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Gator attack, daring plane landing, salmon surging: News from around our 50 states

Gator attack, daring plane landing, salmon surging: News from around our 50 states From USA TODAY Network and wire reports © CATIE WEGMAN/TCPALM A female alligator measuring more than 8-feet long, pictured on top, was captured alive at Halpatiokee Park after it bit a man who fell from his bicycle. Two other gators in the bin were from residential stops trapper John Davidson made before arriving at the park. Alabama Montgomery: Alabama public health officials are warning people to avoid eating any fish from some state waterways because of contamination. The state Department of Public Health issued its latest fish consumption advisories this month. They are based on nearly 500 samples of specific fish species taken during the fall of 2020 from 41 bodies of water, health officials said. Restrictions on consumption are broken down by waterbody and presented as the safe number of meals of a species that can be eaten in a given period of time. In some locations, pe

Oklahoma Sues DOI For Coal Control On Tribal Lands

ADVERTISEMENT Oklahoma Sues DOI For Coal Control On Tribal Lands Law360 (July 19, 2021, 8:23 PM EDT) Oklahoma has hit the U.S. Department of the Interior with claims that the department is threatening the coal industry by illegally taking away the state s authority over coal mining on Muscogee (Creek) Nation lands, teeing up a major test of how the Supreme Court s landmark McGirt decision applies to state regulation. The state and Gov. Kevin Stitt filed a complaint Friday to challenge a May ruling by the DOI s Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement, or OSMRE, which found that Oklahoma couldn t keep jurisdiction over surface coal mining on the Muscogee (Creek) Nation s lands following the U.S. Supreme Court s 2020.

Oklahoma Sues Federal Agency Over Coal Mining Oversight On Tribal Lands

Credit Gov. Kevin Stitt s office OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) Oklahoma is suing the U.S. Department of the Interior over the federal agency’s plan to strip Oklahoma of its jurisdiction to regulate coal mining on tribal reservations, Gov. Kevin Stitt announced Monday. The lawsuit, filed last week in federal court in Oklahoma City, names as defendants U.S. Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland, the Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement and that agency’s acting director, Glenda Owens. The U.S. Department of the Interior notified the state earlier this year it planned to strip Oklahoma of its jurisdiction to regulate surface coal mining within the Muscogee Nation reservation following last year’s U.S. Supreme Court’s McGirt decision, which determined the tribe’s reservation in eastern Oklahoma was never disestablished by Congress.

OKLAHOMA SUES BIDEN ADMINISTRATION: Gov Stitt sues Biden administration, claims federal overreach over mining regulation rights

OKLAHOMA SUES BIDEN ADMINISTRATION: Gov Stitt sues Biden administration, claims federal overreach over mining regulation rights
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