More than 75 marine scientists and environmental organizations are pressuring the Obama administration not to allow oil and gas companies to survey the Atlantic coast for places to drill, saying it could endanger sea life and threaten New York's coastline.

They argued in a letter to the president that seismic testing for oil and gas deposits harms whales, turtles and fish and paves the way for dangerous offshore drilling.

"You've got the impacts from future oil development, but you also have these immediate impacts from seismic testing," said Steve Mashuda, a staff attorney with Earthjustice, "so you're putting a huge amount of coastline and an incredible number of species at risk."

The federal Department of the Interior is reviewing nine applications to conduct seismic testing in the mid-Atlantic. The Obama administration says it wants to get a more accurate map of the ocean floor before it decides whether to open the East Coast to oil and gas leasing and renewable-energy projects. A spokesman from the department said seismic testing hasn't been shown to harm fish or marine mammal populations on a large scale.

Ships conduct seismic testing by blasting high-volume sound waves at the ocean floor using air guns. The process is widely used in the offshore-drilling industry to map out hydrocarbon reserves.

Mashuda said seismic testing poses an unacceptable risk in the Atlantic, where it hasn't been carried out in decades.

"You would have ships towing these air-gun arrays out there in the ocean," he said, "often in overlapping spaces for literally months on end, flooding this whole area of ocean with really detrimental levels of sound."

The Interior Department said it will require companies conducting seismic testing to shut down air guns if whales or other marine mammals come close enough to be injured.

The full text of the letter is available online at docs.nrdc.org.


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