Blog posts from around the country
San Gorgonio Chapter
Air Quality in ourSmoggy Summer Inland ValleyPresented by Dr. Sunni Ivey, UCRSep 3, 2019, 7:30pmSan Bernardino County Museum, 2014 Orange Tree Lane, Redlands Summers in our Inland Valleys often come with triple digit temperatures. As…
North Carolina Chapter
Good news on environmental bills this week! The House amended the controversial Duke Energy multi-year rate-setting bill, removing its most contentious parts and instead calling for a study of various rate-setting changes. And the billboard bill got…
Alabama Chapter
Continuing the momentum and building on last year's event, we chose the date of Friday, September 20th, for Rise for Climate Mobile Bay to avoid an Alabama football Saturday and because September 20th coincides with the United Nations Climate Action…
Alabama Chapter
SOUTHERN EXPOSURE is a film fellowship program that is actively raising awareness about Alabama’s incredible natural resources and important environmental issues that impact all of us. This innovative summer fellowship brings emerging filmmakers…
Grand Canyon Chapter
TUCSON, Ariz.— Conservation groups condemned the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service today for the agency’s blanket authorization — which it is not making public, but which conservationists have uncovered — to trap or kill an imperiled Mexican wolf in…
Houston Group / Lone Star Chapter / Texas
Update on Harris County Precinct 2 Flood Control Projects was cancelled. The program for September 18 is Life in Outdoor Space with speaker Dr. Matthew Strausser...
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Angeles Chapter
Our homes should be a place where we can seek comfort and security, but with the rise of harmful chemicals, such as PFAS and other related contaminants appearing in our water and household products, it can be difficult to rest
Angeles Chapter
The Sierra Club Angeles Chapter presented the 2019 Extraordinary Environmental Leadership Awards to a selected group of public officials dedicated to preserving and protecting the environment.
Lone Star Chapter
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) proposed to abandon its determination that three areas around the largest and dirtiest coal plants in Texas--Luminant’s Martin Lake, Big Brown, and Monticello plants--are failing to meet the public health…