In God We Trust - Established 2008
(606) 638-0123606-624-9019 markgrayson@me.com
In God We Trust - Established 2008
  • News
    • Regional News
    • Announcements
    • Recollections
  • Sports News
    • Big Sandy Sportsman
  • Lifestyles
  • Courthouse
  • Obituaries
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Regional News
    • Announcements
    • Recollections
  • Sports News
    • Big Sandy Sportsman
  • Lifestyles
  • Courthouse
  • Obituaries
No Result
View All Result
TheLevisaLazer.com
No Result
View All Result
Advertisement
LADY BULLDOGS LOOK TO PICK UP THE PACE THIS SEASON; OPENER NEXT TUESDAY POPULAR 19 YEAR-OLD WOMAN FROM KERMIT AREA DIES IN CRASH WITH COAL TRUCK Lawrence Co. Cheer headed to Disney in February; 15th Region Runner-Up PAIR OF LCHS STUDENTS CHOSEN FOR ALL-STATE CHOIR Lawrence Co. local government offices will be **closed** on Thursday and Friday
Three Rivers HH digital ad-AAd-bannerfuneral1leader1joe_young_banneer
Levisa-Lazer-Banner-Ad-copyFoothills-Bundle
Home Content Editorials/Letters

EPA chief: Coal communities in danger of being left behind, with or without clean power regulations

Admin by Admin
May 9, 2016
in Editorials/Letters
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

EPA chief Gina McCarthyEnvironmental Protection Agency chief Gina McCarthy (Getty Images photo) said coal-dependent communities are “at risk of being ‘left behind’ as the country moves away from coal power,” Timothy Cama reports for The Hill.

McCarthy, who was participating in a discussion on Friday with science educator Bill Nye, also said that the move away from coal, which she said would happen even without President Obama’s clean power regulations, “is causing a net increase in jobs.” She told Nye, “On the whole, what’s happened is jobs continue to grow. What happens, though, is some communities may get left behind.”

Nye asked McCarthy about the decline of coal in West Virginia and Kentucky, where presidential candidates have been stumping in advance of Tuesday’s primary in the Mountain State and the May 17 primary in the Bluegrass State, Cama writes.

McCarthy said “recognizing the harm to coal communities does not mean that the country should abandon efforts to cut greenhouse gas emissions or other harmful effects from coal.” She told Nye, “You don’t change the entire dynamics of the economics for those communities or deny they exist. You invest in those communities so they continue to have opportunities moving forward.”

McCarthy said Obama’s administration will “invest in coal country and help communities adjust to new economic development and educational opportunities, among other measures,” Cama writes. “Lawmakers from both parties, along with the White House, have backed a similar proposal they call the Reclaim Act, which would use abandoned mine fees for coal country transitions. The Supreme Court put the administration’s main rule threatening the coal industry, the Clean Power Plan, on hold in February. Obama pledged last year that the U.S. would cut its greenhouse gas emissions 26 percent to 28 percent by 2025, when compared with 2005 levels.”

McCarthy told Nye, “We have already taken considerable steps. We have planned ahead. And for crying out loud, what we have is a pause in the Clean Power Plan. If anybody knows anything about EPA in writing rules, we rock at it, we do them legally, we do them on the basis of sound science. And while there is a pause, there’s no pause in the action in the United States towards renewable energy and energy efficiency. We are going in exactly the direction our rule demanded, and we’re doing it because the markets demand it. We could not be in better shape than we are today.” 

Written by Tim Mandell Posted at 5/09/2016 11:24:00 AM

ShareTweetPinShareScanSend
Next Post
Carrying Concealed class Saturday May 14 at LC Sheriff’s Office

Carrying Concealed class Saturday May 14 at LC Sheriff's Office

   TheLevisaLazer.Com   
TheLevisaLazer.com

In God We Trust - Established 2008

Follow Us

Quick Links

  • News
  • Lifestyles
  • Stay Ahead with Lazer Sports News
  • Education
  • Obituaries
  • About Us
  • Business & Politics News
  • Addiction & Recovery

Quick Links

  • Courthouse
  • Top Recollections News – The Levisa Lazer
  • Big Sandy Sportsman
  • Lazer ad prices and sizes
  • Editorials
  • Lazer announcments, bids and notices
  • Health News

Recent News

LADY BULLDOGS LOOK TO PICK UP THE PACE THIS SEASON; OPENER NEXT TUESDAY

LADY BULLDOGS LOOK TO PICK UP THE PACE THIS SEASON; OPENER NEXT TUESDAY

November 29, 2024

© 2024 thelevisalazer.com, All Rights Reserved. Designed and Managing by BizNex Web.

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Stay Ahead with Lazer Sports News
  • Lifestyles
  • Courthouse
  • Top Recollections News – The Levisa Lazer
  • Obituaries
  • Regional News
  • Announcements

© 2024 thelevisalazer.com, All Rights Reserved. Designed and Managing by BizNex Web.