Florida Lawmakers Want Greenhouse Gas Emissions To Be Regulated wlrn.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wlrn.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
TRENTON New Jersey may create a task force to come up with ways to control species that don t belong here, such as the spotted lanternfly and exotic ticks, and develop plans to restore some of the damage they ve already done in the Garden State.
Approved by an Assembly panel on Monday is a proposed law that would create a five-member Invasive Species Task Force, putting together minds from the Department of Environmental Protection, the Department of Agriculture, the Department of Health, the State Forester, and Rutgers University. New Jersey is particularly susceptible to invasive species because of our proximity to New York City and Philadelphia, said Assemblyman Eric Houghtaling, D-Monmouth, a primary sponsor of the measure and chair of the Agriculture Committee.
HUNTINGTON â A new elementary school will be built on a property that has been without a tenant for decades.
During their regular meeting Tuesday, Cabell County Board of Education members voted to give authorization to Superintendent Ryan Saxe to move forward with the necessary actions to acquire the former Barboursville Brick Co. property near Riverview Drive, where they plan to build the new Davis Creek Elementary School.
The current Davis Creek Elementary is located just outside of Barboursville on Alternate W.Va. Route 10.
The decision was met with applause by school staff in attendance and some even got a little emotional after the vote, visibly expressing their thanks to board members for the decision.
Falcon Pipeline, which provides natural gas to Shell cracker plant, under investigation for possible corrosion pghcitypaper.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from pghcitypaper.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Monmouth solar project planned on 55 acres gets OK from Planning Board
Two days after a moratorium that would have halted the project was defeated, the project planned on Ridge Road received board approval with draft conditions.
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MONMOUTH Just two days after the proposed Longroad Development Co. solar project on Ridge Road survived a vote on a proposed moratorium that would have stopped it, the 55-acre project got Planning Board approval.
Planning Board chairperson Steve O’Donnell said Monday that the project got approval on March 11, and no members of the public spoke in opposition to the project.
The Boston-based renewable energy development firm will place about 36 acres of solar equipment, including 8-foot-high panels, on 55 acres of leased land at 483 Ridge Road. The project aims to produce 4.95 megawatts of power exclusively for Bath Iron Works.