Friday, February 29, 2008

MINDEN:Free workshop in Minden on drinking water protection, septic maintenance and available grants

The workshop will be held at the following:
Minden, Royal Canadian Legion, Hwy 35 & 21, Thursday, March 6th, 6 to 9 p.m.

(Fenelon Falls, Ontario) Property owners can learn how to protect their drinking water and access grants for eligible projects at a free workshop in Minden, Royal Canadian Legion, Hwy 35 & 21, Thursday, March 6th, 6 to 9 p.m.

Experts from Kawartha Conservation, the Haliburton Kawartha Pine Ridge Health Unit and Well Aware will be talking about and answering questions on proper septic maintenance, groundwater protection, well maintenance, well water testing and what projects are eligible for and how to access grants.

WHAT:
Free workshop for property owners on drinking water protection and available grants
WHEN:
Thursday, March 6th from 6 to 9 p.m.
WHERE:
Minden, Royal Canadian Legion, Hwy 35 & 21, Thursday,
  • Sasha Lambrinos, Kawartha Conservation Stewardship Coordinator
  • Anne Elmhirst, Haliburton Kawartha Pine Ridge District Health Unit
  • Brenda Ibey, Well Aware

For more information, contact Sasha Lambrinos at 1-800-668-5722 or slambrinos@kawarthaconservation.com.


Kawartha Conservation
is a watershed-based environmental organization focused on providing abundant clean water within a healthy landscape. It is one of 36 conservation authorities in Ontario providing natural resources management. The Kawartha Watershed intersects portions of the City of Kawartha Lakes; Township of Scugog; Township of Brock; Municipality of Clarington; Township of Galway-Cavendish & Harvey; and Township of Cavan-Monaghan.


www.kawarthaconservation.com

"Leading the way to abundant clean water within a healthy landscape"

Outspoken scientist dismissed from panel on chemical safety - Los Angeles Times

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-epa29feb29,0,6191299.story

Deborah Rice, an award-winning toxicologist, was removed from a group of experts researching a widely-used flame retardant after industry lobbyists complained that she was biased.
By Marla Cone
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

February 29, 2008

Under pressure from the chemical industry, the Environmental Protection Agency has dismissed an outspoken scientist who chaired a federal panel responsible for helping the agency determine the dangers of a flame retardant widely used in electronic equipment.

Toxicologist Deborah Rice was appointed chair of an EPA scientific panel reviewing the chemical a year ago. Federal records show she was removed from the panel in August after the American Chemistry Council, the lobbying group for chemical manufacturers, complained to a top-ranking EPA official that she was biased.

The chemical, a brominated compound known as deca, is used in high volumes worldwide, largely in the plastic housings of television sets.

Rice, an award-winning former EPA scientist who now works at the Maine Department of Health and Human Services, has studied low doses of deca and reported neurological effects in lab animals. Last February, around the time the EPA panel was convened, Rice testified before the Maine Legislature in support of a state ban on the compound because scientific evidence shows it is toxic and accumulating in the environment and people.

Chemical industry lobbyists say Rice's comments to the Legislature, as well as similar comments to the media, show that she is a biased advocate who has compromised the integrity of the EPA's review of the flame retardant.

The EPA is in the process of deciding how much daily exposure to deca is safe -- a controversial decision, expected next month, that could determine whether it can still be used in consumer products. The role of the expert panel was to review and comment on the scientific evidence.

EPA officials removed Rice because of what they called "the perception of a potential conflict of interest." Under the agency's handbook for advisory committees, scientific peer reviewers should not "have a conflict of interest" or "appear to lack impartiality."

EPA officials were not available for comment Thursday.

Environmentalists accuse the EPA of a "dangerous double standard," because under the Bush administration, many pro-industry experts have served on the agency's scientific panels.

The Environmental Working Group, a Washington, D.C.-based advocacy group, reviewed seven EPA panels created last year and found 17 panelists who were employed or funded by the chemical industry or had made public statements that the chemicals they were reviewing were safe. In one example, an Exxon Mobil Corp. employee served on an EPA expert panel responsible for deciding whether ethylene oxide, a chemical manufactured by Exxon Mobil, is a carcinogen.

Sonya Lunder, a senior analyst at the Environmental Working Group, called it "deeply problematic from the public interest perspective" for the EPA to dismiss scientists who advocate protecting health while appointing those who promote industry views.

Lunder said it is unprecedented for the EPA to remove an expert for expressing concerns about the potential dangers of a chemical.

"It's a scary world if we create a precedent that says scientists involved in decision-making are perceived to be too biased," she said.

Rice was unavailable for comment Thursday.

In addition to her testimony for the Maine Legislature, Rice has been quoted in media reports saying there is enough scientific evidence to warrant bans on deca. "We don't need to wait another five years or even another two years and let it increase in the environment, while we nail down every possible question we have," she told the Seattle Post-Intelligencer last March.

In a May letter to an assistant administrator at the EPA, Sharon Kneiss, a vice president of the American Chemistry Council, called Rice "a fervent advocate of banning" deca and said she "has no place in an independent, objective peer review." She told the EPA that Rice's role on the panel "calls into question the overall integrity" of the EPA's evaluation of chemicals and that Rice may have influenced the other panelists in their review of deca.

Top EPA officials met with the industry group's representatives in June and promised to take action, according to a letter that EPA Asst. Administrator George Gray sent to the group last month. In that letter, Gray said the EPA found "no evidence" that Rice "significantly influenced the other panelists."

Environmentalists are concerned that Rice's removal could result in a less protective standard.

After EPA officials dismissed her from the five-member panel, they removed her comments from the panel's report on deca and removed all mention of her. Three months later, at the request of the chemical industry group, the EPA added a note to the panel report that Rice was removed "due to a perception of a potential conflict of interest" and that none of her comments were considered in their review of the chemical.

EPA documents show that Rice's comments while serving on the panel focused on technical, scientific issues. For example, she advised the EPA to consider the cumulative effects of not just deca, but chemicals with similar neurological effects.

Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Los Angeles), chairman of the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, said he was disturbed by Rice's dismissal and the Environmental Working Group's findings about pro-industry panelists.

"If this information is accurate, it raises serious questions about EPA's approach to preventing conflicts of interest on its expert scientific panels," Waxman said.

The conflict of interest policies of another environmental institute, the National Toxicology Program, also has come under fire. Last March, a major consultant for a federal center that evaluates reproductive hazards of chemicals was fired after The Los Angeles Times reported that the firm had financial ties to 50 chemical companies or associations.

Rice specializes in neurotoxins -- chemicals that harm developing brains. Before she went to work for the state of Maine, she was a senior toxicologist at the EPA's National Center for Environmental Research, where she had a major role in setting the EPA's controversial guideline for exposure to mercury in fish.

In 2004, the EPA gave Rice and four colleagues an award for what it called "exceptionally high-quality research" for a study that linked lead exposure to premature puberty in girls.

Many toxicologists and other environmental scientists have said they are highly concerned about flame retardants known as PBDEs, polybrominated diphenyl ethers.

In laboratory tests, PBDEs have been found to skew brain development and alter thyroid hormones, slowing the learning and motor skills of newborn animals.

Two of the compounds, called penta and octa, were banned in 2004. Before the ban, amounts in human breast milk and wildlife were doubling in North America every four to six years, a pace unmatched for any contaminant in at least 50 years. Now they are decreasing.

Scientists had initially thought that the deca compound was not accumulating in people and animals as the other PBDEs were. But it appears that deca turns into other brominated substances when exposed to sunlight, and now many scientists say it, too, is building up in the environment worldwide. Deca has similar effects on animals' developing brains as the banned PBDEs.

The chemical industry contends that low doses pose no danger and that the compound is necessary to prevent fires in many consumer products. In addition to TVs and other electronics, deca is used in furniture textiles, building materials and automobiles. About 56,000 tons were used worldwide in 2001, mostly in the United States and Asia.

Only Maine and Washington state restrict use of deca; both passed laws last year that phase out some uses. Similar bills have been introduced in California but have not passed.

marla.cone@latimes.com
    

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Carbon capture, nuclear energy big budget winners

http://www.canada.com/saskatoonstarphoenix/news/story.html?id=c400b024-8022-48e0-8888-70ca4eac4546&k=78432

By Mike De Souza, Canwest News Service

Published: Tuesday, February 26, 2008

OTTAWA - The Harper government sprinkled a series of new environmental measures into the federal budget on Tuesday, including a $300-million boost for nuclear energy and a $240-million investment to clean up pollution from coal-fired power plants in Saskatchewan.

Meantime, it abruptly announced the termination of a popular program that offered tax rebates on energy efficient cars that had been widely criticized by most of the car manufacturing industry.

"Canadians demand and expect that action is being taken to reduce harmful emissions and to crack down on polluters," Finance Minister Jim Flaherty said in a prepared speech to the House of Commons. "Today we are taking action to fulfil our commitments to a cleaner, healthier environment."

Though Prime Minister Stephen Harper and members of his government have recently described global warming as one of the greatest threats facing humanity, Flaherty's budget speech did not mention any concerns about climate change and adaptation.

The $300 million for Atomic Energy of Canada Limited will nearly triple the budget of the Crown corporation, which develops nuclear products and reactors. The budget indicates that the funding would help AECL develop an advanced CANDU nuclear reactor and maintain safety and operations at its Chalk River facilities.

The Chalk River reactor was shut down over safety concerns last fall, but Parliament passed emergency legislation to reopen it in December because of fears of a global shortage of medical isotopes produced at the facility.

The $240-million investment for the coal industry in Saskatchewan is earmarked for new technology to capture carbon dioxide emissions and store them underground.

The government is also offering more tax incentives for green investments and beefing up environmental law enforcement. But for the average consumer, an incentive program that was introduced in the 2007 budget, offering tax rebates of up to $2,000 an new energy efficient cars will no longer be available after December of this year, while a special tax on gas-guzzling vehicles remains in effect.

Honda Canada, other manufacturers and environmental groups criticized the program the so-called "feebate" program, explaining that it was poorly designed and would not effectively encourage consumers to choose energy efficient cars.

The government is also setting aside $66-million over two years to set up an electronic monitoring infrastructure for carbon-trading, for proposed regulations to crack down on pollution from industrial facilities and to allow for a market trading system that puts a price on emissions.

Environmental groups said the new measures, including a $250-million aid package for car manufacturers, were not a sign of responsible leadership.

"The government has missed the boat on climate change once again" said Stephen Hazell, the executive director of the Sierra Club of Canada. "What we have are a number of industry subsidies masquerading as environmental investments and it just doesn't work.
http://www.environmenthaliburton.ca    

Monday, February 25, 2008

FENELON FALLS: Free workshop on drinking water protection

Free workshop in Minden on drinking water protection, septic maintenance and available grants

The workshop will also be held at the following:
Minden, Royal Canadian Legion, Hwy 35 & 21, Thursday, March 6th, 6 to 9 p.m.

(Fenelon Falls, Ontario) Property owners can learn how to protect their drinking water and access grants for eligible projects at a free workshop in Minden, Royal Canadian Legion, Hwy 35 & 21, Thursday, March 6th, 6 to 9 p.m.

Experts from Kawartha Conservation, the Haliburton Kawartha Pine Ridge Health Unit and Well Aware will be talking about and answering questions on proper septic maintenance, groundwater protection, well maintenance, well water testing and what projects are eligible for and how to access grants.

WHAT:
Free workshop for property owners on drinking water protection and available grants
WHEN:
Thursday, March 6th from 6 to 9 p.m.
WHERE:
Minden, Royal Canadian Legion, Hwy 35 & 21, Thursday,
  • Sasha Lambrinos, Kawartha Conservation Stewardship Coordinator
  • Anne Elmhirst, Haliburton Kawartha Pine Ridge District Health Unit
  • Brenda Ibey, Well Aware

For more information, contact Sasha Lambrinos at 1-800-668-5722 or slambrinos@kawarthaconservation.com.


Kawartha Conservation
is a watershed-based environmental organization focused on providing abundant clean water within a healthy landscape. It is one of 36 conservation authorities in Ontario providing natural resources management. The Kawartha Watershed intersects portions of the City of Kawartha Lakes; Township of Scugog; Township of Brock; Municipality of Clarington; Township of Galway-Cavendish & Harvey; and Township of Cavan-Monaghan.


www.kawarthaconservation.com

"Leading the way to abundant clean water within a healthy landscape"

The forgotten story of the Northwest's only uranium mines |

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/pacificnw/2004191779_pacificpuranium24.html

Sherman Alexie was a teenager when he first felt threatened by the uranium mines near his home on the Spokane Indian Reservation.

His grandmother had died from esophageal cancer in 1980. A few years later, his mother and some other tribal members took out a road map and began marking red dots on every home where someone had cancer.

The roads where the ore trucks rumbled by were pocked with red.

"I remember at that point knowing at some point in my life I'm certainly going to get sick," recalls Alexie, the acclaimed author who now lives in Seattle and recently won the National Book Award. "I have very little doubt that I'm going to get cancer."

Such is the legacy of the Northwest's only uranium mines. At least for those who even know they exist.

read more


Thursday, February 21, 2008

Luz » Blog Archive » Welcome to Luz!

This comic is the creation of Claudia Dávila, a free lance illustrator in Toronto.
http://www.transmission-x.com/luz/2007/10/26/hello-world/

Welcome to Luz!

Thanks for visiting my web comic about Luz! She’s a city girl on a mission to gather “the knowing”: knowledge and experience about sustainable survival for humans, specifically in urban centers. Occasionally we’ll glimpse into Luz’s musings about the human condition and our connection, or lack thereof, to the natural world. You’ll meet her neighbours, friends, and mom and grandma, all of whom have knowledge of their own to share with Luz. Whenever it’s appropriate I’ll include commentary and links to more information relating to the content of each episode.

I hope you enjoy this weekly strip, while accumulating “the knowing” for yourself as the post-petroleum era approaches.

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Plastic (Not) Fantastic: Food Containers Leach a Potentially Harmful Chemical: Scientific American

Bisphenol A (BPA) is a ubiquitous compound in plastics. First synthesized in 1891, the chemical has become a key building block of plastics from polycarbonate to polyester; in the U.S. alone more than 2.3 billion pounds (1.04 million metric tons) of the stuff is manufactured annually.

Since at least 1936 it has been known that BPA mimics estrogens, binding to the same receptors throughout the human body as natural female hormones. And tests have shown that the chemical can promote human breast cancer cell growth as well as decrease sperm count in rats, among other effects. These findings have raised questions about the potential health risks of BPA, especially in the wake of hosts of studies showing that it leaches from plastics and resins when they are exposed to hard use or high temperatures (as in microwaves or dishwashers). (more)


Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Haliburton County Uranium Update


Edward Burtynsky

Uranium Tailings #12, Elliot Lake, Ontario, 1995
chromogenic print
http://www.cowlesgallery.com/



FUME Public Meeting Wed., Feb. 13, 2008 at 7pm

FUME is hosting a public meeting on Wednesday, February 13, 2008, 7:00pm
at the Glamorgan Community Centre in Gooderham.

We have invited a number of local people to speak about FUME,
as well as the various aspects of uranium mining and exploration and
its effect on our community, our health and our environment.
There will be time afterwards for questions and comments.

Coffee and tea will be served.
Please spread the word!

Everyone is welcome.


We held an initial meeting last Friday.Turnout was fantastic!
As our support grows we will be forming committees to work on the various
aspects of this fight.
There is a lot of work to be done!
Work has already started on a Youth Committee.
If you know of any youth who would like to be more actively involved in this issue,
Please let them know about us.

Please contact us if you'd like more info.
Contact us at
fighturanium@gmail.com
or visit us on the web at
www.fighturanium.com


March 15 Bancroft Uranium is hosting a public information session
Lloyd Watson Centre in Wilberforce.
Open House at 6pm followed by a presentation at 7 and then a question period.
We would like to get as many people out there as we can.We're aiming for 100 or more.
We will have yellow armbands for people to wear.

March 7 SAGE (Safe and Green Energy),are hosting
an evening with Dr. Michael Mehta,

Weighing The Risks of Nuclear Energy
Toward A Renewable Energy Strategy for Ontario
An Evening with Dr. Michael D. Mehta

Friday, March 7, 7:00 pm
Peterborough Public Library
345 Aylmer Street North
Admission: Free(donations accepted)

A Question and Answer session will follow Dr. Mehta's presentation
Coffee and tea will be served

Michael D. Mehta specializes in science, technology and society with a focus on health and environmental risk issues. Dr. Mehta is Professor of Sociology at the University of Alberta and Executive Director of thePopulation Research Laboratory. The Population Research Laboratory at the University of Alberta is the largest social sciences research centre in Western Canada.

Dr. Mehta has authored the following books:
· Risky Business: Nuclear Power and Public Protest in Canada
· Biotechnology Unglued: Science, Society, and Social Cohesion
· Nanotechnology: Risk, Ethics and Law
· Environmental Sociology: Theory and Practice

Here's a link to some info on Dr. Mehta's book: http://www.entrepreneur.com/tradejournals/article/166564510.html.

Brought to you by SAGE
For more information, email goSAGE@yahoo.ca

Finally, we have updated the website and blog site with a new 'NEWS' section and events on the 'Events' page.


Our support is really growing! We anticipate a good turnout at our meeting Wednesday as well as at the Bancroft meeting Friday. Hope to see you there!
Regards,
Christine and Robin

FUME (Fight Uranium Mining and Exploration)

www.fighturanium.com


Uranium Mining and Exploration in Haliburton


Agroup of activists dedicated to the defence of our environment and the preservation of the beauty of the Haliburton Highlands. Our aim is to change the mining act, stop uranium mining and exploration and investigate the possibility of raising a class action lawsuit against the government for putting the health and welfare of its citizens in danger.
Contact us at:
fighturanium@gmail.com



Uranium Exploration in the Haliburton Area

As you may or may not be aware, the Highlands East and Bancroft areas are actively being staked and claimed for potential uranium mining and exploration. Currently, roughly 17% of Monmouth township has been staked (appox. 8500 acres). This includes both private property and crown land.

El Nino Ventures,
One of the two larger stakeholders in Monmouth, has claimed a total of 9,765 acres in Faraday, Cardiff and Monmouth townships and is currently exploring the Amalgamated Rare Earth claim in Monmouth. Another prospector has claimed roughly 5,000 acres in Monmouth.

Your land could be staked! In Ontario, most property owners hold only the surface rights and not the mineral rights to their land. This means a prospector (anyone who applies and pays the $25 licence fee) could come on to your land without being required to notify you and claim the mineral rights. The mineral rights holder can then start exploring (this could include drilling, digging, stripping, building roads, etc. ) on your land. Under the Ontario Mining Act, there is nothing the surface rights owner can do to stop this. But we can try! For more information on mining and mineral rights in Ontario, follow this link to the Government of Ontario website.

Check out http://f-u-m-e.blogspot.com/ for more information about Uranium Mining and Exploration in Haliburton County


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