Wednesday, 22 April 2009

In Passing

I did my part. I stopped my subscription.


The Indianapolis Star boosts economic stagnation, more state government spending, expensive and unreliable energy:

INDIANA'S TOP THREE ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES[1]
  1. DWINDLING OPEN SPACE, HABITATS
    Indiana's 4 percent of publicly owned land is among the lowest in the country.  He includes opposition to the I-69 expansion in this category, not because he’s against roads but because of what he says is the potential to destroy 2,000 acres of forest.
  2. TOXIC EMISSIONS
    Indiana is third in the nation in toxic emissions, including coal ash and mercury, according to EPA data for 2007.[2]
  3. CARBON FOOTPRINT
    Kharbanda rejects the idea of “clean coal” technology, calling it cleaner coal, and says the costs are “dramatically understated.”  He thinks priority should go to alternative energy sources, such as wind and solar.[3]


(Some previous Gannett-age here, here, here, and here.  Not to mention here.)

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[1]  The source is Jesse Kharbanda, director of the Hoosier Environmental Council.  This is noted on the front page sidebar, but not on the paper’s website.

[2]  Not surprising for a state that gets most of its electricity (a lot of which gets sent eastward) from coal, and had its last nuclear plant halted mid-construction by environmentalists.

[3]  Which works really well on those long, dark, midwinter nights.

(Star front page image via newseum.org.)

Posted by: Old Grouch in In Passing at 16:18:25 GMT | Comments (1) | Add Comment
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1 You're behind times. I canceled my subscription to the Kansas City "Red" Star years ago. Welcome to the ranks of those watching the extinction of the print media dinosaur.

I've no complaints.

Posted by: Crucis at 04/22/09 17:42:05 (rt5ZX)

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