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Our Sponsors


TaconicArts.com

Interior/Exterior House Painting by someone you can trust.
(845) 554-5119
jeff@taconicarts.com

House


Brown Ink
Commercial Printing

600 Horsepound Road, Kent Lakes, NY 10512 (845) 225-0177
Email Greg Brown


Joe Greico's
Out On A Limb

All types of tree work, all aspects of lawn maintenance, snow plowing, lot clearing, excavation, retaining walls, stump grinding.

82 Hortontown Rd.
Kent Cliffs, NY 10512
greico@verizon.net
T- (914)224-3049
F- (845)231-0815


Chuckie Goodnight Foundation

To educate children on how to be good stewards of the earth.


Hudson Valley Photo and Video

Photography by Chris Casaburi (845) 531-2358


Town of Kent Conservation Advisory Committee

Explore the outdoors in the Town of Kent, New York


One Click ButterCutter

The BEST way to handle butter!

A Putnam County Owned Business Enterprise


Activist Calendar

Politifact

Cost of Wars Since 2001

Google Syndication

Google is being boycotted until they reverse their stand on Net Neutrality. See : for More Information

Midway Message from the Gyre

MidwayMessage from the Gyre

These photographs of albatross chicks were made in September, 2009, on Midway Atoll, a tiny stretch of sand and coral near the middle of the North Pacific. The nesting babies are fed bellies-full of plastic by their parents, who soar out over the vast polluted ocean collecting what looks to them like food to bring back to their young. On this diet of human trash, every year tens of thousands of albatross chicks die on Midway from starvation, toxicity, and choking.

To document this phenomenon as faithfully as possible, not a single piece of plastic in any of these photographs was moved, placed, manipulated, arranged, or altered in any way. These images depict the actual stomach contents of baby birds in one of the world's most remote marine sanctuaries, more than 2000 miles from the nearest continent.

via current work.

Wikio

New York ban on burning waste takes effect | LoHud.com | The Journal News

New York ban on burning waste takes effect

By Jon Campbell • Albany Bureau • October 15, 2009

The state Department of Environmental Conservation enacted a statewide ban Wednesday on burning trash, eliminating so-called burn barrels and open pits used to incinerate waste.

The ban is an effort to curb the amount of toxic chemicals released into the air, including dioxin, a carcinogen. Residents had been allowed to burn home waste only in towns and villages with a population less than 20,000.

“These regulations are long overdue,” said Laura Haight, senior environmental associate for the New York Public Interest Research Group.

“Smoke and fumes from outdoor garbage burning contaminate our air, water and food with dioxins and other toxic chemicals that can cause breathing difficulties such as asthma attacks.”

Open burning is also the leading cause of wildfires in the state, the DEC said.

via New York ban on burning waste takes effect | LoHud.com | The Journal News.

Wikio

Some Coal Plants Cleanse the Air at the Expense of Waterways – Series – NYTimes.com

Cleansing the Air at the Expense of Waterways By CHARLES DUHIGG

MASONTOWN, Pa. — For years, residents here complained about the yellow smoke pouring from the tall chimneys of the nearby coal-fired power plant, which left a film on their cars and pebbles of coal waste in their yards. Five states — including New York and New Jersey — sued the plant’s owner, Allegheny Energy, claiming the air pollution was causing respiratory diseases and acid rain.

So three years ago, when Allegheny Energy decided to install scrubbers to clean the plant’s air emissions, environmentalists were overjoyed. The technology would spray water and chemicals through the plant’s chimneys, trapping more than 150,000 tons of pollutants each year before they escaped into the sky.

But the cleaner air has come at a cost. Each day since the equipment was switched on in June, the company has dumped tens of thousands of gallons of wastewater containing chemicals from the scrubbing process into the Monongahela River, which provides drinking water to 350,000 people and flows [...]