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Mon, 12/21/2020 - 3:57pm tim
Statement of Senate Appropriations Committee Vice Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont) On the FY 2021 Omnibus Appropriation Bills and COVID Relief Package
December 21, 2020
After months of delay and painstaking negotiation, this afternoon we will have before us a spending package that includes all 12 appropriations bills for fiscal year 2021, and a vitally important COVID relief package. It provides funding for programs that are critically important to the American people, and I urge its swift passage. We are already 2 months and 20 days into the fiscal year. We cannot delay further.
As Vice Chairman of the Appropriations Committee, I worked hard to reach agreement on this omnibus appropriations bill that will fund the federal government through the remainder of the fiscal year, without relying on a long-term continuing resolution. This was no easy task.
North Dakota Residents Fight Loopholes Allowing Fracking to Poison Their Water
North Dakotaâs water supplies are at risk from contaminants from fracking wastewater, but residents are fighting back.
William Campbell / Corbis via Getty Images
By
Lisa Finley-DeVille started drinking bottled water around the same time her friendâs horses began to get sick and die. A half decade ago on the Fort Berthold Reservation in western North Dakota, Deville drove up to see her friend in the New Town area. The horses looked dehydrated and brittle, just skin and bones. Theyâre eating, but itâs like theyâre not eating, her friend told her.
Texas Water Development Board receives over $3 3 million to help improve drinking water | U S EPA News Releases epa.gov - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from epa.gov Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Friday, December 18, 2020
With just over thirty days until President-Elect Joe Biden and Vice President-Elect Kamala Harris are sworn into office, the Biden-Harris team continues to work on the many aspects of transition to ensure that change can commence immediately after swearing in. While the United States and other countries wait to see the areas that will remain the focus of the Biden-Harris leadership, there is little question that one of the top campaigning issues – the environment – will remain a key focal point of the administration’s efforts in the next four years.
While there are hundreds of ways that environmental policies will likely change in the next four years, this second article in a three-part series (our first article focused on climate change) takes a deeper dive into how the administration will change the PFAS landscape and, in doing so, will significantly impact many environmental and compliance issues for businesses. These impacts will be fe