Alabama's Environmental Issues
#1
Posted 24 January 2007 - 06:59 PM
The report compiled by both Alabama River Alliance and Southern Environmental Law Center reports that Alabama's water quality is in serious danger. It discusses how we have too many small individual agencies and no cooperation or enforcement of our water quality. ADEM is seriously underfunded and needs to funding for enforcement measures to ensure our drink water is safe.
#2
Posted 27 March 2007 - 07:38 PM
Kudos to the Advertiser for taking a stand for stricter water quality standards. I can't believe that our standards are so dangerously low.
#3
Posted 17 April 2007 - 09:47 AM
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Great resource: Bama Environmental News
#4
Posted 17 April 2007 - 10:13 AM
Between 1990 and 2004, carbon dioxide emissions in Alabama rose 29%, far exceeding the 18% national rise. Coal-fired electric power plants were responsible for two-thirds of the increase, and much of the rest resulted from cars and trucks.
Neither the Riley administration nor ADEM officials currently have any plans to address this. Alabama Power could modify their plants to reduce these emissions, but they will have to be forced to do so. That isn't likely to happen anytime soon.
Thoughts?
Mobile Press-Register: Above-average rise for carbon dioxide
#6
Posted 17 April 2007 - 12:26 PM
Republican State Senator Bradley Byrne, federal wildlife officials and coastal Alabama environmental groups are concerned by an Alabama Department of Environmental Management (ADEM) attempt to weaken state restrictions on building homes in wetlands.
ADEM officials indicated that they planned to favor less stringent U.S. Army Corps of Engineers guidelines on filling wetlands, instead of following state rules put in place in the 1990s. Corps rules would make it much easier for homeowners to fill coastal wetlands without obtaining a special permit. Current state rules forbid the filling of wetlands within the most sensitive coastal areas.
A former ADEM official said that the Corps of Engineers and local developers had been trying for years to get the state to adopt the weaker Corps guidelines.
This is simply unbelievable. We badly need leadership at ADEM committed to protecting our environment.
Mobile Press-Register: Groups oppose wetland changes
#7
Posted 17 April 2007 - 03:57 PM
ADEM can be an effective enforcer of environmental policy, if things worked that way. i question the propriety of ADEM's role as a policy-making arm of state government, and would like to see it stick to its role as envirnomental liaison and enforcer. municipalities (i don't know about companies) live in mortal fear of ADEM and its past proclivity to fine big - not a bad thing in alabama. i would rather see an infrastructure project stalled for eternity than see it done poorly and without full diligence concerning environmental impacts - it only leads to erosion, contaminated ground water, damaged (in some cases badly damaged) local ecosystems, compromised quality of natural resources, and bankrupt towns who have to pour all their remaining money into ADEM fines.
#8
Posted 22 April 2007 - 01:56 PM
According to a Mobile Press-Register special report, families and individuals own 78% of Alabama's forests, and are being forced to choose between ever-increasing forest maintenance costs and lucrative development opportunities.
Between 1997 and 2002, approximately 318,300 acres of rural land was developed in Alabama -- nearly the equivalent of paving an area the size of Huntsville every year.
The risk of losing our forest heritage is at an all-time high, and this report suggests ways to help family forest owners keep and better manage their land.
Mobile Press-Register: Urban sprawl endangering forests
#9
Posted 22 April 2007 - 03:16 PM
State program purchases threatened wilderness tracts
Since 1992 the Forever Wild program, mostly funded by state oil and gas royalties from the Gulf of Mexico, purchased 56 tracts of land totalling nearly 124,000 acres.
A total rural land area nearly the size of Huntsville is developed each year in Alabama. Across the United States, an area about the size of Alabama was developed between 1982 and 2001.
This program is vital to our efforts to preserve the most ecologically sensitive areas in Alabama. I wish we could give it $100 million dollars or more every year.
Mobile Press-Register: Forever Wild about state conservation
Forever Wild program website
#10
Posted 22 April 2007 - 03:26 PM
#11
Posted 21 June 2007 - 11:33 AM
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Under a Bush administration recommendation, Alabama would get $2 million in federal money to help buy almost 1,600 acres in the Mobile-Tensaw Delta in north Baldwin County. Forever Wild would pitch in to reach the expected purchase price of $2.8 million. The property is surrounded by land already owned by Forever Wild. It's not known yet whether Congress will go along with the request.
Mobile Press-Register: Bill would steer money to Delta land purchase
Hopefully Congress will approve this request and help protect more of the Mobile-Tensaw Delta.
#12
Posted 27 July 2007 - 09:25 AM
Details in the article below.
Mobile Press-Register: Alabama Power on dirtiest plants list
#13
Posted 27 July 2007 - 05:46 PM
#14
Posted 31 August 2007 - 10:24 PM
The latest EPA report has deridden ADEM as an agency that has continued to now file penalities against policy violators. Also they said, "ADEM should document economic benefit and gravity for all penalties assessed." Simply put, ADEM is still be lackluster as they have been since forever. The only bright spots in the report were how the state seems to cooperate with other neighboring states' environmental management/protection agencies, and how the state compliance to the U.S. Clean Air Act.
#15
Posted 30 October 2007 - 05:18 AM
I wish we could significantly increase funding for Forever Wild so that more of these tracts could be bought every year.
Birmingham News: Forever Wild buying land
Montgomery Advertiser: Forever Wild adds 10,000 acres in Coosa County
#16
Posted 19 March 2008 - 10:24 PM
Alabama counties that do not meet the EPA's new smog standard:
Baldwin
Jefferson
Madison
Mobile
Morgan
Shelby
Source: EPA
Tighter ozone rules likely to affect area
#17
Posted 24 April 2008 - 05:22 PM
ADEM toughens carcinogenic regulations
#18
Posted 26 May 2008 - 10:40 AM
Southron, on Apr 24 2008, 06:22 PM, said:
ADEM toughens carcinogenic regulations
It's about time that ADEM made the substantial steps of actually trying to protect the citizens of this state.
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