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Trump delivers profanity, below-the-belt digs at Catholic charity banquet; Poll finds Harris leads among Black voters in key states; Puerto Rican parish leverages solar power to build climate resilience hub; TN expands SNAP assistance to residents post-Helene; New report offers solutions for CT's 'disconnected' youth.

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Longtime GOP members are supporting Kamala Harris over Donald Trump. Israel has killed the top Hamas leader in Gaza. And farmers debate how the election could impact agriculture.

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New rural hospitals are becoming a reality in Wyoming and Kansas, a person who once served time in San Quentin has launched a media project at California prisons, and a Colorado church is having a 'Rocky Mountain High.'

Environmentalists: Climate Depends on Filled U.S. Supreme Court Seat

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Friday, April 22, 2016   

RALEIGH, N. C. – As Earth Day events are held throughout North Carolina today, residents concerned about the effects of climate change and passionate about clean energy are calling on the U.S. Senate to do its job.

Specifically, they're asking Republican senators to move forward with hearings and an up-or-down vote on Judge Merrick Garland's nomination to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Both of North Carolina's U.S. Senators, Richard Burr and Thom Tillis, are among those who say President Obama's successor should make the appointment. But Zack Davis, a spokesman for NextGen Climate – a part of today's Earth Day efforts – explains why the time to act is now.

"We need a full nine justices on the bench, because we need to continue to build off the progress that we've made so far with clean-energy legislation, clean-energy policy," says Davis.

What's at stake, he says, is the president's Clean Power Plan. In February, the Supreme Court issued a temporary stay of the plan, thereby preventing the United States from carrying out promises made at the global climate summit in Paris.

Legal experts predict that with the current eight-member high court bench, there isn't enough support to uphold executive efforts to alleviate the country's impact on global warming.

According to Davis, he and others feel that Senate members refusing to fill the vacant seat left by the death of Justice Antonin Scalia are preventing progress – and furthering harm to the planet.

"The future of clean energy and the future of the Clean Power Plan and good climate policy moving forward is going to be impacted by decisions made at the Supreme Court," Davis says. "We're just extremely disappointed to see Senate Republicans refuse to not only hold a hearing but really, just refusing to do what is a required part of their job."

At the time of Scalia's death, there were 10 months left in Obama's presidency. Historically, the Senate has never taken more than 125 days to vote on a successor from the time of nomination. And a few presidents, including Republicans, have filled Supreme Court vacancies that were announced in their final year in office.



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