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Most Recent Publications for CT

New England Currents | Winter 2011

new england currents
winter 2011 edition
Inside
  • Making Manufacturers Take Out the Trash
  • From the Director
  • The Diesel Pollution Solution
  • Connecticut
  • Rhode Island
  • Massachusetts
  • Year-End Giving

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making manufacturers take out the trash!

Americans generate a lot of trash — some would say, much more than their “fair share.” Many people feel that each individual should be responsible for reducing their own waste, perhaps along with the local community recycling program. The reality is that cities and towns have ended up bearing most of the responsibility — and the costs — for figuring out ways to reduce waste and make recycling programs work. Over the past ten years, however, new policies challenging this conventional approach have started gaining traction.

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  • global warming
  • Sustainer Letter
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New England Clean Water Currents, Summer 2010

In this issue of New Englance Clean Water Currents:

  • Clean Diesel On The Move In Rhode Island And Massachusetts
  • Massachusetts Clean Water Action Pushes For Phase-Out Of BPA
  • Clean Water – Clean Energy Choices
  • Upstream Solutions Offer Hope for Protecting Water, Health
  • Legislative Report From Rhode Island
  • Clean Water: Now And For The Future
  • Clean Water Action Member, Business Owner To Donate 15% From Sales Of Eco-Friendly Furniture, Fabrics, Photo Art And More
  • We All Live Downstream
  • Connecticut Legislative Round-Up

Download the complete issue today.

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  • democracy
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Providence's Double-Diesel Victory

New England Currents|Online, Summer 2009 - Update

Providence may be the second largest city in New England, but it can trade asthma and pollution stories with the best of the major cities. Rhode Island has the 5th highest child asthma rate in the country, and metropolitan Providence is ranked in the worst 6% of all U.S. counties for cancer risks posed by diesel pollution. Diesel is a menacing public health threat and a potential lynchpin in the fight against global warming. Black carbon soot is now considered the second largest source of global warming pollution after carbon dioxide. It is 2,000 more potent as a global warming agent than an equal volume of CO2.

Cue Providence: this summer will surely be remembered, not least by Clean Water Action members, for precedent-setting local government action and a highly practical approach to diesel pollution reduction measures in the capitol city.

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Connecticut Update: BPA Wins, Solar Power A Draw

New England Currents|Online, Summer 2009 - Update

BPA Banned In Connecticut

Rally to ban BPA outside Connecticut State Legislative offices

State Legislators, Attorney General Richard Blumenthal, and other supporters rally outside the Legislative Office Building in support of the Bisphenol-A legislation.

Thanks to the commitment of our members, Connecticut Clean Water Action is celebrating a banner year marked by recent legislative victories that will reduce toxins in consumer products.

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Massachusetts Health Officials Issue Bisphenol-A (BPA) Warning

New England Currents|Online, Summer 2009 - Update

Clean Water Calls for BPA-Free Children's Products

If you were at the beach or on vacation mid-summer, you may have missed this announcement but... after months of determined prodding from Clean Water Action and the Alliance for a Healthy Tomorrow, the Massachusetts Department of Public Health (DPH) issued a consumer warning on bisphenol-A (BPA) in August. Why is this important? BPA is a toxic chemical that leaches from polycarbonate plastics and the linings of food and beverage cans such as baby bottles, sippy cups, infant formula, and canned sodas and soups. It mimics the hormone estrogen and disrupts the body's endocrine system, leading to potential health damage including breast cancer, obesity, diabetes, and early onset of puberty, among others. And BPA has been found in the bodies of 93% of Americans tested.

The DPH warning states that children under the age of two, pregnant women, and chemotherapy patients should, where possible, avoid products that contain BPA.

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Other Publications

California Currents | Winter 2011

california currents
winter 2011 edition

Inside

  • Getting to the Source
  • From the Director
  • Legislative Update
  • Clean Water for Monterey Park?
  • Community Action = Clean Water
  • Phasing Out Foam
  • San Joaquin Valley
  • California's Scorecard
  • Year-End Giving

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getting to the source of plastics and trash in our waterways

Clean Water Action wanted to know where all the plastics and trash in the world’s oceans and inland waterways, such as the San Francisco Bay, are coming from. Research has long held that 80% of ocean debris is generated from land-based sources. It enters waterways through the storm drain system or gets blown into waterways from open garbage dumps and trash containers. But where is all that trash originating? There research just wasn’t there.
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Phasing Out Foam Food Containers:
Support SB 568 (Lowenthal)
Clean Water Action is working at both the local and state levels to get rid of foam food containers — a bad actor in the marine environment. Small pieces of foam evade litter cleanup and are mistaken for food by all kinds of marine wildlife. Polystyrene foam (incorrectly referred to as Styrofoam™ — a material used for transport packaging) is bad for the environment and toxic too.
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  • democracy
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Florida Currents | Winter 2011

florida currents
winter 2011 edition
good new for the everglades!

inside

  • Good News for the Everglades
  • From the Florida Director
  • POWER! Protect Our Water, Economy, & Rights
  • Preparing for the 2012 Legislative Session
  • Polluters' Political Pressure
  • Fracking:
  • Florida's Legislative Scorecard

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The final months of 2011 have brought exciting news for the future of Everglades restoration. A fully restored Everglades ecosystem will strengthen the economy and improve water quality and quality of life for people across South Florida. All of these benefits are now much closer to being realized.
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Power_logo1_web (2).jpg
 
 
 
 
Clean Water Action’s new POWER campaign “is about real people in communities across Florida sending a message to local, state, and federal lawmakers."  “We want elected officials to represent our health and well-being regardless of partisan affiliation or political aspirations. It is about stepping up and taking back our basic rights..." - Kathy Aterno
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Colorado Currents | Winter 2011

colorado currents
winter 2011 edition

Inside

  • Frack Attack
  • From the Director
  • A Thank you to Senator Michael Bennett
  • Legislative Round Up
  • Saving the Colorado
  • Flaming Gorge Pipeline Update
  • Colorado's Scorecard
  • Year-End Giving

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frack attack across colorado's front range!

Northern Colorado, home base to Colorado Clean Water Action in Fort Collins, is in the midst of the biggest fracking boom in the United States. Weld County, just east of Fort Collins, has more active oil and gas wells than any county in the U.S, with nearly 18,000 wells. As a geologic formation called the “Niobrara Shale” is drilled for oil and gas, 10,000 to 20,000 more wells could be added. The Niobrara is a deep shale rock layer that requires hydraulic fracking to get out the oil and gas. As is the case with shale gas fracking across the U.S., the issue is extremely controversial in northern Colorado. Recently, cities and counties up and down the Front Range have been dealing with the consequences of drilling and fracking.
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Clean Water Currents | Fall 2011

we can’t live without clean water. it’s that simple.
Clean Water Currents Fall 2011
It's That Simple | Dirty Water Caucus in Congress | Fixing the Clean Water Act | Fracking Fights | Clean Water Jobs | Ban the Foam | Scoring Congress | Coal's Dirty Backside | Your Impact on Water  Download Clean Water Currents

But sometimes, the people we elect seem to forget that. They’ve been forgetting it a lot lately in Washington, DC and in too many of our state capitols. But with your support, we keep reminding them how important clean water is… to our health, to our quality of life, to our economy and to our jobs!

This fall marked the 39th anniversary of the Clean Water Act — one of our most successful environmental laws ever! The Clean Water Act has restored lakes, rivers and streams around the country to health. Because of this law, the Cuyahoga River doesn’t catch on fire, our Great Lakes have come back to life, and thousands of rivers and streams are healthier now than they’ve been in fifty years! But instead of celebrating our progress, those of us who care about our water find ourselves defending against an all-out assault.

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  • National
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Chesapeake Currents - Fall 2011

chesapeake currents
fall 2011 edition

Inside

  • We Can't Live Without Clean Water
  • Uranium Mining
  • Virginia Endorsements
  • Winning in Baltimore
  • DC - Leading on Stormwater
  • Delaware's Senator Takes on Diesel

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we can’t live without clean water

It’s that simple. But sometimes, the people we elect seem to forget that. And they’ve been forgetting it a lot lately in Washington, DC and in too many of our state capitals.

Clean Water Action’s job – which we can only do in partnership with you, our members — is to keep the pressure on the politicians in Washington, and in their home districts across the country, telling them to protect our water.
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  • Delaware
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  • democracy
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