A national consensus on WASA newsday.co.tt - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from newsday.co.tt Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
outlookindia.com 2021-03-12T15:58:49+05:30
The butler did it and the doodhwala was an eager accomplice but like a cheap Byomkesh clone sold on Howrah sidewalks, the devil was in the telling. The unfolding of a befuddling Bengalee murder mystery when the thievish fox walked into the snare for the wolf. All along, the choice of poison was arsenic, less than one-eighth of a teaspoon of which can kill a healthy adult. Ingesting the toxin in small quantities for a prolonged period causes arsenicosis, cancer. Kills slowly, leads to horrible death. And arsenic has been a silent killer prowling Bengal, like the sneaky butler of detective pulp. That’s no fiction, but a grim fact that a group of researchers at Jadavpur University went after. And so it happened: the study on groundwater arsenic contaminating groceries and dairy in West Bengal upheld the obvious fear (that our food is laced with the toxin) and also confirmed a long-held doubt that the milkman is bilking the folks b
EPA slaps state with big fine for operating banned cesspools on Kauai Kauai, Hawaii (Source: Hawaii News Now Graphic Library) By HNN Staff | March 4, 2021 at 9:12 PM HST - Updated March 4 at 9:54 PM
HONOLULU, Hawaii (HawaiiNewsNow) - The state Department of Land and Natural Resources has been fined nearly $222,000 for operating seven large-capacity cesspools on Kauai.
The EPA banned this type of cesspool in 2005 because it can pollute water resources and violates the Safe Drinking Water Act.
The cesspools are located at Camp Hale Koa, the Waineke Cabins and at a commercial property on Kukui street in Kapaa.
The EPA has previously taken action against the DLNR, collecting over $407,000 in fines and closing 74 cesspools.
Winnipeg Free Press By: Joseph Quesnel Save to Read Later
CANADA and its Indigenous communities should finally commit this year to making the systemic reforms needed to ensure First Nations drinking water standards are the same as the rest of the country.
Opinion
CANADA and its Indigenous communities should finally commit this year to making the systemic reforms needed to ensure First Nations drinking water standards are the same as the rest of the country.
For starters, Indigenous communities ought to experiment with more regional water authority agreements to deliver safe drinking water.
In late 2020, Indigenous Services Canada signed agreements with Atlantic First Nations communities to create a utility to oversee drinking water and wastewater systems for 15 Indigenous communities across the region. This includes a financial commitment for staff training and capacity building.
Pubic Notices - March 3, 2021 ashleycountyledger.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from ashleycountyledger.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.