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Page 28 - பொது சேவை நிறுவனம் ஆஃப் புதியது மெக்ஸிகோ News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Haaland s work on wild horses sets an example

I applaud U.S. Rep. Deb Haaland for taking a stand to protect wild horses and supporting efforts in the U.S. House to humanely manage wild horse populations on the range where they belong. She recently took a stand against the Bureau of Land Management’s plan to conduct brutal surgical sterilization procedures, and she is urging the BLM to utilize a reasonable portion of its budget to implement humane fertility control, the PZP vaccine. PZP is a viable solution and costs only a fraction of what the agency spends on removing and warehousing horses. The Bureau of Land Management must end its failed strategy of removing horses. Terrified horses — including young foals — are chased by helicopters and often killed or severely injured. Just this month, a horse suffered a broken neck during a roundup in Utah. Removing and warehousing horses in corrals leads to an increase in population growth and is projected to cost over a billion dollars if the agency continues on this pat

Ethics panel files lawsuit seeking disclosure of group s donors

Copyright © 2020 Albuquerque Journal SANTA FE – The New Mexico Ethics Commission on Friday filed a lawsuit aimed at forcing a group that spent more than $130,000 on political advertisements in hotly-contested Democratic legislative primary election races to disclose its donors. The lawsuit – the first of its kind filed by the Ethics Commission since its creation this year – could be a test case for a law amended in 2019 that requires more “dark money” disclosure for election-related expenditures. Jeremy Farris, the Ethics Commission’s executive director, said Friday the lawsuit was filed in state District Court after the Council for a Competitive New Mexico refused to comply with a demand letter sent by the commission a day earlier.

Salt River Project increases share in nuclear plant to meet growing demand : Corporate

10 December 2020 Share Community-based, not-for-profit Arizona public power utility Salt River Project (SRP) says it is increasing its share of the Palo Verde Nuclear Generating Station - from 17.5% to 20% - to meet growing customer demand while reducing its overall carbon intensity and protecting it from price spikes. Palo Verde (Image: APS) SRP s board of directors has approved the purchase of a portion of Public Service Company of New Mexico s (PNM) share of the three-unit plant, west of Phoenix, Arizona, and certain transmission assets for about USD70 million plus the cost of the associated nuclear fuel inventory. The purchase of 114 megawatts of safe, reliable and zero-carbon emitting energy from PNM in 2023-24 will help SRP meet customer demand that is growing significantly faster than the national average and defer planned capital expenditures associated with the construction of potential new generating assets. The purchase price represents an attractive economic opportu

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