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Hurricane Helene charges toward Florida's Gulf Coast, expected to strike late today as a dangerous storm; Millions of Illinois' convenient voting method gains popularity; House task force holds first hearing today to investigate near assassination of Donald Trump in Pennsylvania; New report finds Muslim students in New York face high levels of discrimination in school.

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Biden says all-out-war is threatening in the Middle East, as tensions rise. Congress averts a government shutdown, sending stopgap funding to the president's desk and an election expert calls Georgia's latest election rule a really bad idea.

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The presidential election is imminent and young rural voters say they still feel ignored, it's leaf peeping season in New England but some fear climate change could mute fall colors, and Minnesota's mental health advocates want more options for troubled youth.

National Survey Shows Strong Support for Limits on Carbon Pollution

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Monday, February 17, 2014   

YANKTON, S.D. - There's majority support for moving the country "entirely away from coal," according to a new nationwide survey commissioned by the Sierra Club. The poll finds that 57 percent of those questioned support the idea.

According to Mary Anne Hitt, who heads the Sierra Club's Beyond Coal campaign, the poll results show clear support for non-fossil-fuel power.

"These results serve as a strong reminder that when we make choices about which path we're going to take, the voices of American families are loud and clear," Hitt said. "They want clean energy and they want it right away."

The poll found that more than three of every five Americans support investing in clean energy sources and energy efficiency instead of the traditional fuels, coal, oil and gas (61 percent for clean energy to 33 percent for traditional sources).

The Sierra Club's Alex DeSha, a member from Whitesburg, said coal is "no longer cheap." He sees the EPA's push for stricter rules on carbon emissions as a chance to broaden the country's energy mix.

"We've seen the coal industry lose its competitive edge to other resources. Investing in renewable energy and energy efficiency is the direction the nation as a whole is going," he said. "I look at the carbon rules as an opportunity for us to be innovative."

While many political leaders are criticizing the EPA's actions, pollster Andrew Baumann, vice president, Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research, said the federal agency received "very solid ratings" from the cross-section of Americans surveyed.

"So, you know, the EPA, unlike some would have you believe, is not at all the bogeyman," Baumann declared. "It's actually quite popular and trusted."

The poll found that 44 percent of those questioned had a favorable opinion of the EPA, compared with 27 percent unfavorable. A coal industry supporter from Kentucky, Bill Bissett, claims the survey comes from an "anti-coal polling firm" and that it is a "rallying call" for the industry to do a better job communicating.

Link to poll results at SierraClub.org.




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