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Ballot dropbox ban a barrier in SD primary; former President Donald Trump says jail threat won't stop him from violating gag order; EBT 'skimming' on the rise, more Ohioans turn to food banks; new maps show progress on NY lead service line replacement.

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Hamas accepts a ceasefire deal amid warnings of a ground attack on Rafah by Israel, some faculty members defend protesters as colleges cancel graduation ceremonies, and Bernie Sanders announces his re-election run.

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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.

Chemical Dangers May Face Wisconsin's First Responders

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Monday, April 27, 2015   

MADISON, Wis. - Wisconsin is fourth-highest on a list of six Midwest states which have storage and manufacturing facilities that have or use at least one of nine dangerous chemicals; chemicals which are not included in risk management reports filed with the Environmental Protection Agency. More than 200 such companies are located in the Badger state, according to a new report from the Center for Effective Government.

Sean Moulton, director of Open Government Policy with the Center for Effective Government, says critical data regarding the chemicals is not available in a central database. He says it's important to be able to get all the data in one place.

"Not just the general public, which honestly if you live near these facilities you should be able to know very easily what risks you face, but especially someone like first responders," says Moulton. "There should be a single place they can go and get this information because they have to know what the best approach is when there's a fire or when there's a chemical release."

Moulton says public leaders have called for stronger protection against hazardous chemicals in the past two years, but little actual policy action has been taken.

Two years ago this month a huge explosion at a fertilizer facility in Texas killed 15 people and injured more than 160 others. Moulton says a big part of the problem was that first responders didn't know how much ammonium nitrate was being stored at the site.

"The general principle for firefighters would have been to contain the blast, to stay back, to contain the fire, but not to get in too close because of the risk of explosion and clearly the firefighters didn't understand that possibility because they moved in very close," he says. "They didn't think there was an explosive risk, and the majority of people who were killed when that facility exploded were firefighters."

The report recommends that all highly hazardous chemicals and data about them, no matter where they are stored or used, should be made available in one place online.


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