Water Contamination On Military Bases Isn’t New. And That’s A Problem
By Anita Hofschneider
Honolulu Civil Beat
December 3, 2021
Dee Ann Koanui’s memories of the three years she spent as a child living on Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune in North Carolina are a glorious stream of outdoor adventures.
She and her four siblings spent their days climbing trees and watching alligators at a nearby river, only returning to their four-bedroom home at the end of a cul-de-sac when night fell and the streetlights flickered on.
But Koanui’s rosy recollections were dampened when years later, in her 30s, she learned that Camp Lejeune had been the site of contaminated drinking water for decades, in part due to carcinogenic chemicals used for dry-cleaning services.
Bernalillo County Planning Commission Defers Santolina Another 90 Days
December 2, 2021 Albuquerque, NM — The Bernalillo County Planning Commission (CPC) on December 1st voted to defer for 90 days its consideration of the Amended Level A Master Plan and the Level B.II Master Plan for the long-proposed but never built Santolina...New Mexico lawmakers endorse ‘environmental rights’ bill ahead of 2022 Legislative Session
By Adrian Hedden
Carlsbad Current-Argus
November 26, 2021
A group of New Mexico lawmakers endorsed a resolution that would codify into the State’s Constitution the public’s right to a “healthy environment,” citing ongoing concerns for pollution and climate change.
Known as the “Green Amendment,” the legislation was introduced during the previous 2021 Legislative Session, receiving a “do pass” vote from the Senate Rules Committee but stalled in the Senate Judiciary Committee.
It would place into the State’s Bill of Rights language to declare a healthy environment a right of all New Mexicans.
During a recent meeting of the interim Radioactive and Hazardous Materials Committee, lawmakers from both the House and Senate voted in favor of the resolution on a 6-1 vote.
New Mexico Regulators Approve Shaft at Nuclear Waste Dump
By Associated Press
U.S. News
November 4, 2021
State environmental regulators have cleared the way for work to continue on a multimillion-dollar project at the federal government’s underground nuclear waste repository in southern New Mexico.
CARLSBAD, N.M. (AP) — State environmental regulators have cleared the way for work to continue on a multimillion-dollar ventilation shaft at the federal government’s underground nuclear waste repository in southern New Mexico.
Ventilation has been an issue since 2014, when a radiation release contaminated parts of the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant and forced an expensive, nearly three-year closure, delayed the federal government’s cleanup program and prompted policy changes at national laboratories and defense-related sites across the U.S…
Heinrich, Lujan look to support ‘clean’ hydrogen through package of U.S. Senate bills
By Adrian Hedden
Carlsbad Current-Argus
November 4, 2021
New Mexico leaders hope state can be leader in emerging fuel source
New Mexico’s two Democrat U.S. Sens. Martin Heinrich and Ben Ray Lujan continued their pursuit of hydrogen to curb carbon emissions from energy generation, joining in the introduction of a package of bills to support the implementation of hydrogen power in the U.S.
The three bills would create grant funding for hydrogen power projects throughout the U.S. to support development of technology to generate “clean” hydrogen, needed infrastructure and research…