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Trump touts immigration crackdown despite concerns about due process; NY faces potential impacts from federal vote on emissions standards; ND Tribes can elevate tourism game with new grants; WA youth support money for Medicaid, not war.

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Major shifts in environmental protections, immigration enforcement, civil rights as Trump administration reshapes government priorities. Rural residents and advocates for LGBTQ youth say they're worried about losing services.

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Migration to rural America increased for the fourth year, technological gaps handicap rural hospitals and erode patient care, and doctors are needed to keep the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians healthy and align with spiritual principles.

As CA Faces Massive Snowmelt, Experts Call for Better Flood Management

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Tuesday, June 20, 2023   

Snowmelt from this winter's heavy storms threatens significant flooding - and conservation groups are calling for large-scale restoration of wetlands to help absorb excess water. In April, the Biden administration recommended more than $60-million go to projects in Northern California.

Janelle Kellman, founder of the nonprofit Center for Sea Rise Solutions, said the escalating climate crisis with its weather whiplash poses a serious threat.

"This funding could serve as a critical resource, enabling communities to construct resilient infrastructure that will safeguard today against rising sea levels, but also in the future around the increased storm intensity that we are now experiencing," she said.

It's estimated that 90% of the state's wetlands have been lost - but efforts are underway to restore them, both along the coast and in traditional floodplains, like seasonally wet meadows in the Sierra foothills. Experts suggest, for example, that land managers could allow streams to flow in a braided fashion across meadows rather than channeling them into one place to facilitate grazing.

Conservation advocates also want the state to focus on recharging aquifers - instead of funneling floodwaters to the sea.

Letitia Grenier, senior scientist and resilient landscapes program director with the San Francisco Estuary Institute, said the state needs to take its cues from nature, and take a proactive approach - rather than reacting to extreme weather.

"The state needs to work with nature to restore the kinds of wetlands and floodplains within watersheds that can help people with flooding, that can help us with water supply and water quality, that can bring back places for wildlife to thrive and give us access to nature and the well-being that comes with that," she contended.

Some state projects in the works include efforts to reintroduce beavers so their natural dams can divert water toward riverbank floodplains.

Support for this reporting was provided by The Pew Charitable Trusts.


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