Editorial: The Pinelands escapes Christie’s vandalism
Editorial: The Pinelands escapes Christie’s vandalism Read More »
Editorial: The Pinelands escapes Christie’s vandalism Read More »
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| The crowd at Tuesday’s PADEP meeting on Elcon’s proposed treatment facility. (Kyle Bagenstose photo) |
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| PADEP regional manager for waste management James Wentzel addresses the crowd. (Kyle Bagenstose photo) |
Crowd speaks out against Elcon’s waste-burning plan Read More »
The Senate vote of 34-13 came after days of off-and-on debate, with many Republicans raising concerns that the ban would cause difficulty or increased expenses for farmers, small businesses and nonprofit organizations.They also questioned how much the ban would do to reduce litter and improve the health of the Chesapeake Bay. Sen. Adelaide Eckardt said she lives at the headwaters of a creek in Cambridge and regularly picks up litter, but rarely finds foam cups or containers.“We attempt to clean it up to the best of our ability, but I do not believe that banning the polystyrene that we’ve been talking about is going to impact all that trash,” said Eckardt, who was among half a dozen Republicans who spoke against the bill.Sen. Bryan Simonaire, an Anne Arundel County Republican, voted for the ban, saying he contacted the school system in Montgomery County — where is already a foam ban — and learned the district is saving money after switching to nonfoam containers.“It was actually cheaper. You have to look at the facts,” Simonaire said.Proponents of the ban, including sponsor Sen. Cheryl Kagan, a Montgomery County Democrat, say the products are not recyclable and don’t break down in the environment, making them a particularly difficult form of litter to deal with.The ban would be effective July 1, 2020.A version of the foam ban is pending in the House of Delegates. It’s sponsored by Del. Brooke Lierman, a Baltimore Democrat.The measure is among the priorities of Democratic leaders of the General Assembly.Like this? Click to receive free updates

Fifty-eight former high-ranking military and intelligence officials issued a stern warning to the White House: Think twice about creating a panel to counter the government’s own findings that climate change poses a threat to national security.
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“Imposing a political test on reports issued by the science agencies, and forcing a blind spot onto the national security assessments that depend on them, will erode our national security,” wrote a group of former generals, admirals and other national security officials in a letter Tuesday to President Trump, which I reported on here. “It is dangerous to have national security analysis conform to politics.”
They are objecting to plans by top administration officials to convene an ad hoc group of select federal scientists to scrutinize and potentially dispute the conclusions of recent federal climate reports, which The Post’s Juliet Eilperin, Josh Dawsey and Brady Dennis revealed last week.
Officials are still determining what sort of group they will assemble to assess the government’s scientific findings and whether they will eventually establish an independent federal advisory committee to scrutinize climate science.
Yet the letter writers, who include heavyweights from President Barack Obama’s administration such as former secretary of state John F. Kerry and former secretary of defense Chuck Hagel, already worry the panel will end up unduly “second-guessing the scientific sources” that underpin the grave conclusions from most military leaders that climate change is a menace to the nation’s security. They do not want the White House to, as they say, “dispute and undermine military and intelligence judgments on the threat posed by climate change.”
The question is whether there is any chance that Trump — a commander in chief who likes to boast about “my generals” and “my military” — will listen to these former military leaders.
“This letter is not an attack on the president, it is an offer of dialogue,” said Andrew Holland, chief operating officer of the American Security Project. His group, along with the Center for Climate and Security, another policy and research nonprofit organization focused on security issues, organized the letter.
In various military and intelligence reports, military leaders predict that the impact of climate change will directly endanger U.S. facilities — for example, a rise in sea level is expected to increase the risk of flooding at some naval bases. They also project that climate change will exacerbate conditions, such as drought, that lead to conflict.
But for years, Trump himself has had his mind made up: Climate change is “madness,” a “con,” a “hoax.” His administration has worked hard to unravel efforts under the previous president to curb climate-warming emissions from coal-fired power plants, natural gas wells and automobiles.
Still, Holland said “we do hold out hope” of convincing Trump.
“We actively hope that he will listen to people like his daughter Ivanka and his son-in-law Jared Kushner,” he said.
The couple, who both serve as senior White House advisers, each urged the president to keep the United States in the Paris climate accord, an international deal meant to keep the world below 2 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels. But the president said early in his term the country would pull out of the widely hailed agreement.Read the full storyLike this? Click to receive free updates
Ex-military leaders trying to stop Trump’s climate panel Read More »
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| Elcon chemical waste treatment plant in Falls Township – Graphic rendering |
[Click here for meeting coverage]
By Frank Brill
EnviroPolitics Editor
The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) will host a public meeting tonight regarding Elcon Recycling Services, LLC’s (Elcon) proposed plans to construct and operate a hazardous waste treatment and storage facility to treat and store liquid waste at the Keystone Industrial Port Complex in Falls Township, Bucks County.
The meeting is scheduled for 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the Sheraton Bucks County Hotel, 400 Oxford Valley Road, Langhorne, PA 19047
Here’s how the DEP describes the meeting
The public meeting will be held to answer questions from the public regarding the permit applications for the project. Representatives from DEP’s Waste Management, Air Quality, and Clean Water programs will be on hand to discuss permit applications currently under review.
Matthew Flamm reports for Crain’s New York Business
NYC to capture, recycle aluminum coffee pods from waste Read More »