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Environment
Quick Hit
by Ellyn Fortino
12:37pm
Wed Jun 20, 2012

Legislators Look At Environmental Successes, Unfinished Business From Spring Session

The state’s recent legislative session brought about environmental successes from Cook County’s landfill-expansion ban to dry cleaning chemical restrictions, but environmental advocates in the General Assembly and members of the Environmental Law and Policy Center say more work is still needed to protect Illinois.

State Sen. Don Harmon (D-Oak Park) and State Reps. Elaine Nekritz (D-Des Plaines), Michael Tryon (R-Crystal Lake) and Michael Zalewski (D-Summit) met Tuesday afternoon at the Environmental Law and Policy Center’s office, located at 35 E. Wacker Dr., to recap what did — and didn’t happen — in Springfield this past legislative session.
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Quick Hit
by Matthew Blake
5:04pm
Fri Jun 1, 2012

Early Release Program & Gambling Bill Advance; Detention Center Ban & Tenaska Bills Die

The Illinois spring legislative session ended last night, meaning state lawmakers will meet just once again the rest of the year, for a brief fall veto session, though Gov. Pat Quinn is expected to convene lawmakers this summer to pass pension legislation.

Key legislative items were decided, including the House rejecting a bill to effectively ban a federal immigrant detention center, but passing a bill to bring back an early release prison program. Read more »

Quick Hit
by Steven Ross Johnson
12:42pm
Tue May 29, 2012

More Hot Days Ahead & Increased Fatalities Expected At Current Pollution Levels, Study Warns

Findings of a new report warn that by the end of the century, as many as 150,000 U.S. deaths could be attributed to extreme heat caused by climate change if steps are not taken to limit current carbon pollution levels.

The report, released by the Natural Resources Defense Council, assessed excessive heat in 40 cities and projected that by 2099 there will be an increase in the number of days where the heat index – how hot it feels when both the actual temperature and the relative humidity is factored – reaches between 105 and 110 degrees. These extended days of high temperature will lead to a rise in the number of heat-related deaths, according to the study.

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Quick Hit
by Ellyn Fortino
11:21am
Fri May 25, 2012

Health Advocates Push For Carbon Emission Standards At Coal Plants

The Environmental Protection Agency held a hearing Thursday regarding the first of its kind limits on carbon dioxide emissions for new power plants.

News of the EPA’s proposed standards for power-plant emissions comes shortly after Midwest Generation announced Chicago’s two infamous coal-fired power plants, Frisk and Crawford, will shut down. Progress Illinois reported last month about Chicago’s power-plant saga.

Double lung-transplant recipient Dan Dolan-Laughlin, 65, is one of many people who planned to speak at the hearing to urge the EPA to follow through with its carbon-regulation proposal.

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Quick Hit
by Brandon Campbell
10:18am
Fri May 18, 2012

Chicago Protesters Decry Canada’s Tar Sands Oil Extraction Methods (VIDEO)

With ties to Occupy Chicago about a dozen protesters covered themselves in fake oil and performed a symbolic death in front of the Canadian Consulate in downtown Chicago Thursday evening.

Those who “died” were joined by more than 100 supporters in protesting Canada’s extracting of crude oil from the Alberta Tar Sands, which is the world’s third-largest deposit of oil. The protesters pointed to a recent report which said the oil derived from the tar sands could emit 10 to 12 times more greenhouse gases than conventional crude oils, and the Chicago Tribune recently reported that the increased level of emissions could be as high as 22 percent.
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Quick Hit
by Matthew Blake
3:25pm
Fri May 11, 2012

Tenaska Compromise Doesn’t Win Over Skeptics

The Nebraska-based energy company Tenaska, Inc. negotiated a deal with state lawmakers this week to run a proposed electricity plant in Taylorville on natural gas instead of coal gasification, and the amended legislation will be called before the House Public Utilities Committee next Thursday.

But environmentalists against the original proposal remain opposed for now – they contend that the new legislation will let Tenaska phase into the more expensive and environmentally risky proposition of converting Illinois’ abundant downstate coal into gas.

“It is kicking the most expensive and dirty parts down the road,” says Jack Darin, director of the Sierra Club Illinois chapter. Read more »

Quick Hit
by Matthew Blake
5:17pm
Mon May 7, 2012

Accelerated Coal Plant Closings Have Community Advocates 'On Their Toes'

The closing date for the Fisk and Crawford coal-fired power plants was pushed forward to this September, which provides a sense of urgency for Chicago’s Little Village neighborhood. The Crawford plant in Little Village was initially slated to close in December 2014, as set by a February agreement between Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel and plant owner Midwest Generation.

“It’s a lot sooner than expected and it has me on my toes,” says Rafeal Hurtado, an organizer at the Little Village Environmental Justice Organization, or LVEJO. “People are taking it more personal now, thinking, ‘Okay, this is really happening.’”
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Quick Hit
by Progress Illinois
1:51pm
Wed May 2, 2012

Op-Ed: 25 Groups Urge IL House To Reject Tenaska's Sweetheart Deal

The following was written by Jack Darin, director of the Sierra Club, Illinois Chapter.

Two dozen health, faith, farm, and environmental advocates joined with us this week to urge the Illinois House to reject a proposal to force Illinois ratepayers to subsidize the coal plant proposed by the Tenaska corporation. Twenty-five organizations signed the letter to Illinois lawmakers, a sign of new and growing opposition due to concerns about pollution from Tenaska’s plant and its very high cost.

“Creating a new electric plant that requires us to mine and burn more Illinois coal in communities already suffering from the effects of mining, while it places a long-term surcharge on the electricity costs for low-income people is not only poor policy, it is unjust,” said Rev. Dr. Clare Butterfield, Executive Director, Faith in Place and the Illinois Interfaith Power & Light Campaign, among the faith leaders joining opposition to Tenaska’s legislation.

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