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Help Raise the Voice for Sea Turtles
Written by Julee Felinski   
Tuesday, 07 September 2010

On Sept. 13th, the U.S. government will close the period for public comments on whether they should reclassify the loggerhead sea turtle on the Federal Endangered Species List to guarantee them stronger protections than they currently receive.

You can make the difference for loggerhead sea turtles by joining in the chorus of support for our nation's most well known sea turtle species.

Loggerhead sea turtles are the most abundant of the sea turtle species that reside in U.S. waters, but for decades they have been at risk from loss of nesting habitat, degradation of their marine habitats, and entanglement in fishing gear.

Now they also face the added struggle of waters polluted by millions of gallons of oil from the BP oil disaster.

Speak up today -- your voice can help achieve the goal of generating 20,000 messages nationwide in support of stronger protections for this species.

Loggerhead sea turtles are in dire need of stronger protections and your voice is needed to make the overwhelming public concern for this species clear to our public officials.

The deadline for action is fast approaching -- please help keep up the pressure to get loggerhead sea turtles the stronger protections they deserve.

Thanks for all that you do to protect wildlife!

Sincerely,

Sue Brown
Executive Director, National Wildlife Federation Action Fund
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Twitter: @wildlifeaction
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 07 September 2010 )
 
No Free Pass for Global Warming Polluters!
Written by Julee Felinski   
Tuesday, 07 September 2010

What's it going to take for the U.S. Senate to push for solutions to global warming -- instead of trying to make the problem even worse?

So far, 2010 is on track to be one of the hottest years ever recorded. And what's the U.S. Senate doing about it? Nothing -- they left Washington for their summer recess without even voting on a global warming and clean energy bill.

Having blocked progress, now the big polluters and their lobbyists are at it again, trying to take the country backward in the fight against global warming. West Virginia Sen. Jay Rockefeller introduced the "Dirty Air Act," which would give coal-fired power plants, America's biggest global warming offenders, a free pass to keep polluting.

Enough is enough. We need our senators to hold polluters accountable and fight global warming by rejecting the Dirty Air Act. Click here to sign our petition today.

With your help, we've made some real progress cleaning up cars and winning state limits on global warming pollution. But coal-fired power plants are America's largest single source of global warming pollution. If Congress allows them to keep polluting, it will cancel out all of the progress we've made to cut global warming pollution elsewhere. This is a fight we simply cannot afford to lose.

We're working with a broad coalition of groups across the country to collect hundreds of thousands of petition signatures to our senators, urging them to hold polluters accountable by rejecting the Dirty Air Act and any other bills which roll back clean air laws. Please add your voice to this effort by clicking the link below to sign the petition today.

http://www.environmentflorida.org/action/global-warming/dirty-air-act?id4=ES

Sincerely,

Adam Rivera
Environment Florida Field Organizer
http://www.environmentflorida.org
 

 
4 Months Since Gulf Oil Explosion
Written by Julee Felinski   
Saturday, 21 August 2010

August 20, 2010 from the Center for Biological Diversity

Today marks four months since BP's negligence and lack of government oversight caused the Deepwater Horizon offshore drilling rig to explode, sending over 200 million gallons of oil in to the Gulf of Mexico.

To assess how much damage was done, we just spent this week walking the Gulf's beaches, boating through its marshes, and flying over its open water.

What we saw firsthand was horrific.

Beaches are covered in oil; pools of liquid oil ooze on the surface and oil mixed with sand is hardened into mats along the water's edge. On Grand Isle, just south of New Orleans, some beaches look fine from a distance but are actually sitting atop massive amounts of oil which bubbled to the surface as we walked across the sand. Digging into the sand with rubber gloves, we struck oil just six inches below the clean looking surface.

Crabs and birds continue to be covered in oil as they cross the beaches or land in the marshes. Fish and sea turtles are forced to swim through oil on the surface and below the surface as they look for food. The marshes in Grand Isle smell of oil and an oily sheen covers the earth.

In short, a full four months post-BP explosion, the Gulf of Mexico is still an oily mess
despite rosy assertions by oil companies and the Obama administration that most of the oil is gone. Our survey this week supports the conclusion of independent scientists, who announced findings on Monday that 80% of the oil is still present and continues to foul the beaches, waters, marshes and wildlife of the Gulf of Mexico.

But we also saw something else when we were in the Gulf.

People are stepping up to do their part, and more.

• On Grande Isle, we met a young scientist (and Center supporter) who has collected nearly 5,000 oil-covered hermit crabs, cleaning them off one by one in a make-shift lab and releasing them 15 miles away where the oil hasn't reached yet. (Support her efforts by joining "Hermit Crab Survival Project" on Facebook.)

• In New Orleans, we met a professional photographer visually capturing the oil's effect on the food chain, and a documentary film crew explaining how big oil money has captured local communities, Congress, and even the White House

• On the docks, we met shrimp fishermen getting ready to testify before Congress about how the dispersants sprayed on the BP oil killed off millions of shrimp.

It was humbling to see the impact of the oil spill firsthand, and inspiring to see many people taking action. And, to know that the many late nights our staff has, and will put in are absolutely necessary to protect and recover our Gulf -- and to make sure this never happens again, anywhere.

The Center for Biological Diversity will continue our major response effort by pushing forward with seven lawsuits against BP and the corrupt government regulators who allowed BP and dozens of other oil companies to dangerously drill for oil with no environmental review, lax safety measures and useless clean-up plans.

Your help has been tremendous so far and we hope that you won't let the lessons we need to learn from this oil disaster fade away. Stay motivated: check out the slideshow we put together from the trip, and share this email with your friends.

It's been a long four months, but we're not done yet. The oil's still in our environment and the causes of the explosion still need to be addressed.

Thanks to all of you who have written letters, signed petitions, donated money and gone to the Gulf to help with the clean up. Without you we wouldn't be able to be so effective, and wildlife would be dying in even larger numbers. We'll keep the updates coming.

With thanks and resolve,


Kierán Suckling
Executive Director

Sarah Bergman
Assistant Executive Director

Last Updated ( Saturday, 21 August 2010 )
 
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