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Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland was in Cincinnati Wednesday to announce federal funds to help clean up some of the thousands of abandoned mines in Ohio.
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Having too many deer can cause problems with forest regeneration and make it easier for invasive plant species to take hold.
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Because of a state law passed three years ago and the result of a recent U.S. Supreme Court case, few wetlands in Indiana are protected today.
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Fifteen out of the country's more than 3,000 counties fail to meet the EPA's current standards. Violators are concentrated in California, Ohio, and Pennsylvania — places with lots of industrial activity, fossil fuel burning, and agriculture. The new regulations could save thousands of lives from deadly air pollution, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's calculations.
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Hamilton County ReSource is working with local companies and nonprofits to help them figure out how much waste they generate and then reduce it.
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The new rules would also apply to parts of Over-the-Rhine, Mount Adams, East End, West End, Pendleton and Mount Auburn.
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Kentucky and Ohio transportation officials will hold hearings next month to gather public input about the reports.
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Cleanup efforts are still underway in Sulphur Run and Leslie Run in East Palestine nearly a year after a Norfolk Southern train derailed in the village. But Ohio EPA officials say progress is being made at restoring water quality and aquatic life.
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A state Senate bill would establish a hunting and trapping season for bobcats in Indiana by July of next year. This isn't the first time lawmakers have tried to make taking bobcats legal — and it's still a divisive topic.
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"It's like a graduating class that has a reunion every 17 or 13 years," says Gene Kritsky, professor emeritus of biology at Mount St. Joseph University and author of 'A Tale of Two Broods: The 2024 Emergence of Periodical Cicada Broods XIII and XIX.'