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  • This carpool’s rockin’ … come knockin’

    As I was leaving work last night, a bus blew past me with a big, colorful ad on the side. "Freewheeling," said the type at the top. The photo showed a van on a bare stretch of road, with a beautiful sunsetty skyline beyond. Then the tagline: "Vanpooling is your trip, your way."

    Um, really? I thought vanpooling was 12 other people's trips, and you have to wait your turn, and it takes forever, and is sort of smelly.

    I wish I could get over that notion. Because I do believe in sharing rides. And the Washington DOT website makes it look so darn bucolic. I admire their attempt to sex up vans, I really do. I wish them the best of truck.

  • Gore says he won’t run

    And adds this:

    "My country is extremely attentive to the slightest increase in a risk from terror, and that's appropriate," he said. "But why should we be so tolerant of risk where the future habitability of our planet is concerned?"
    Sigh.

  • Tight federal budget prevents old-growth timber sales

    The Oregonian today reports on an unexpected consequence of a tight federal budget: The U.S. Forest Service doesn't have enough money to prepare timber sales in old-growth forests.

    From the article:

    [T]he administration and Congress are starving the U.S. Forest Service of money to plan sales of the big trees, and fight the inevitable appeals and lawsuits by their defenders. Forest managers say they are no longer pouring their shrinking funds into thankless conflicts they rarely win.

    "We can't afford expensive timber sales -- the kind where controversy is engendered," said Gary Larsen, supervisor of the Mount Hood National Forest. "We're trying to find those where people can agree on the benefits."

    Nifty: We can save money and old-growth in one step. How come it took so long to figure this out?

  • Dept. of irony

    This is hilarious. Rep. Mike Conaway (R-Tex.) is holding a fundraiser for beleaguered ex-House Speaker Tom DeLay (R-Tex.). Where, you ask?

    The Petroleum Club.

    Poetry.

  • From Cracking Up to Cream Pie

    Gloom and doom with a sense of … hey, wait a minute Some Grumpy Grumpersteins out there think environmentalism is never funny. TBS aims to prove ’em wrong with Earth to America! — an exclamation-pointed, star-studded night of comedy about the planet’s plight. That bit on new-source review is gonna kill. Turning Japanese, we really […]

  • Readers talk back about school choice, organic rules, bike commuting, and more

      Re: Storm Front and Center Dear Editor: If we could only make politicians and multinational firms understand the direct relation between forest clear-cutting and floods, we might be able to prevent — or at least reduce — the damage caused by tropical storms and hurricanes. Hurricane Katrina is one good example of many stupid […]

  • Civil servants quit or get canned for bucking bad environmental policy

    In Nick Turse's astonishing list of Bush administration casualties -- civil servants who have quit or been fired for bucking administration policy -- are numerous entries of interest to greens. Here are a few:

  • The Dark Side of the Source

    EPA issues draft rules that would gut air-pollution standard The U.S. EPA has issued draft regulations that would allow the nation’s dirtiest power plants to emit more air pollution. The proposed regs — anticipated and dreaded by clean-air advocates — would supersede new-source review (NSR), the Clean Air Act regulation requiring plants to upgrade their […]

  • Wet, Me Worry?

    Wetlands protection has gone downhill under Bush administration The Bush administration has radically curtailed protection of wetlands and waterways in the past four years, according to a new report by the Government Accountability Office. It found that prior to 2001, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers asserted its jurisdiction over most waters if migratory birds […]

  • Take the Pinheads Polling

    Poll says most Americans back ultra-strength environmental protections Nearly half of all U.S. adults think the government’s doing too little to protect the environment. Almost three-quarters say that eco-protections are important, and that standards cannot be too high. No, you’re not dreaming — it’s a fresh new Harris Interactive poll on attitudes of Americans toward […]