In the News

June 16, 2022

Fish and Wildlife Service backs 4 water, coastal bills

by Hannah Northey, Jack Forrest

A top Fish and Wildlife Service official expressed administration support for water and coastal conservation legislation during a Senate Environment and Public Works hearing yesterday. Stephen Guertin, deputy director for program management and policy, said his agency supports bills to reauthorize conservation efforts in the Delaware River Basin, restore the Great Lakes and address other coastal concerns. "These coastal habitats are threatened by climate change, rising sea levels, …  Continue Reading


June 16, 2022

Inaugural Mendocino Coast Purple Urchin Festival seeks to help rebalance troubled marine ecosystem

by Mary Callahan

They'll be serving purple urchin this weekend on the Mendocino Coast, offering creamy seafood morsels cooked up in a variety of preparations, savory and sweet. It's part of an effort to spread the word that the abundant urchins - the edible parts of them - are delicious, and that consuming more of them can help restore balance to a troubled North Coast marine ecosystem. Known in the food world as uni, the yellow-orange meat will be featured on menus of at least eight restaurants …  Continue Reading


June 15, 2022

Oil-state governors lay out different paths on methane

by Heather Richards

Two governors from states with the highest fossil fuel production from federal minerals championed their efforts yesterday to rein in methane emissions. At a hearing before the House Select Committee on the Climate Crisis, however, the state officials, one Republican and one Democrat, disagreed on whether the federal government should strengthen rules on oil and gas companies to curb releases of the powerful greenhouse gas. "Wyoming does not need additional layers of federal regulation to …  Continue Reading


June 15, 2022

House Democrats double down on claims of reconnaissance tours following Loudermilk video release

by Mychael Schnell

House Democrats are doubling down on claims that lawmakers may have led reconnaissance tours before the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol, citing newly released footage of Rep. Barry Loudermilk (R-Ga.) giving a tour the day before the riot to a man who took photos of Capitol complex hallways before attending the rally the next day. "With what that person had been looking for, the pictures he was taking, and then certainly what he did the next day, it certainly seems as if he was preparing …  Continue Reading


June 14, 2022

Greens urge Biden admin to block offshore pipeline restart

by Heather Richards

Twelve environmental groups are urging the Biden administration to block the restart of an offshore oil pipeline that spilled nearly 600 barrels of crude into the San Pedro Bay last year. The oil spill, caused by a large ship dragging the pipeline, which then split, prior to the spill discovery in October, was the largest in decades off the coast of California. Amplify Energy Corp., the pipeline's owner, is working to repair and restore the pipeline to service but needs permission from the …  Continue Reading


June 13, 2022

Aging Lake Hennessey Spillway, other local water needs sail through House, await Senate

by Marc Albert

Dozens of local water-related projects moved a step closer to reality late last week, as the House of Representatives approved a nation-wide bill to upgrade water infrastructure.   Much of the local initiatives that made the cut involve dredging and using spoils to shore up areas against sea level rise and to protect, restore and create wetlands, including in Petaluma.   The Water Resources Development Act of 2022 also authorizes a study to reduce potential flood damage from a …  Continue Reading


June 09, 2022

Jared Huffman Backs New Gun Bills

by Gideon Rubin


June 07, 2022

Humboldt County education, cultural institutions get $140K in COVID-19 relief

by Sonia Waraich

A handful of educational and cultural institutions in Humboldt County are set to receive $140,000 to revive programs that were disrupted by the pandemic. On Tuesday, U.S. Rep. Jared Huffman (D-San Rafael) announced several tribes and cultural institutions along the North Coast had been awarded funds through the National Endowment for the Humanities’ American Rescue Plan humanities grants program. In Humboldt County, specifically, the Hoopa Tribal Museum received $40,000, the Northern …  Continue Reading


June 03, 2022

Huffman, Graves want Biden to make “strong statement” against IUU

by Steve Bittenbender

Two U.S. lawmakers pushing the federal government to take broader action against illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing are asking U.S. President Joe Biden to take action ahead of a key international conference. U.S. Representatives Jared Huffman (D-Calif.) and Garret Graves (R-La.) sent the letter on 2 June 2022, saying the country has the opportunity to demonstrate leadership in the fight against IUU ahead of the United Nations Ocean Conference in Lisbon, Portugal, which starts …  Continue Reading


June 03, 2022

North Coast rail dispute intensifies with competing bids from Skunk Train and coal export company

by Andrew Graham

A mysterious Wyoming-based firm believed to be pushing a controversial coal-by-rail export proposal along the Northern California coast has made a new filing with a powerful federal board to advance its bid to seize control over the defunct lines running between Willits and Eureka. The June 1 filing indicated the so-named North Coast Railroad Company, which wants to ship Rocky Mountain coal out of the port at Humboldt Bay, had at least $15 million in the bank — enough to clear an …  Continue Reading


June 02, 2022

Symposium and Learning Festival outline opportunities for Fort Bragg

by MEGAN WUTZKE

FORT BRAGG, CA — On May 19 and 20, the City of Fort Bragg held the Blue Economy Symposium, with a Learning Festival taking place on May 21 and 22. During the symposium, attendees filled the town hall to listen to speakers discuss Fort Bragg’s future blue economy. The symposium was also live-streamed via Zoom, and locations such as the West Business Development Center held watch parties for the public to attend. “How do we diversify industry while positioning a rural …  Continue Reading


June 02, 2022

Bipartisan lawmakers urge Biden to lead on illegal fishing

by Jack Forrest

House lawmakers from both parties are asking President Joe Biden for the U.S. to take a leading role in fighting illegal, unreported and unregulated international fishing. Rep. Jared Huffman (D-Calif.), chair of the Natural Resources Subcommittee on Water, Oceans and Wildlife, and Rep. Garret Graves (R-La.) urged the president to introduce new regulations to stop illegal fishing and human trafficking operations that account for up to a third of annual seafood around the world. They sent Biden …  Continue Reading


June 01, 2022

North Coast Almost beats back ‘toxic coal train’, but company submits late filing

by Sonia Wariach

It appeared the North Coast no longer had to worry about a shadowy corporation’s proposal to poach rail line fated to be converted into the Great Redwood Trail in order to use the tracks to transport coal to Asia via Humboldt Bay. However, the company filed a late offer to do just that. North Coast State Sen. Mike McGuire announced at a virtual town hall Wednesday night that the North Coast Railroad Company failed to submit an offer for financial assistance by the Surface …  Continue Reading


May 27, 2022

Are high energy prices displacing climate action in Congress?

by Nick Sobczyk

Progressives and environmental advocates made huge gains in the 2020 campaign by pushing climate change to the forefront, but they are increasingly concerned that high energy prices and calls for greater fossil fuel production could destroy those hard-fought wins. And there’s good reason for that concern, they say. “If you’re paying attention, you should be worried,” Rep. Jared Huffman (D-Calif.) said in an interview. “All of that progress is at stake, and …  Continue Reading


May 26, 2022

Alaska Republicans open to EPA Pebble mine veto

by Hannah Northey, Nick Sobczyk

The Biden administration’s move to veto the contentious Pebble gold and copper mine in Alaska's Bristol Bay watershed may soothe the state's Republican senators who in the past have pushed back against federal intervention. GOP Sen. Dan Sullivan said he and Sen. Lisa Murkowski, both staunch supporters of mining in Alaska, are still digesting the agency’s proposal to impose a Clean Water Act veto against mining in the watershed (Greenwire, May 25). Sullivan suggested his …  Continue Reading


May 22, 2022

North Coast trail plan complicated by US rail ruling

by Sonia Wariach

A ruling by federal regulators has put a damper on plans to turn 300 miles of rail line from Humboldt County to Marin County into the Great Redwood Trail. The Surface Transportation Board issued a decision Tuesday that it will not prioritize trail use and, in so doing, cast aside the established process for considering offers from the North Coast Railroad Co. and the Mendocino Railway to acquire or subsidize rail service along either the entire corridor or a stretch of the line. The ruling …  Continue Reading


May 20, 2022

Congressional progressives warn Biden, EU natural gas reliance may hurt climate goals

by Zack Budryk

Twenty-two congressional Democrats on Thursday urged caution over the European Union’s plan to replace fossil fuel imports from Russia with liquefied natural gas (LNG) infrastructure.  In a letter to President Biden and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, the members warned that the transition must incorporate the goals of the Paris Climate Agreement. The letter came shortly after the EU announced a plan to replace the energy that it would …  Continue Reading


May 20, 2022

House Democrats seek crackdown on microplastics

by E.A. CRUNDEN

House Democrats want to crack down on small plastic pellets that have grown notorious for their links to environmental contamination. Rep. Alan Lowenthal (D-Calif.) unveiled legislation yesterday targeting the discharge of the pellets, often called "nurdles," into the environment. The "Plastic Pellet Free Waters Act" would direct EPA to draft regulations prohibiting the discharge of that material into vulnerable water systems. "For too long, the plastics industry has been allowed …  Continue Reading


May 20, 2022

Progressives warn Europe against rush to LNG reliance

by Jeremy Dillon

Democratic lawmakers raised alarms yesterday about the climate consequences of the rush to replace Russian energy in Europe with liquefied natural gas. The warning from both Senate and House Democrats comes as the European Union released a sweeping plan earlier this week to end imports of fossil fuels from Russia and rapidly scale up its use of renewable power. That plan acknowledges a need to import gas from other sources. In a letter sent to the White House and E.U. leadership, …  Continue Reading


May 16, 2022

Rep. Jared Huffman reveals 2022 Congressional Art Competition winners and finalists

by Sergio Berrueta

WASHINGTON D.C. — Congressman Jared Huffman announced Zexuan Wu of San Anselmo as the winner of the 2022 Congressional Art Competition, "An Artistic Discovery," for California's Second District. Wu's piece titled "We are the Keeper of Tomorrow" will hang in the U. S Capitol for one year along with other art pieces from each congressional district across the country. “Every year, the Congressional Art Competition serves as a testament to our students’ creative …  Continue Reading

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