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Morrisey leads 19-state petition urging Supreme Court to limit EPA authority

CHARLESTON West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey is leading a 19-state coalition in asking the U.S. Supreme Court to take action to stop an appeals court ruling that would give the Environmental Protection Agency what he calls virtually unlimited authority to regulate wide swaths of everyday life with rules that would devastate coal mining, increase energy costs and eliminate countless jobs. The coalition filed a petition April 29 arguing that a ruling from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit violates the constitutional separation of powers. It contends the lower court inappropriately interpreted Section 111 of the Clean Air Act as authorizing EPA to sidestep Congress to exercise broad regulatory power that would radically transform the nation’s energy grid and force states to fundamentally shift their energy portfolios away from coal-fired generation.

Morrisey: W Va being shortchanged by Purdue Pharma | News, Sports, Jobs

Morrisey Purdue Pharma released its “Denver Plan” how it will distribute $7 billion in opioid lawsuit settlement money following West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey’s objection Friday to the pharmaceutical company keeping that plan out of the public view. With that plan’s release, Morrisey voiced his displeasure with how the plan doles out that money among the states, a format he believes shortchanges West Virginia Purdue’s distribution plan is based on a state or local government’s population, not the intensity of the opioid crisis in that state or municipality. According to the state attorney general’s website, West Virginia has one of the highest rates in the country of non-medical use of opioid pain medication among people ages 19-25.

Pushing back on Biden s energy plan | News, Sports, Jobs

Apr 28, 2021 It must have been quite a victory for President Joe Biden to receive the backing of the United Mine Workers in his plan to move away from coal and other fossil fuels in exchange for a “true energy transition.” Biden claims that transition will include thousands of jobs in renewable energy and spending on technology to make coal cleaner. In fact, there is a lot that sounds promising in Biden’s adjusted approach to helping those who would lose their livelihoods if the administration’s goals are achieved. Rather than simply damage those workers, families and communities and then abandon them, a recent report says “President Biden is committed to providing federal leadership in partnership with coal, oil and gas, and power plant communities to create good-paying union jobs, spur economic revitalization, remediate environmental degradation, and support energy workers.”

Not So Fast | News, Sports, Jobs - The Intermountain

Apr 28, 2021 It must have been quite a victory for President Joe Biden to receive the backing of the United Mine Workers in his plan to move away from coal and other fossil fuels in exchange for a “true energy transition.” Biden claims that transition will include thousands of jobs in renewable energy and spending on technology to make coal cleaner. In fact, there is a lot that sounds promising in Biden’s adjusted approach to helping those who would lose their livelihoods if the administration’s goals are achieved. Rather than simply damage those workers, families and communities and then abandon them, a recent report says “President Biden is committed to providing federal leadership in partnership with coal, oil and gas, and power plant communities to create good-paying union jobs, spur economic revitalization, remediate environmental degradation, and support energy workers.”

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