The EPA will begin work to remove more than 1 million cubic yards of radioactive waste from sites on the Navajo Nation.
The agency disguises its 11th-hour regulations as ‘waivers.’ Congress shouldn’t fall for it.
Bald eagles were nearly eliminated from much of their native range by the 1960s, but have rebounded. Now, they've been ...
Whether to put fluoride in water was a hot-button issue in the late 90s in Kitsap, a debate raised again by national ...
Officials in Delray Beach are debating whether to remove fluoride from city tap water after health officials came out with ...
ThriveTogether, a team of partners working to develop a sustainability playbook for Greater Cincinnati as part of the United ...
Vehicles of all types have gotten larger and more fuel efficient, but you'll be surprised at the extent these attributes have ...
Michael Montgomery, director of the EPA’s Superfund and Emergency Management Division, told the Board of Supervisors that ...
Uranium mine waste northeast of Gallup is a step closer to being safely stored after the Environmental Protection Agency and Navajo Nation finalized a plan Monday to transport 1 million cubic yards of ...
For example, the first Trump administration tried to use the principles of transparency to prevent federal agencies from ...
U.S. industry is a major source of the greenhouse gas pollution causing climate change. Some operations emit way more than ...
Blue states are bracing for a battle with the Trump administration over their authority to limit tailpipe emissions, a showdown that will have major repercussions on the types of cars and trucks sold ...