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Alabama faces battle at the ballot box; groups look to federal laws for protection; Israeli Cabinet votes to shut down Al Jazeera in the country; Florida among top states for children losing health coverage post-COVID; despite the increase, SD teacher salary one of the lowest in the country.

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Civil rights groups criticize police actions against student protesters, Republicans accuse Democrats of "buying votes" through student debt relief, and anti-abortion groups plan legal challenges to a Florida ballot referendum.

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Bidding begins soon for Wyoming's elk antlers, Southeastern states gained population in the past year, small rural energy projects are losing out to bigger proposals, and a rural arts cooperative is filling the gap for schools in Pennsylvania and West Virginia.

Climate Bill Action in Congress Today; Americans, New Yorkers Approve

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Monday, May 18, 2009   

Albany, NY – As a House committee is set to begin marking up and debating a milestone climate change and energy bill, New Yorkers are in tune with new nationwide surveys showing strong support for government action reducing carbon emissions, which many scientists believe contribute to global warming. A pair of non-partisan polls, commissioned by the Pew Environment Group, show 77 percent of voters want government action to reduce global warming emissions.

That view is shared by the Adirondack Mountain Club, according to the club's executive director, Neil Woodworth.

"Our members and their friends and neighbors understand the harm that will come to many aspects of the living experience in upstate New York from climate change."

Members of the club, which is dedicated to conserving the state's wild lands and waters, report seeing the effects of global warming, says Woodworth; not only in places like Adirondack State Park, but right in their own backyards, where disease-bearing ticks and poison ivy are moving northward, following warming trends.

“Our snow depths and the number of days with below-zero temperatures have been dramatically reduced from what they were just 15 or 20 years ago."

Phyllis Cuttino, director of the U.S. Global Warming Campaign for the Pew Environment Group, says the surveys found 59 percent of voters believe efforts to tackle global warming will create new American jobs.

“Voters really believe that, if America becomes more dependent on alternative sources of energy, then jobs and the economy will both do better."

The Adirondack Club's Woodworth says his members agree.

"People in upstate New York understand the benefit to the economy from new renewable energy jobs and they also realize that the drain of dollars to the Mideast for overseas fossil fuel can't be sustained."

The Waxman-Markey bill under consideration in the House today would cap emissions of greenhouse gases by 17 percent below 2005 levels by 2020, and would give away up to 85 percent of the pollution permits in a proposed cap-and-trade program.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce warns the bill's cap-and-trade provisions would add to an "already dizzying array" of existing and proposed regulations.

The national surveys were taken by both a leading Democratic Party polling firm and leading Republican Party pollsters in order to get a bipartisan perspective on the public's opinion. The results can be seen in detail at www.pewtrusts.org/news_room_detail.aspx?id=52044.


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