Ask your State Senator to support the Maryland Energy Efficiency Act of 2024 so we can lower utility bills and reduce pollution.
Roundup kills indiscriminately, so when it's sprayed in gardens, parks or on farmland, it can wipe out plants we need -- such as milkweed, which monarch butterflies rely on.
The risks aren't worth the reward. Research has shown that glyphosate is dangerous to both monarch butterflies and human health.
I urge you to ban glyphosate-containing Roundup in commercial agriculture use.
Oregon's Rogue River is a special place. The pristine and flowing river is home to Chinook salmon, steelhead, and other fish. It is surrounded by canyons, ridges, and old-growth trees.
Now, we have an opportunity to expand the acreage surrounding the Rogue River that receives permanent, federal protections. Send a message urging your U.S. Senators to support the Oregon Recreation Enhancement Act, which would add 59,000 acres to the wilderness area.
One of the leading threats to wild bees, butterflies, and other important pollinators is habitat loss and degradation. As native vegetation is replaced by buildings, parking lots and roads, pollinators lose the food and nesting sites critical to their survival.
Legislation currently in Congress can make a difference on this issue. Send a message urging your U.S. House representative to support the Building Native Habitats at Federal Facilities Act, which will restore native plants on federal landscapes.
Georgia's Okefenokee Swamp is part of the largest wildlife refuge east of the Mississippi River and home to some of our nation's rarest animals. But plans to develop a titanium mine in its backyard are moving forward. The clock is ticking, and we only have until April 9 to make our voices heard to save this iconic swamp.
Coca-Cola CEO James Quincey,
Coca-Cola has been named the world's top plastic polluter for several years in a row. But it doesn't have to be that way. Your company has already committed to putting a dent in your plastic pollution by committing to selling 25% of your beverages worldwide in refillable containers. Why not here?
I urge Coca-Cola to commit to selling 25% of its products in the United States in refillable containers.
Sincerely,
California state regulators are planning to end new fracking permits, essentially phasing out fracking. But for this plan to become reality, the California Geologic Energy Management Division (CalGEM) needs to hear from you.
Take action today to help phase out destructive, polluting fracking in California.
There are as few as 216 wolves left in Washington state. If this fragile population is going to survive, it needs an "endangered" status, the strongest protection state law can provide.
Hunting, trapping, and poisoning once nearly drove wolves to extinction in Washington state -- and they need all the protection they can get to prevent this tragedy from playing out again. These amazing animals are a vital part of Washington's natural heritage, and wolves are keystone species that promote the health of the ecosystems they call home.
I strongly urge you to protect your state's wolves by retaining their "endangered" status. Washington's wolves deserve to thrive.
Interior Secretary Haaland,
Idaho, Montana and Wyoming are actively slaughtering hundreds of wolves. From burning them alive in their dens to hunting them down from airplanes, almost nothing is off limits this winter.
This is an emergency for wolves.
I'm urging you to restore their Endangered Species Act protections today.
Sincerely,
Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan,
Emissions from burning fossil fuels for energy are driving global climate change with harmful consequences for people and wildlife.
Bank of America can re-establish itself as an industry leader by recommitting to stop financing new coal mines, coal-burning power plants and oil drilling projects in the Arctic. It's the right thing to do for the planet and the prudent thing to do in a global economy threatened by climate change.
I urge Bank of America to stop financing new fossil fuel operations.
Neonicotinoid pesticides, or neonics, poison birds, bees, and more when we use them on our crops -- and every year, over 150 million acres of U.S. farmland are planted with neonic-coated seeds.
Coating seeds with toxic pesticides poses an unacceptable risk to our precious pollinators and other wildlife. Send a message to your state legislators today to support a ban on toxic neonic-coated seeds.
Both sides of Congress are voting this week on a must-pass spending bill -- and some members are trying to use it as cover to push for more wolf hunting.
Rep. Boebert's legislation would erase federal protections for the wolves that are already safe from hunting, and block any efforts to restore those protections for wolves in the Lower 48.
Put simply, that would mean hundreds of wolves dying every year -- especially in the Upper Midwest.
Led by Rep. Lauren Boebert (Colo.), the House already added nationwide wolf hunting to one version of this legislation. We need to stop this effort in its tracks.
Tell your U.S. senators and U.S. House representative: Vote against any efforts to expand wolf hunting or erase Endangered Species Act protections for wolves.
Up to 1 billion birds die by colliding into buildings every single year in the U.S., but this bill will help change that. Urge your U.S. House representative to support the Federal Bird-Safe Building Act, which will require all federal buildings to incorporate bird-safe building materials and design features.
We, the undersigned, urge Costco to eliminate single-use packaging from its stores. Single-use packaging is the largest contributor to the plastic waste crisis. In 2018, 14.5 million tons of plastic containers were generated. Once these plastics are disposed of, they culminate in landfills, contaminate waterways, and threaten wildlife.
It's clear we need a large-scale shift away from single-use plastic packaging, and Costco can play a crucial role. By taking unnecessary plastic packaging off its shelves, your company can both immediately reduce the amount of plastic in our environment and set an important example for others in the industry to follow.
I strongly urge you to abandon proposed plans to draw nearly 1 million gallons of water a day from Ginnie Springs. With the water levels already low, further pumping would threaten both the health of the spring and the wildlife that call it home. It would be a tragedy to sacrifice Ginnie Springs' ecological diversity and natural beauty for bottled water.
Monarch butterfly populations are near record lows. The destruction of their habitat and the milkweed they depend on has sent populations into a tailspin. Latest wintering counts show declines of 59% in eastern monarchs and 30% in western monarchs following an already low winter count from last year.
These butterflies can't afford to wait much longer. They deserve to see their young take flight -- not fight for their survival. The Endangered Species Act has an incredible track record for saving species, and the monarchs are no less worthy than the other saved or protected species.
Please make the right decision for monarchs and prevent another harsh winter by giving them endangered species protections.
Methane is a pollutant that is up to 80 times more potent than carbon dioxide in the short term. It's responsible for about a third of the warming from all greenhouse gasses globally. As our planet's climate continues to shift ever closer to dangerous tipping points, controlling global warming pollution is more important than ever.
I strongly support the proposed rule that will require oil and gas companies to pay a fee for methane emissions over a certain level. Cutting back on methane waste is an important way we can confront the climate crisis.
There are as few as 20 red wolves left in the wild, and all of them live in a small area in North Carolina. Endangered red wolves are often struck and killed by cars on major highways near their remaining habitat.
North Carolina's governor can help protect endangered red wolves from deadly car crashes by creating wildlife crossings on the busy highways by red wolf habitat. Tell Governor Cooper to apply for federal money to build wildlife crossings for endangered red wolves.
The United States government is the biggest purchaser of goods and services in the world, and the world's biggest plastic polluter.
When the government purchases goods for federal buildings and events, it should shift to plastic-free alternatives. Let's make this a requirement and put a serious dent in plastic pollution.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration:
In January, a North Atlantic Right whale calf was struck by a boat and your agency warns it's likely to die as a result of its injuries. As you're aware, boat strikes are a leading cause of mortality among this critically endangered species, and we can't afford to lose any more of them if this species is to survive.
I urge you to enact the strongest possible vessel strike rule as soon as possible to require smaller boats to slow down, as is already required of larger boats, to enforce these speed limits, and to expand seasonal speed limits to cover more of the areas where we know Right whales hang out.
Interior Secretary Haaland,
We, the undersigned, urge you to support restoring Endangered Species Act protections for Florida's manatees. Several thousands of Florida manatees have died in recent years, making it painfully clear that the 2017 decision to downlist the species was premature. Facing such threats as habitat degradation and loss, manatees experienced record losses in 2021 and 2022.
Restoring manatees' endangered status under the Endangered Species Act is critical to protecting the species from extinction. Listing manatees as endangered will lead to critical habitat protections for the species. It will also result in the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service being directed to administer a recovery plan.
Please do all you can to save Florida's manatees.
Sincerely,
From the boreal to the Amazon, we need forests to stay standing for generations to come, but illegal deforestation threatens to level towering jungle giants and destroy many of our planet's oldest trees.
Forests are crucial for a number of ecological, environmental and biodiversity reasons. They even help us combat climate change, as they hold enormous amounts of carbon, safely stored in trunks, branches and soil. Don't let illegal logging cut down these forests.
Tell your U.S. senators to support the FOREST Act and help stop illegal deforestation.
Interior Secretary Haaland,
Idaho, Montana and Wyoming are actively slaughtering hundreds of wolves. From burning them alive in their dens to hunting them down from airplanes, almost nothing is off limits this winter.
This is an emergency for wolves.
I'm urging you to restore their Endangered Species Act protections and end the wolf hunts.
Sincerely,
EPA Administrator Michael Regan,
The pesticide chlorpyrifos poses an unacceptable risk to our families, to our environment and to the pollinators we depend on.
The EPA's own research revealed that children can be exposed to up to 140 times the safety limit of chlorpyrifos in their lifetime. This pesticide has been linked to brain damage in kids. It's unacceptable to use it on our food and expose it to our families when we know how risky this chemical can be.
Chlorpyrifos is also known to be toxic to vital pollinators like honeybees. We must grow our crops without the use of toxic pesticides like chlorpyrifos in order to protect the health of vital ecosystems.
I strongly urge you to reinstate a full ban on all food uses of chlorpyrifos.
To the U.S. Forest Service,
Thank you for proposing to protect old-growth national forests from commercial logging. Our old-growth trees are critical for wildlife, people and public health, and this is a big step toward preserving them for future generations.
Please ensure that the final plan does not include exceptions that allow continued logging of old-growth for commercial gain and please consider including protections for mature trees in the final policy.
Old-growth should be protected from logging in all ecosystems, including in southeast Alaska. The only exceptions should be for protecting public health and safety, including protecting communities and infrastructure from wildfire, to comply with statutes or regulations and for culturally significant uses.
If old-growth trees must be logged for these reasons, they should not be sold to timber companies. Instead, they should be left in the forest to continue as part of the ecosystem just as if they had fallen due to natural disturbances.
Sincerely,
To the Bureau of Land Management,
The Gunnison sage grouse needs your help. As few as 3,000 remain in the southern corners of Colorado and Utah, and their sagebrush habitat is being carved up for land conversion, development, roads and recreation.
The loss of these birds' habitat is central in their decline.
Gunnison sage grouse need the sage shrublands for shelter, to hide from predators, to raise their young, and to attract mates in their strange, iconic dances. Without that habitat, the grouse are struggling to survive. For that reason, I urge you to update the Bureau of Land Management's management plans for the greater sage grouse to protect this iconic species.
Sincerely,
Long after we're gone, flimsy fragments of polystyrene foam coffee cups will drift around the world -- blowing out of landfills and into oceans. Once in our oceans, this plastic waste can harm and even kill sea creatures like turtles and dolphins.
Nothing we use for a moment's convenience should harm generations of wildlife.
Polystyrene foam is one of the worst forms of plastic pollution. It's time that we ban it for good. Tell your U.S. senators to support the Farewell to Foam Act.
Right now, there are more than 12,000 species across the United States that are in need of greater support. These include monarch butterflies, Florida manatees, orcas, and more.
Fortunately, there's legislation currently before Congress that pledges funding to state wildlife agencies for the purposes of protecting threatened and declining species. Call on your U.S. representative to support the American Wildlife Habitat Conservation Act today.
We, the undersigned, urge the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to support listing the American bumblebee as an endangered species. The American bumblebee, which once buzzed across the country, is on the verge of extinction. Since the 1990s, the population of American bumblebees has dropped by 90%.
Endangered Species Act protections are critical to saving the American bumblebee. Listing the bee as endangered will require the FWS to create a recovery plan -- helping to create safe havens for these bumblebees and give them the monitoring and protection they need to begin to thrive again.
Sincerely,
Dear Whole Foods CEO Jason Buechel,
We, the undersigned, urge Whole Foods to eliminate single-use plastic packaging. We need to turn off the tap on the 8 million tons of plastic pollution that enter the ocean each year, and Whole Foods can play a leading role by eliminating single-use plastic packaging from its stores.
In our lakes, rivers, and oceans, plastic pollution threatens marine wildlife. It's estimated that 90% of seabirds are ingesting plastic now, and nearly every single one will be eating it by 2050. This can cause organ failure, starvation, and death.
If we're going to protect ocean ecosystems, we need companies like yours to make bold, concrete commitments to reduce and ultimately eliminate single-use plastic packaging. By eliminating single-use plastic packaging from its stores, Whole Foods can establish itself as an environmental leader and set an example for others in the industry to follow.
Sincerely,
Dear U.S. House representative,
I urge you to oppose H.R. 5635, which would nullify President Biden's designation of the Baaj Nwaavjo I'tah Kukveni Grand Canyon National Monument.
The Grand Canyon National Monument is deeply needed. Currently, there are over 600 uranium mining claims surrounding the Grand Canyon. Some exist as close as 10 miles to the border of the Grand Canyon National. A monument designation ensures that these mines won't become operational and prevents radioactive materials from poisoning the groundwater and seeping into the Grand Canyon.
Please do all you can to protect the Grand Canyon and its surrounding environment for current and future generations.
Interior Secretary Haaland,
Idaho, Montana and Wyoming are actively slaughtering hundreds of wolves. From burning them alive in their dens to hunting them down from airplanes, almost nothing is off limits this winter.
This is an emergency for wolves.
I'm urging you to restore their Endangered Species Act protections today.
Sincerely,
To the U.S. House of Representatives,
I urge you to keep our oldest forests off the chopping block. Please vote 'no' on the Promoting Effective Forest Management Act of 2023, which would direct the Forest Service to focus logging activity on "mature forests."
These forests are crucial for a number of ecological, environmental and biodiversity reasons. They even help us combat climate change, as mature and old-growth forests hold enormous amounts of carbon, safely stored in trunks, branches and soil.
We need our mature and old-growth forests to stay standing for generations to come, but this legislation threatens to level towering giants and destroy many of our nation's oldest trees. Don't let them cut down our oldest forests.
Sincerely,
Interior Secretary Haaland,
Idaho, Montana and Wyoming are actively slaughtering hundreds of wolves. From burning them alive in their dens to hunting them down from airplanes, almost nothing is off limits this winter.
This is an emergency for wolves.
I'm urging you to restore their Endangered Species Act protections today.
Sincerely,
Interior Secretary Haaland,
We, the undersigned, urge you to support restoring Endangered Species Act protections for Florida's manatees. Several thousands of Florida manatees have died in recent years, making it painfully clear that the 2017 decision to downlist the species was premature. Facing such threats as habitat degradation and loss, manatees experienced record losses in 2021 and 2022.
Restoring manatees' endangered status under the Endangered Species Act is critical to protecting the species from extinction. Listing manatees as endangered will lead to critical habitat protections for the species. It will also result in the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service being directed to administer a recovery plan.
Please do all you can to save Florida's manatees.
Sincerely,
U.S. senators,
In the 1900s, wolves were hunted to the brink of extinction in the Lower 48 states. It was only thanks to the Endangered Species Act, and immense amounts of hard work by conservationists, that the gray wolf was brought back in the Northern Rockies and Upper Midwest.
Even today, there are only a few thousand wolves, roaming a tiny fraction of their historic range. That precarious population is already threatened by radically expanded hunting and trapping in states like Idaho, Montana and Wyoming.
I'm urging you to reject the anti-wolf policy rider that was attached to the House's Interior Appropriations Bill. Decisions about protecting endangered species should be made based on the best available science, by professionals -- not turned into a political football and slipped into unrelated legislation.
Sincerely,
An estimated 30,000 elephants are killed every year by trophy hunters. Recently, an elephant in South Africa died after being hunted by land and on a helicopter. It's a tragic death and devastating news for a species that is slipping to extinction. 98% of elephants that once roamed the Earth have disappeared.
Here in the U.S., we can take action to prevent poaching. A federal ban on trophy imports can make a difference on this issue. By banning trophy imports, the U.S. can discourage trophy hunting and wildlife trafficking abroad.
Neonicotinoids, a class of toxic pesticides, are a threat to honeybees and wild bees. Bees exposed to neonicotinoids have lower lifespans and their colonies were more likely to permanently lose queens.
Yet still, neonicotinoids are being sprayed in the places that bees are supposed to be safest: national wildlife refuges. Send a message today urging your U.S. representative to support a ban on neonicotinoids in national wildlife refuges.
William Anderson, CEO of the Bayer Corporation,
Glyphosate, the main active chemical ingredient in Roundup, kills the milkweed that's vital to monarch butterflies and has been linked to harm to bees and numerous endangered plant and animal species.
To protect the health of our ecosystems, I urge Bayer to follow through on its commitment to reformulate Roundup without glyphosate.
Sincerely,
Around the world, trillions of tiny plastic pellets called "nurdles" end up in our water each year.
This is dangerous for the planet and wildlife. These plastic pellets are easily ingested and can build up in animals' digestive tracts, causing them to starve. Tell your senators to keep plastic out of our waterways by supporting the Plastic Pellet Free Waters Act.
Bee species are disappearing before our eyes, with troubling consequences for nature and our food supply.
There's one simple yet effective thing we can do to help them recover: Make sure they have the plants they need to survive. States can create safe havens for bees on their public lands by planting the plants that have evolved together with the bees that pollinate them.
Call on your governor to expand bee-friendly habitat on our public lands.
We, the undersigned, urge the Department of the Interior to reject any proposed seismic activity on Arctic lands. Seismic surveys involve months of thumping the ground with giant machines, threatening wildlife who call the Arctic home. Caribou herds, for example, can be separated from their historical calving grounds. Polar bears can be injured or even killed by thumper trucks running over undetected dens.
To make matters worse, the seismic survey is aimed at finding oil and gas for drilling, which would further threaten Arctic wildlife and worsen global climate change. Extracting more fossil fuels from the ground is incompatible with reducing the amount of greenhouse gas released into the atmosphere.
Drilling for fossil fuels in a fragile environment is clearly a dangerous idea. Please do all you can to protect Arctic lands for current and future generations.
Sincerely,
Send a holiday card to BGE and the Maryland Public Service Commission (PSC) letting them know that BGE's proposed $602.4 million multi-year rate hike, which woukd take effect next year, is a bad deal for energy customers.
Re: EPA-HQ-OPP-2023-0420
We, the undersigned, urge you to regulate and limit the use of seeds coated in neonicotinoid pesticides in order to protect birds and bees.
Approximately 95% of the neonicotinoid coated on seeds is washed away, contaminating the surrounding environment and having lethal consequences for wildlife. Bees can fly through lethal doses of pesticides stirred up during planting. And, in 2017, 200 red-winged blackbirds died in New Jersey after eating wheat seeds coated in neonics.
We shouldn't plant neonic-coated seeds in millions of acres of soil, poisoning the world around us and killing the very pollinators that help our crops to grow. Please do all you can to protect birds and bees from toxic pesticides.
Sincerely,
We, the undersigned, urge the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to impose a total ban on trophy and live elephant imports. Elephants are globally treasured animals, but, unfortunately, they are being threatened with extinction. After two centuries of overhunting, poaching, and habitat loss, the African elephant population has dropped 98%.
While this proposal is a step in the right direction, a total ban on trophies is critical to protecting elephants' survival. Otherwise, United States demand for elephant trophies will continue to incentivize their killing.
Sincerely,
Dear Governor Newsom,
Sea otters bobbing in the surf. Whales diving deep to feed. Seabirds flying above. Our state's coastline is home to wildlife, large and small. As Californians, we've taken steps to protect this ocean heritage by creating a network of marine protected areas that, just like state parks on land, help protect and restore ocean life.
I urge you to strengthen this network through the Decadal Management Review in line with your important goal of protecting 30 percent of our state waters by 2030. Specifically, I urge you to expand the network to protect the state's last remaining kelp forests, critical homes to fish and sea otters, and to strengthen existing areas that don't yet provide high levels of protection to ocean life.
With your support, California can expand this network of ocean parks to create a brighter future for the ocean life that calls our state home, and hopefully inspire others across the country and around the world to follow our lead.
Sincerely,
Governor Gianforte and Montana wildlife officials,
Wolves were almost completely exterminated once before -- and if we're not careful, we could see history repeat itself.
Montana's wolf hunt is cruel and unnecessary. It's endangering the animals that our country has already nearly lost once before.
We can't risk losing the wolves again. That's why I'm writing to urge you to stop Montana's wolf hunt before it does irreparable damage to one of our country's most iconic species.
Sincerely,
A new census of plastic waste in oceans has found that pollution is increasing. Approximately 550,000 tons of plastic bottles, shopping bags and fishing nets are making their way into the waters around the world every single year.
It's time to put the planet over plastic. That's why we're calling on the U.S. Senate to pass the Break Free From Plastic Pollution Act, which would ban many of the worst single-use items entering the ocean. Send a message to your U.S. senators urging them to support this legislation today.
We're facing a biodiversity crisis, and to protect wildlife, we can't wait until they're already on the edge before we intervene.
Tell your senators to support the Recovering America's Wildlife Act to conserve creatures before they ever become imperiled.
EVENT DETAILS
When: Wednesday, December 6, 2023 from 4:30-5:30 PM ET
Where: Zoom Video Conferencing
What: Too often communities are left cleaning up the mess in their own backyards that polluters leave. A recent law has helped change that.
Join Community Action Works and USPIRG Education Fund to talk about how the reinstatement of the “polluter pays” tax has invigorated the Superfund program allowing more toxic sites to be cleaned up including sites in the Northeast.
Join the virtual panel to learn more about the report and its findings, the organizing work around Superfund sites, and the policy surrounding the Superfund program. After panelist presentations, we will have a Q&A session where you can ask questions to the panelists and learn more about the program.
Panelists include:
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
We, the undersigned, urge you to let wild wolves roam free.
A wild Mexican gray wolf named Asha left the species' recovery area for the second time in a year. She isn't the first, and she won't be the last. It's time to remove the boundary of the permitted habitat and allow wild lobos to disperse naturally.
Dispersal is how a healthy wolf population grows. In order to meet conservation targets for the Mexican gray wolf, the lobos need more territory to live and thrive. We strongly urge you to allow wild wolves like Asha to remain north of the recovery area instead of capturing and relocating her.
Sincerely,
As the government faces the possibility of a shutdown, Rep. Lauren Boebert (Colo.) and the House of Representatives successfully added a few words to a must-pass spending bill that would erase Endangered Species Act protections for gray wolves.
Even today, there are only a few thousand wolves, roaming a tiny fraction of their historic range. That precarious population is already threatened by radically expanded hunting and trapping in states like Idaho, Montana and Wyoming.
If Rep. Boebert and her allies succeed, it will mean more hunts like what we saw in Wisconsin in 2021, when one out of every five of the state's wolves was killed in just 60 hours.
Tell your U.S. senators: No more wolf hunts.
As the government faces the possibility of a shutdown, Congress is debating must-pass spending bills to keep the lights on -- and some U.S. House representatives are using this as an opportunity to erase Endangered Species Act protections for wolves across the rest of the Lower 48.
Even today, there are only a few thousand wolves, roaming a tiny fraction of their historic range. That precarious population is already threatened by radically expanded hunting and trapping in states like Idaho, Montana and Wyoming.
If they succeed, it will mean more hunts like what we saw in Wisconsin in 2021, when one out of every five of the state’s wolves was killed in just 60 hours. Tell your U.S. House representative: Wolves are treasures, not trophies.
An endangered elephant was brutally killed during a trophy hunt in South Africa. It's a tragic death and devastating news for a species that is slipping to extinction.
Here in the U.S., we can take action to prevent poaching. Banning the import of elephant trophies will discourage trophy hunts and wildlife trafficking. Send your message urging the Biden administration to support a ban today.
A new census of plastic waste in oceans has found that pollution is increasing. Approximately 550,000 tons of plastic bottles, shopping bags and fishing nets are making their way into the waters around the world every single year.
It's time to put the planet over plastic. That's why we're calling on the U.S. Senate to pass the
Break Free From Plastic Pollution Act, which would ban many of the worst single-use items entering the ocean. Send a message to your U.S. senators urging them to support this legislation today.
The Biden administration's designation of the Grand Canyon National Monument was a hard-won victory. Now, some members of Congress are trying to nullify it.
The designation of the Grand Canyon National Monument prevents the development of over 600 uranium mines on the Grand Canyon's doorstep. Urge your U.S. House representative to preserve this monument by opposing HR 5635.
I urge you to keep our oldest forests off the chopping block. Please vote 'no' on the Promoting Effective Forest Management Act of 2023, which calls for chopping down our mature and old-growth forests.
Mature and old-growth trees provide critical wildlife habitat and keep huge amounts of climate-warming carbon from being released into the atmosphere.
We need our old-growth and mature forests to stay standing for generations to come, but this legislation threatens to level towering giants and destroy many of our nation's oldest trees. Don't let them cut down our oldest forests.
Have you been affected by PFAS in your well or water system? Do you want legislators to do more to protect you?
Here’s your chance!
I'm writing today to urge you to oppose efforts by Senator Ron Johnson, among others, to erase Endangered Species Act protections for wolves.
These incredible animals are a keystone species and critical to their ecosystems. They occupy a tiny fraction of their historic range, and we've already seen the devastating consequences when they're delisted. The 2021 Wisconsin wolf hunt slaughtered one out of every five wolves in the state, in just 60 hours, and hundreds of wolves are killed every year in the northern Rockies.
Moreover, provisions in S.1895, and similar legislation in the House, would set a dangerous precedent by blocking judicial review.
Thank you for your consideration.
Drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge could destroy critical wildlife habitat. Millions of birds travel from across the continent to meet in the Arctic Refuge. It's home to the porcupine caribou herd and important denning grounds for polar bears.
Thank you for canceling the remaining leases from the 2021 lease sale. We appreciate that you are proposing a new Environmental Impact Statement but are concerned that all of the Alternatives proposed would harm the caribou and other species that depend on the coastal plain. Oil and gas drilling simply doesn't belong in a wildlife refuge, and especially not this arctic treasure. It's too important for wildlife.
In 2017, the Trump administration rushed into selling off parcels of wildlife habitat to fast track oil drilling without adequately considering the environmental impacts. The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge shouldn't be sold off to the oil and gas industry.
The future of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge is in your hands. We, the undersigned, urge you to keep oil and gas drilling out of the Arctic Refuge.
Plastic pollution is choking the planet. Piles of single-use plastic waste are polluting our environment and harming wildlife -- but this bill will help stop it.
The REDUCE Act will help seriously cut back on the production of new plastic to make single-use items, reducing plastic waste and protecting wildlife. Send a message urging your U.S. senators to support the REDUCE Act today.
The overuse of pesticides is making our environment too toxic for bees and other pollinators to survive. We depend on these amazing insects for healthy wild spaces and a functional food system -- we can't afford to lose them.
Over 1 billion pounds of pesticides are sprayed in the U.S. annually. The National Pesticide Use Maps database is a critical tool for monitoring that pesticide use and estimating the resulting pollution across the nation. Without this data, it will be impossible to estimate the impacts of pesticides on pollinators and the environment's health.
I strongly urge you not to terminate, and in fact to restore to previous pre-Trump levels, the tracking and mapping of pesticide use in the U.S.
Deep oceans and seabeds are among the most wild and biodiverse places on earth. They should be protected for current and future generations.
The International and American Seabed Protection Acts would help ensure the safety of the deepsea by placing a moratorium on destructive mining. Send a message in support of this legislation to your U.S. House representative today.
I urge you to support a Wild and Scenic designation for Colorado's Crystal River. The Crystal River, situated in western Colorado, is a critical environmental and community resource. The river supports rare and diverse species of wildlife. It also provides clean drinking water to several neighboring counties.
Designating the Crystal River as a Wild and Scenic River will ensure it remains free-flowing and undiverted for current and future generations. The designation will proactively prevent development and other threats to this special and necessary place.
Sincerely,
Docket # BLM_HQ_FRN_MO4500173644
We, the undersigned, urge you to protect 13 million acres of "special areas" in the Western Arctic landscape from oil and gas drilling. Wildlife love this place. It's one of the few places on the planet that has been spared from human interference. Undisturbed, beluga whales, migratory birds, moose and caribou all thrive.
Drilling would permanently scar this critical wildlife habitat. The breeding grounds for migratory birds, caribou and more would be replaced with gaping holes in the earth, thundering trucks and pipelines. Not to mention the air, water and climate pollution that goes hand in hand with oil drilling.
We can't let even more drilling spoil the Arctic. Please protect the most important places in the Western Arctic from oil and gas drilling.
Dear Interior Secretary Deb Haaland,
Last year, roughly 1 in 10 of Florida's manatees died -- many of starvation resulting from the degradation of their habitat.
As we approach winter, the conditions that made last year so dangerous have only persisted -- and the manatees are still struggling with malnutrition. Yet since 2017, manatees have seen their protections under the Endangered Species Act reduced, even as researchers fear for their survival.
If we don't improve their protections soon, we could risk losing one of Florida's most iconic animals. For that reason, we the undersigned urge you to restore the manatees' endangered status under the Endangered Species Act and grant them the fullest protections under federal law.
Sincerely,
Home Depot CEO Ted Decker,
We, the undersigned, urge you to stop selling Roundup and other glyphosate products in all of Home Depot's stores. Killing weeds more easily isn't worth the irreparable damage that glyphosate, the main active ingredient in Roundup, inflicts on people and our environment.
In the past few decades, monarch butterfly populations have plummeted by as much as 95%.
One big reason? The pervasive use of Roundup, which devastates the milkweed that monarchs need to survive.
Research has also linked glyphosate to serious health risks, including cancer. The World Health Organization has labeled glyphosate a "probably carcinogenic to humans." One study estimates that exposure can raise the risk of cancer by 41%.
Home Depot can make a difference on this issue by ending the sale of Roundup until it's been reformulated and proven safe.
Sincerely,
Drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge could destroy critical wildlife habitat. Millions of birds travel from across the continent to meet in the Arctic Refuge. It's home to the Porcupine caribou herd and important denning grounds for polar bears.
Thank you for canceling the remaining leases from the 2021 lease sale. We appreciate that you are proposing a new Environmental Impact Statement but are concerned that all of the alternatives proposed would harm the caribou and other species that depend on the coastal plain. Oil and gas drilling simply doesn't belong in a wildlife refuge, and especially not this arctic treasure. It's too important for wildlife.
In 2017, the Trump administration rushed into selling off parcels of wildlife habitat to fast track oil drilling without adequately considering the environmental impacts. The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge shouldn't be sold off to the oil and gas industry.
The future of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge is in your hands. We, the undersigned, urge you to keep oil and gas drilling out of the Arctic Refuge.
Walmart CEO Doug McMillon:
Your company has made recent progress in recognizing the importance of pollinators and the harm they suffer from pesticide use. But toxic neonicotinoid pesticides still line the shelves of Walmart stores, enabling pesticide use on plants all over the country. It's time to step up and do all we can to save the bees and the food crops that we rely on bee pollination to grow. I urge you to take neonicotinoid pesticides off of your shelves.
Sincerely,
There are only about 50 Rice's whales left alive in the world today. Threatened by vessel strikes and habitat degradation, Rice's whales are one of the most endangered marine mammals.
With such a small population, the protection of every remaining whale is critical to the species' survival.
The Biden administration is taking steps to protect these incredible whales from speeding vessels and offshore drilling, but there's a push in Congress to sacrifice these rare whales.
Send a message to your U.S. House representative in support of saving Rice's whales.
In just two and a half days in 2021, Wisconsin hunted down and killed 216 wolves.
That was the direct result of the Trump administration's decision to erase Endangered Species Act protections for wolves in the Upper Midwest.
After the Wisconsin hunt, a court intervened -- but now Sen. Ron Johnson is pushing to bring back the Trump-era policy of nationwide wolf hunting.
Tell your U.S. senators: No more wolf hunting.
Montana Fish and Wildlife Commission,
With Montana's wolf population already on the decline, we are troubled by the proposed hunting quotas for the upcoming season.
The recovery of wolves in the West is a conservation success story, and as a keystone species, they are vital to our ecosystems.
While the reduced quotas, both statewide compared to last year, and next to Yellowstone as compared to two years ago, are steps in the right direction, we encourage you to do more to protect this fragile, keystone species.
We particularly urge you to zero out the quota in Wolf Management Unit 313, bordering Yellowstone National Park.
Thank you for your consideration,
Montana Fish and Wildlife Commission,
With Montana's wolf population already on the decline, we are troubled by the proposed hunting quotas for the upcoming season.
The recovery of wolves in the West is a conservation success story, and as a keystone species, they are vital to our ecosystems.
While the reduced quotas, both statewide compared to last year, and next to Yellowstone as compared to two years ago, are steps in the right direction, we encourage you to do more to protect this fragile, keystone species.
We particularly urge you to zero out the quota in Wolf Management Unit 313, bordering Yellowstone National Park.
Thank you for your consideration,
Last spring, an estimated 1,500 wolves lived in Idaho. By the year's end, a full third of those wolves had been killed.
Extreme wolf hunting legislation in the states of the Northern Rockies, including Idaho, Montana and Wyoming, will allow this killing to continue with virtually no limits.
If this isn't an emergency for our wolves, then what is? We need to protect these canines before they're wiped out for good.
Docket # BLM_HQ_FRN_MO4500173644
We, the undersigned, urge you to protect 13 million acres of "special areas" in the Western Arctic landscape from oil and gas drilling. Wildlife love this place. It's one of the few places on the planet that has been spared from human interference. Undisturbed, beluga whales, migratory birds, moose and caribou all thrive.
Drilling would permanently scar this critical wildlife habitat. The breeding grounds for migratory birds, caribou and more would be replaced with gaping holes in the earth, thundering trucks and pipelines. Not to mention the air, water and climate pollution that goes hand in hand with oil drilling.
We can't let even more drilling spoil the Arctic. Please protect the most important places in the Western Arctic from oil and gas drilling.
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
The endangered rusty patched bumblebee needs all the help it can get to survive. Scattered in small groups, this bee's population has already declined by 87%.
Habitat loss is contributing to this special bee's decline. Before the rusty patched bumblebee loses any more of the wild fields and woods that it calls home, those places need to be preserved.
After the recent court decision, your agency should act quickly to designate critical habitat for the rusty patched bumblebee. I urge you to revisit the endangered species recovery plan for the rusty patched bumblebee and take swift action to protect its habitat.
Sincerely,
Manufacturers prefer when we replace our gadgets quickly. It's terrible for the planet.
In fact, manufacturers use a variety of tactics to block repair, which reduces lifespans and feeds the churn of devices, which has become the fastest growing waste stream in the world. Help us pass Right to Repair reforms which lower barriers to repair.
Only around 12% of the United States is currently protected as national and state parks and wilderness areas.
Yet, legislation currently in the U.S. House of Representatives aims to prevent further conservation of nature. The bill, called the Acre-in, Acre-out Act, would require that for every new acre managed by federal agencies, an acre also be sold.
We need more nature, not less. Join us in calling on your U.S. representative to oppose the Acre-in, Acre-out Act today.
Chick-fil-A CEO Andrew Truett Cathy:
Every 45 seconds, a garbage truck's worth of plastic is being dumped into our oceans, where it's harming and even killing sea turtles, dolphins and whales that mistake it for food. To protect our natural world, we need to use less plastic.
Already, companies are starting to reduce the amount of single-use plastics they give to customers day in and day out, and Chick-fil-A should be next. I urge you to lead the industry in a more sustainable direction by replacing your polystyrene foam cups with a more sustainable alternative.
Sincerely,
July 2023 was the hottest month on record. Human-induced climate change, including oil and gas drilling, have driven unprecedented temperatures across the planet.
Yet, every year the federal government doles out billions of dollars in the form of tax breaks, incentives, and other subsidies to the fossil fuel industry. Call on your U.S. senators to end these subsidies today.
Docket #FWS-HQ-ES-2023-0018-0001
Docket #FWS-HQ-ES-2021-0107-0001
Docket #FWS-HQ-ES-2021-0104-0001
We, the undersigned, support the full restoration of the Endangered Species Act and the reversal of the 2019 rollbacks. In particular, we are in favor of the proposed rules that would:
We urge you to finalize the proposed rules, and do everything within your authority to further restore the Endangered Species Act.
As the government faces the possibility of a shutdown at the end of September, Congress is debating must-pass spending bills to keep the lights on -- and some U.S. House representatives are using this as an opportunity to erase Endangered Species Act protections for wolves across the rest of the Lower 48.
Even today, there are only a few thousand wolves, roaming a tiny fraction of their historic range. That precarious population is already threatened by radically expanded hunting and trapping in states like Idaho, Montana and Wyoming.
If they succeed, it will mean more hunts like what we saw in Wisconsin in 2021, when one out of every five of the state's wolves was killed in just 60 hours. Tell your U.S. House representative: Wolves are treasures, not trophies.
Neonicotinoid pesticides have been found to be harmful and often lethal to bees, birds and other wildlife. This is especially troubling given the decline in multiple species of bees and birds. Coating seeds with these pesticides offers little to no protection. Birds eat the seeds. Dust from the seed coating lands on the bees, the plants where they forage, the hives where they live, and the water they drink from.
For the sake of pollinators and other wildlife, and for our own sake, we urge you to stop selling seeds coated with neonicotinoid pesticides.
Sonic CEO J Hudson,
We, the undersigned, urge Sonic to end the use of polystyrene foam takeout containers.
Polystyrene foam is one of the worst forms of plastic pollution. It is lightweight and breaks apart easily, meaning it is carried through wind and water and nearly impossible to remove. Worse yet, polystyrene persists in the environment. Polystyrene foam takes centuries to decompose, posing an enduring threat to waterways and wildlife.
Sonic can make a difference on this issue. By ending its use of polystyrene foam containers, it can make a positive impact on the environment. Sonic can also set an example for others in the industry to follow.
Sincerely,
The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) is considering stripping wolves of their state "endangered" status right now. We have until August 16 to submit our comments telling WDFW that Washington's wolves need strong protections to survive.
EPA Administrator Michael Regan,
Thank you for proposing to cut global warming pollution from power plants. We must require America's biggest polluters to clean up their act, instead of continuing to harm our climate and our health, and we shouldn't allow new power plants to make these problems worse.
The proposal allows more pollution from some coal plants and smaller or intermittently running gas plants -- we urge you to extend the limits to even more power plants to accelerate the transition away from dirty, polluting energy.
Most of the top 50 polluters in the U.S. are coal and gas-fired power plants. Together, those 45 power plants emitted 28% of all greenhouse gases from electricity generation nationwide, while generating only 11% of the nation's power.
Please finalize the strongest possible limits to cut global warming pollution from power plants.
Department of the Interior Secretary Haaland,
We, the undersigned, urge you to support listing monarch butterflies as an endangered species under the Endangered Species Act. Monarch butterflies, whose annual migration across North America was once a common sight, are experiencing a devastating decline. Recent research shows that the number of monarch butterflies hibernating in Mexico has declined by 22%.
The monarch butterfly needs the protections of the ESA. Since the passage of the ESA, approximately 90% of the plant and wildlife species listed have or are recovering.
Please do all you can to support saving monarch butterflies from extinction.
Sincerely,
Home Depot CEO Ted Decker,
We, the undersigned, urge you to stop selling Roundup and other glyphosate products in all of Home Depot's stores. Killing weeds more easily isn't worth the irreparable damage that glyphosate, the main active ingredient in Roundup, inflicts on people and our environment.
In the past few decades, monarch butterfly populations have plummeted by as much as 95%.
One big reason? The pervasive use of Roundup, which devastates the milkweed that monarchs need to survive.
Research has also linked glyphosate to serious health risks, including cancer. The World Health Organization has labeled glyphosate as "probably carcinogenic to humans." One study estimates that exposure can raise the risk of cancer by 41%.
Home Depot can make a difference on this issue by ending the sale of Roundup until it's been reformulated and proven safe.
Sincerely,
Glyphosate -- the main active ingredient in Bayer's Roundup -- is a probable human carcinogen. Why are we still allowing it to be sprayed where we live, work, and play?
In order to protect our health, we need to ban Roundup in states across the country unless and until it's proven safe. Send a message calling on your governor to ban Roundup today.
Walmart CEO Doug McMillon:
We, the undersigned, urge Walmart to commit to taking single-use plastic packaging off store shelves, especially in the grocery section.
Walmart is America's largest grocer by revenue -- but far too many shoppers are coming home with a pile of single-use plastic packaging that they didn't ask for, which can clog our landfills and pollute our environment for centuries to come.
Nothing we use for a few minutes should threaten our communities and our planet for hundreds of years. Walmart can reduce its plastic waste and even set a precedent for other superstores to follow by eliminating single-use plastic packaging.
Sincerely,
Montana Fish and Wildlife Commission,
With Montana's wolf population already on the decline, we are troubled by the proposed hunting quotas for the upcoming season.
The recovery of wolves in the West is a conservation success story, and as a keystone species, they are vital to our ecosystems.
While the reduced quotas, both statewide compared to last year, and next to Yellowstone as compared to two years ago, are steps in the right direction, we encourage you to do more to protect this fragile, keystone species.
We particularly urge you to zero out the quota in Wolf Management Unit 313, bordering Yellowstone National Park.
Thank you for your consideration,
Dear Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella,
Don't junk millions of computers. Microsoft's decision to end support for Windows 10 could cause the single biggest jump in junked computers ever, and make it impossible for them to hit their sustainability goals. The new version of their operating system's stringent hardware requirements could result in 40% of PCs in use being left behind.
Microsoft's decision to stop supporting millions of functional computers in our hospitals, businesses, and homes is a raw deal for customers who expect their expensive devices to last.
All software reaches a point at which it's no longer supported, but when the consequences to our environment are this large we shouldn't accept it.
P&G CEO John Moeller,
The North American boreal is our planet's largest intact forest. Logging is steadily flushing these trees down the toilet. Destroying this bountiful forest is a disaster. P&G should move away from virgin wood fibers and incorporate more recycled and forest-free fibers in its home paper products, including Charmin toilet paper, Puffs tissues and Bounty paper towels.
Customers would "enjoy the go" even more if your toilet paper didn't come at the expense of our forests. P&G's Charmin Ultra Eco bamboo toilet paper is a step in the right direction and we hope it is available online again soon. P&G should make a stronger commitment to switch to forest-free tissue products. We, the undersigned, urge P&G to commit to protect the boreal and reduce the amount of virgin wood fibers in your tissue products by 50% or more by 2025.
Chaco Canyon, a National Historical Park in northwestern New Mexico, is a special place. It is home to diverse species of plants and wildlife, including bobcats, elk and badgers. Chaco Canyon is an International Dark Sky Park and UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Yet, legislation currently in the U.S. House of Representatives threatens to allow oil and gas drilling to the doorstep of Chaco Canyon. Send a message urging your representative to oppose this legislation today.
Governor Newsom,
Bees are dying at unsustainable rates, and one clear contributor is the widespread use of bee-killing neonic pesticides. I urge you to take action to restrict bee killing neonicotinoids (neonics) this summer and close the loophole that exempts pesticides on seeds from rules and limits.
Neonics are poisonous to bees, butterflies, and other wildlife. The pesticides attack bees' central nervous system, causing neurological damage, paralysis, and death.
California can become the tenth state to limit the worst uses of neonics, and doing so will reinforce our commitment and leadership on the environment. Pollinators should be protected, not poisoned. Please take action to protect pollinators and the environment that they depend on by signing bill AB363 when it comes to your desk.
Sincerely,
President Biden,
The greater Grand Canyon area is an important watershed for the Colorado River, a home for wildlife, and the location of important archaeological and cultural sites. New uranium mining on federal lands near the Grand Canyon would pose unacceptable risks to all of this.
I urge you to designate a new national monument -- to be called the Baaj Nwaavjo I'tah Kukveni Grand Canyon National Monument -- to protect the Grand Canyon watershed, including its natural and cultural treasures.
Montana Fish and Wildlife Commission,
With Montana's wolf population already on the decline, we are troubled by the proposed hunting quotas for the upcoming season.
The recovery of wolves in the West is a conservation success story, and as a keystone species, they are vital to our ecosystems.
While the reduced quotas, both statewide compared to last year, and next to Yellowstone as compared to two years ago, are steps in the right direction, we encourage you to do more to protect this fragile, keystone species.
We particularly urge you to zero out the quota in Wolf Management Unit 313, bordering Yellowstone National Park.
Thank you for your consideration,
A new proposed rule from the Environmental Protection Agency would ensure toxic coal ash sites that are currently not regulated by federal rules are cleaned up and closed in a way that would protect communities and Illinois' waterways. Send an email to EPA today in favor of the rule.
President Biden,
The greater Grand Canyon area is an important watershed for the Colorado River, a home for wildlife, and the location of important archaeological and cultural sites. New uranium mining on federal lands near the Grand Canyon would pose unacceptable risks to all of this.
I urge you to designate a new national monument -- to be called the Baaj Nwaavjo I'tah Kukveni Grand Canyon National Monument -- to protect the Grand Canyon watershed, including its natural and cultural treasures.
Honeybees, bumblebees, and other native pollinators are in trouble. Widespread use of seeds that are coated in neonicotinoids, a class of pesticides, has increased the toxicity of America's environment and poisoned countless bees.
We're working to protect pollinators from toxic pesticides by calling on policymakers across the country to ban coating seeds with neonicotinoids. Join us by sending a message to your governor today.
Just one small seed has deadly consequences for birds and bees. Millions of seeds are treated with neonicotinoid pesticides, contaminating the entire plant as it grows. Plus, most of the pesticides on the seeds don't stay there -- 95% gets rubbed off or washed away, contaminating the surrounding environment. That turns a cornfield into a toxic minefield for a tiny bee or a hungry bird.
Tell your governor to ban toxic seeds that kill birds and bees.
Just one small seed has deadly consequences for birds and bees. Millions of seeds are treated with neonicotinoid pesticides, contaminating the entire plant as it grows. Plus, most of the pesticides on the seeds don't stay there -- 95% gets rubbed off or washed away, contaminating the surrounding environment. That turns a cornfield into a toxic minefield for a tiny bee or a hungry bird.
Tell your governor to ban toxic seeds that kill birds and bees.
Just one small seed has deadly consequences for birds and bees. Millions of seeds are treated with neonicotinoid pesticides, contaminating the entire plant as it grows. Plus, most of the pesticides on the seeds don't stay there -- 95% gets rubbed off or washed away, contaminating the surrounding environment. That turns a cornfield into a toxic minefield for a tiny bee or a hungry bird.
Tell your governor to ban toxic seeds that kill birds and bees.
Just one small seed has deadly consequences for birds and bees. Millions of seeds are treated with neonicotinoid pesticides, contaminating the entire plant as it grows. Plus, most of the pesticides on the seeds don't stay there -- 95% gets rubbed off or washed away, contaminating the surrounding environment. That turns a cornfield into a toxic minefield for a tiny bee or a hungry bird.
Tell your governor to ban toxic seeds that kill birds and bees.
Just one small seed has deadly consequences for birds and bees. Millions of seeds are treated with neonicotinoid pesticides, contaminating the entire plant as it grows. Plus, most of the pesticides on the seeds don't stay there -- 95% gets rubbed off or washed away, contaminating the surrounding environment. That turns a cornfield into a toxic minefield for a tiny bee or a hungry bird.
Tell your governor to ban toxic seeds that kill birds and bees.
Just one small seed has deadly consequences for birds and bees. Millions of seeds are treated with neonicotinoid pesticides, contaminating the entire plant as it grows. Plus, most of the pesticides on the seeds don't stay there -- 95% gets rubbed off or washed away, contaminating the surrounding environment. That turns a cornfield into a toxic minefield for a tiny bee or a hungry bird.
Tell your governor to ban toxic seeds that kill birds and bees.
Just one small seed has deadly consequences for birds and bees. Millions of seeds are treated with neonicotinoid pesticides, contaminating the entire plant as it grows. Plus, most of the pesticides on the seeds don't stay there -- 95% gets rubbed off or washed away, contaminating the surrounding environment. That turns a cornfield into a toxic minefield for a tiny bee or a hungry bird.
Tell your governor to ban toxic seeds that kill birds and bees.
Just one small seed has deadly consequences for birds and bees. Millions of seeds are treated with neonicotinoid pesticides, contaminating the entire plant as it grows. Plus, most of the pesticides on the seeds don't stay there -- 95% gets rubbed off or washed away, contaminating the surrounding environment. That turns a cornfield into a toxic minefield for a tiny bee or a hungry bird.
Tell your governor to ban toxic seeds that kill birds and bees.
Just one small seed has deadly consequences for birds and bees. Millions of seeds are treated with neonicotinoid pesticides, contaminating the entire plant as it grows. Plus, most of the pesticides on the seeds don't stay there -- 95% gets rubbed off or washed away, contaminating the surrounding environment. That turns a cornfield into a toxic minefield for a tiny bee or a hungry bird.
Tell your governor to ban toxic seeds that kill birds and bees.
Just one small seed has deadly consequences for birds and bees. Millions of seeds are treated with neonicotinoid pesticides, contaminating the entire plant as it grows. Plus, most of the pesticides on the seeds don't stay there -- 95% gets rubbed off or washed away, contaminating the surrounding environment. That turns a cornfield into a toxic minefield for a tiny bee or a hungry bird.
Tell your governor to ban toxic seeds that kill birds and bees.
Just one small seed has deadly consequences for birds and bees. Millions of seeds are treated with neonicotinoid pesticides, contaminating the entire plant as it grows. Plus, most of the pesticides on the seeds don't stay there -- 95% gets rubbed off or washed away, contaminating the surrounding environment. That turns a cornfield into a toxic minefield for a tiny bee or a hungry bird.
Tell your governor to ban toxic seeds that kill birds and bees.
Just one small seed has deadly consequences for birds and bees. Millions of seeds are treated with neonicotinoid pesticides, contaminating the entire plant as it grows. Plus, most of the pesticides on the seeds don't stay there -- 95% gets rubbed off or washed away, contaminating the surrounding environment. That turns a cornfield into a toxic minefield for a tiny bee or a hungry bird.
Tell your governor to ban toxic seeds that kill birds and bees.
Just one small seed has deadly consequences for birds and bees. Millions of seeds are treated with neonicotinoid pesticides, contaminating the entire plant as it grows. Plus, most of the pesticides on the seeds don't stay there -- 95% gets rubbed off or washed away, contaminating the surrounding environment. That turns a cornfield into a toxic minefield for a tiny bee or a hungry bird.
Tell your governor to ban toxic seeds that kill birds and bees.
Just one small seed has deadly consequences for birds and bees. Millions of seeds are treated with neonicotinoid pesticides, contaminating the entire plant as it grows. Plus, most of the pesticides on the seeds don't stay there -- 95% gets rubbed off or washed away, contaminating the surrounding environment. That turns a cornfield into a toxic minefield for a tiny bee or a hungry bird.
Tell your governor to ban toxic seeds that kill birds and bees.
Just one small seed has deadly consequences for birds and bees. Millions of seeds are treated with neonicotinoid pesticides, contaminating the entire plant as it grows. Plus, most of the pesticides on the seeds don't stay there -- 95% gets rubbed off or washed away, contaminating the surrounding environment. That turns a cornfield into a toxic minefield for a tiny bee or a hungry bird.
Tell your governor to ban toxic seeds that kill birds and bees.
Just one small seed has deadly consequences for birds and bees. Millions of seeds are treated with neonicotinoid pesticides, contaminating the entire plant as it grows. Plus, most of the pesticides on the seeds don't stay there -- 95% gets rubbed off or washed away, contaminating the surrounding environment. That turns a cornfield into a toxic minefield for a tiny bee or a hungry bird.
Tell your governor to ban toxic seeds that kill birds and bees.
Just one small seed has deadly consequences for birds and bees. Millions of seeds are treated with neonicotinoid pesticides, contaminating the entire plant as it grows. Plus, most of the pesticides on the seeds don't stay there -- 95% gets rubbed off or washed away, contaminating the surrounding environment. That turns a cornfield into a toxic minefield for a tiny bee or a hungry bird.
Tell your governor to ban toxic seeds that kill birds and bees.
Just one small seed has deadly consequences for birds and bees. Millions of seeds are treated with neonicotinoid pesticides, contaminating the entire plant as it grows. Plus, most of the pesticides on the seeds don't stay there -- 95% gets rubbed off or washed away, contaminating the surrounding environment. That turns a cornfield into a toxic minefield for a tiny bee or a hungry bird.
Tell your governor to ban toxic seeds that kill birds and bees.
Just one small seed has deadly consequences for birds and bees. Millions of seeds are treated with neonicotinoid pesticides, contaminating the entire plant as it grows. Plus, most of the pesticides on the seeds don't stay there -- 95% gets rubbed off or washed away, contaminating the surrounding environment. That turns a cornfield into a toxic minefield for a tiny bee or a hungry bird.
Tell your governor to ban toxic seeds that kill birds and bees.
Just one small seed has deadly consequences for birds and bees. Millions of seeds are treated with neonicotinoid pesticides, contaminating the entire plant as it grows. Plus, most of the pesticides on the seeds don't stay there -- 95% gets rubbed off or washed away, contaminating the surrounding environment. That turns a cornfield into a toxic minefield for a tiny bee or a hungry bird.
Tell your governor to ban toxic seeds that kill birds and bees.
Just one small seed has deadly consequences for birds and bees. Millions of seeds are treated with neonicotinoid pesticides, contaminating the entire plant as it grows. Plus, most of the pesticides on the seeds don't stay there -- 95% gets rubbed off or washed away, contaminating the surrounding environment. That turns a cornfield into a toxic minefield for a tiny bee or a hungry bird.
Tell your governor to ban toxic seeds that kill birds and bees.
Just one small seed has deadly consequences for birds and bees. Millions of seeds are treated with neonicotinoid pesticides, contaminating the entire plant as it grows. Plus, most of the pesticides on the seeds don't stay there -- 95% gets rubbed off or washed away, contaminating the surrounding environment. That turns a cornfield into a toxic minefield for a tiny bee or a hungry bird.
Tell your governor to ban toxic seeds that kill birds and bees.
Just one small seed has deadly consequences for birds and bees. Millions of seeds are treated with neonicotinoid pesticides, contaminating the entire plant as it grows. Plus, most of the pesticides on the seeds don't stay there -- 95% gets rubbed off or washed away, contaminating the surrounding environment. That turns a cornfield into a toxic minefield for a tiny bee or a hungry bird.
Tell your governor to ban toxic seeds that kill birds and bees.
Just one small seed has deadly consequences for birds and bees. Millions of seeds are treated with neonicotinoid pesticides, contaminating the entire plant as it grows. Plus, most of the pesticides on the seeds don't stay there -- 95% gets rubbed off or washed away, contaminating the surrounding environment. That turns a cornfield into a toxic minefield for a tiny bee or a hungry bird.
Tell your governor to ban toxic seeds that kill birds and bees.
Just one small seed has deadly consequences for birds and bees. Millions of seeds are treated with neonicotinoid pesticides, contaminating the entire plant as it grows. Plus, most of the pesticides on the seeds don't stay there -- 95% gets rubbed off or washed away, contaminating the surrounding environment. That turns a cornfield into a toxic minefield for a tiny bee or a hungry bird.
Tell your governor to ban toxic seeds that kill birds and bees.
Just one small seed has deadly consequences for birds and bees. Millions of seeds are treated with neonicotinoid pesticides, contaminating the entire plant as it grows. Plus, most of the pesticides on the seeds don't stay there -- 95% gets rubbed off or washed away, contaminating the surrounding environment. That turns a cornfield into a toxic minefield for a tiny bee or a hungry bird.
Tell your governor to ban toxic seeds that kill birds and bees.
Just one small seed has deadly consequences for birds and bees. Millions of seeds are treated with neonicotinoid pesticides, contaminating the entire plant as it grows. Plus, most of the pesticides on the seeds don't stay there -- 95% gets rubbed off or washed away, contaminating the surrounding environment. That turns a cornfield into a toxic minefield for a tiny bee or a hungry bird.
Tell your governor to ban toxic seeds that kill birds and bees.
Every day, companies manufacture and sell us plastic products and packaging meant to be used once and then thrown away, often mislabeling them as recyclable. More than 90% end up in a landfill. And who pays to manage and dispose of that plastic waste? Us, the consumers, taxpayers and the environment in our communities.
Tell your legislators that it's time we move beyond plastics by requiring companies to use less plastic packaging and to pay for more recycling options. The responsibility of the waste companies produce should be on them -- not us and our communities. Urge your legislators to pass legislation to move us beyond plastics.
EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan,
Forty-eight percent of honeybee colonies in the U.S. died last year, making it the second-worst year for honeybees yet. The use of neonicotinoid pesticides on yards, gardens and farms has been found to play a major role in bee die-offs.
We can't keep allowing these toxic pesticides to kill off millions of bees, especially when they pollinate some of our most important crops. I urge the Environmental Protection Agency to ban the worst uses of neonicotinoid pesticides.
Sincerely,
EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan,
Forty-eight percent of honeybee colonies in the U.S. died last year, making it the second-worst year for honeybees yet. The use of neonicotinoid pesticides on yards, gardens and farms has been found to play a major role in bee die-offs.
We can't keep allowing these toxic pesticides to kill off millions of bees, especially when they pollinate some of our most important crops. I urge the Environmental Protection Agency to ban the worst uses of neonicotinoid pesticides.
Sincerely,
EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan,
Forty-eight percent of honeybee colonies in the U.S. died last year, making it the second-worst year for honeybees yet. The use of neonicotinoid pesticides on yards, gardens and farms has been found to play a major role in bee die-offs.
We can't keep allowing these toxic pesticides to kill off millions of bees, especially when they pollinate some of our most important crops. I urge the Environmental Protection Agency to ban the worst uses of neonicotinoid pesticides.
Sincerely,
EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan,
Forty-eight percent of honeybee colonies in the U.S. died last year, making it the second-worst year for honeybees yet. The use of neonicotinoid pesticides on yards, gardens and farms has been found to play a major role in bee die-offs.
We can't keep allowing these toxic pesticides to kill off millions of bees, especially when they pollinate some of our most important crops. I urge the Environmental Protection Agency to ban the worst uses of neonicotinoid pesticides.
Sincerely,
EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan,
Forty-eight percent of honeybee colonies in the U.S. died last year, making it the second-worst year for honeybees yet. The use of neonicotinoid pesticides on yards, gardens and farms has been found to play a major role in bee die-offs.
We can't keep allowing these toxic pesticides to kill off millions of bees, especially when they pollinate some of our most important crops. I urge the Environmental Protection Agency to ban the worst uses of neonicotinoid pesticides.
Sincerely,
EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan,
Forty-eight percent of honeybee colonies in the U.S. died last year, making it the second-worst year for honeybees yet. The use of neonicotinoid pesticides on yards, gardens and farms has been found to play a major role in bee die-offs.
We can't keep allowing these toxic pesticides to kill off millions of bees, especially when they pollinate some of our most important crops. I urge the Environmental Protection Agency to ban the worst uses of neonicotinoid pesticides.
Sincerely,
EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan,
Forty-eight percent of honeybee colonies in the U.S. died last year, making it the second-worst year for honeybees yet. The use of neonicotinoid pesticides on yards, gardens and farms has been found to play a major role in bee die-offs.
We can't keep allowing these toxic pesticides to kill off millions of bees, especially when they pollinate some of our most important crops. I urge the Environmental Protection Agency to ban the worst uses of neonicotinoid pesticides.
Sincerely,
EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan,
Forty-eight percent of honeybee colonies in the U.S. died last year, making it the second-worst year for honeybees yet. The use of neonicotinoid pesticides on yards, gardens and farms has been found to play a major role in bee die-offs.
We can't keep allowing these toxic pesticides to kill off millions of bees, especially when they pollinate some of our most important crops. I urge the Environmental Protection Agency to ban the worst uses of neonicotinoid pesticides.
Sincerely,
EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan,
Forty-eight percent of honeybee colonies in the U.S. died last year, making it the second-worst year for honeybees yet. The use of neonicotinoid pesticides on yards, gardens and farms has been found to play a major role in bee die-offs.
We can't keep allowing these toxic pesticides to kill off millions of bees, especially when they pollinate some of our most important crops. I urge the Environmental Protection Agency to ban the worst uses of neonicotinoid pesticides.
Sincerely,
EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan,
Forty-eight percent of honeybee colonies in the U.S. died last year, making it the second-worst year for honeybees yet. The use of neonicotinoid pesticides on yards, gardens and farms has been found to play a major role in bee die-offs.
We can't keep allowing these toxic pesticides to kill off millions of bees, especially when they pollinate some of our most important crops. I urge the Environmental Protection Agency to ban the worst uses of neonicotinoid pesticides.
Sincerely,
EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan,
Forty-eight percent of honeybee colonies in the U.S. died last year, making it the second-worst year for honeybees yet. The use of neonicotinoid pesticides on yards, gardens and farms has been found to play a major role in bee die-offs.
We can't keep allowing these toxic pesticides to kill off millions of bees, especially when they pollinate some of our most important crops. I urge the Environmental Protection Agency to ban the worst uses of neonicotinoid pesticides.
Sincerely,
EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan,
Forty-eight percent of honeybee colonies in the U.S. died last year, making it the second-worst year for honeybees yet. The use of neonicotinoid pesticides on yards, gardens and farms has been found to play a major role in bee die-offs.
We can't keep allowing these toxic pesticides to kill off millions of bees, especially when they pollinate some of our most important crops. I urge the Environmental Protection Agency to ban the worst uses of neonicotinoid pesticides.
Sincerely,
EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan,
Forty-eight percent of honeybee colonies in the U.S. died last year, making it the second-worst year for honeybees yet. The use of neonicotinoid pesticides on yards, gardens and farms has been found to play a major role in bee die-offs.
We can't keep allowing these toxic pesticides to kill off millions of bees, especially when they pollinate some of our most important crops. I urge the Environmental Protection Agency to ban the worst uses of neonicotinoid pesticides.
Sincerely,
EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan,
Forty-eight percent of honeybee colonies in the U.S. died last year, making it the second-worst year for honeybees yet. The use of neonicotinoid pesticides on yards, gardens and farms has been found to play a major role in bee die-offs.
We can't keep allowing these toxic pesticides to kill off millions of bees, especially when they pollinate some of our most important crops. I urge the Environmental Protection Agency to ban the worst uses of neonicotinoid pesticides.
Sincerely,
EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan,
Forty-eight percent of honeybee colonies in the U.S. died last year, making it the second-worst year for honeybees yet. The use of neonicotinoid pesticides on yards, gardens and farms has been found to play a major role in bee die-offs.
We can't keep allowing these toxic pesticides to kill off millions of bees, especially when they pollinate some of our most important crops. I urge the Environmental Protection Agency to ban the worst uses of neonicotinoid pesticides.
Sincerely,
EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan,
Forty-eight percent of honeybee colonies in the U.S. died last year, making it the second-worst year for honeybees yet. The use of neonicotinoid pesticides on yards, gardens and farms has been found to play a major role in bee die-offs.
We can't keep allowing these toxic pesticides to kill off millions of bees, especially when they pollinate some of our most important crops. I urge the Environmental Protection Agency to ban the worst uses of neonicotinoid pesticides.
Sincerely,
EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan,
Forty-eight percent of honeybee colonies in the U.S. died last year, making it the second-worst year for honeybees yet. The use of neonicotinoid pesticides on yards, gardens and farms has been found to play a major role in bee die-offs.
We can't keep allowing these toxic pesticides to kill off millions of bees, especially when they pollinate some of our most important crops. I urge the Environmental Protection Agency to ban the worst uses of neonicotinoid pesticides.
Sincerely,
EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan,
Forty-eight percent of honeybee colonies in the U.S. died last year, making it the second-worst year for honeybees yet. The use of neonicotinoid pesticides on yards, gardens and farms has been found to play a major role in bee die-offs.
We can't keep allowing these toxic pesticides to kill off millions of bees, especially when they pollinate some of our most important crops. I urge the Environmental Protection Agency to ban the worst uses of neonicotinoid pesticides.
Sincerely,
EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan,
Forty-eight percent of honeybee colonies in the U.S. died last year, making it the second-worst year for honeybees yet. The use of neonicotinoid pesticides on yards, gardens and farms has been found to play a major role in bee die-offs.
We can't keep allowing these toxic pesticides to kill off millions of bees, especially when they pollinate some of our most important crops. I urge the Environmental Protection Agency to ban the worst uses of neonicotinoid pesticides.
Sincerely,
EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan,
Forty-eight percent of honeybee colonies in the U.S. died last year, making it the second-worst year for honeybees yet. The use of neonicotinoid pesticides on yards, gardens and farms has been found to play a major role in bee die-offs.
We can't keep allowing these toxic pesticides to kill off millions of bees, especially when they pollinate some of our most important crops. I urge the Environmental Protection Agency to ban the worst uses of neonicotinoid pesticides.
Sincerely,
EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan,
Forty-eight percent of honeybee colonies in the U.S. died last year, making it the second-worst year for honeybees yet. The use of neonicotinoid pesticides on yards, gardens and farms has been found to play a major role in bee die-offs.
We can't keep allowing these toxic pesticides to kill off millions of bees, especially when they pollinate some of our most important crops. I urge the Environmental Protection Agency to ban the worst uses of neonicotinoid pesticides.
Sincerely,
EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan,
Forty-eight percent of honeybee colonies in the U.S. died last year, making it the second-worst year for honeybees yet. The use of neonicotinoid pesticides on yards, gardens and farms has been found to play a major role in bee die-offs.
We can't keep allowing these toxic pesticides to kill off millions of bees, especially when they pollinate some of our most important crops. I urge the Environmental Protection Agency to ban the worst uses of neonicotinoid pesticides.
Sincerely,
EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan,
Forty-eight percent of honeybee colonies in the U.S. died last year, making it the second-worst year for honeybees yet. The use of neonicotinoid pesticides on yards, gardens and farms has been found to play a major role in bee die-offs.
We can't keep allowing these toxic pesticides to kill off millions of bees, especially when they pollinate some of our most important crops. I urge the Environmental Protection Agency to ban the worst uses of neonicotinoid pesticides.
Sincerely,
EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan,
Forty-eight percent of honeybee colonies in the U.S. died last year, making it the second-worst year for honeybees yet. The use of neonicotinoid pesticides on yards, gardens and farms has been found to play a major role in bee die-offs.
We can't keep allowing these toxic pesticides to kill off millions of bees, especially when they pollinate some of our most important crops. I urge the Environmental Protection Agency to ban the worst uses of neonicotinoid pesticides.
Sincerely,
Glyphosate -- the main active ingredient in Bayer's Roundup -- is a probable human carcinogen. Why are we still allowing it to be sprayed where we live, work, and play?
In order to protect our health, we need to ban Roundup in states across the country unless and until it's proven safe. Send a message calling on your governor to ban Roundup today.
Glyphosate -- the main active ingredient in Bayer's Roundup -- is a probable human carcinogen. Why are we still allowing it to be sprayed where we live, work, and play?
In order to protect our health, we need to ban Roundup in states across the country unless and until it's proven safe. Send a message calling on your governor to ban Roundup today.
Glyphosate -- the main active ingredient in Bayer's Roundup -- is a probable human carcinogen. Why are we still allowing it to be sprayed where we live, work, and play?
In order to protect our health, we need to ban Roundup in states across the country unless and until it's proven safe. Send a message calling on your governor to ban Roundup today.
Glyphosate -- the main active ingredient in Bayer's Roundup -- is a probable human carcinogen. Why are we still allowing it to be sprayed where we live, work, and play?
In order to protect our health, we need to ban Roundup in states across the country unless and until it's proven safe. Send a message calling on your governor to ban Roundup today.
Glyphosate -- the main active ingredient in Bayer's Roundup -- is a probable human carcinogen. Why are we still allowing it to be sprayed where we live, work, and play?
In order to protect our health, we need to ban Roundup in states across the country unless and until it's proven safe. Send a message calling on your governor to ban Roundup today.
Glyphosate -- the main active ingredient in Bayer's Roundup -- is a probable human carcinogen. Why are we still allowing it to be sprayed where we live, work, and play?
In order to protect our health, we need to ban Roundup in states across the country unless and until it's proven safe. Send a message calling on your governor to ban Roundup today.
Glyphosate -- the main active ingredient in Bayer's Roundup -- is a probable human carcinogen. Why are we still allowing it to be sprayed where we live, work, and play?
In order to protect our health, we need to ban Roundup in states across the country unless and until it's proven safe. Send a message calling on your governor to ban Roundup today.
Glyphosate -- the main active ingredient in Bayer's Roundup -- is a probable human carcinogen. Why are we still allowing it to be sprayed where we live, work, and play?
In order to protect our health, we need to ban Roundup in states across the country unless and until it's proven safe. Send a message calling on your governor to ban Roundup today.
Glyphosate -- the main active ingredient in Bayer's Roundup -- is a probable human carcinogen. Why are we still allowing it to be sprayed where we live, work, and play?
In order to protect our health, we need to ban Roundup in states across the country unless and until it's proven safe. Send a message calling on your governor to ban Roundup today.
Glyphosate -- the main active ingredient in Bayer's Roundup -- is a probable human carcinogen. Why are we still allowing it to be sprayed where we live, work, and play?
In order to protect our health, we need to ban Roundup in states across the country unless and until it's proven safe. Send a message calling on your governor to ban Roundup today.
Glyphosate -- the main active ingredient in Bayer's Roundup -- is a probable human carcinogen. Why are we still allowing it to be sprayed where we live, work, and play?
In order to protect our health, we need to ban Roundup in states across the country unless and until it's proven safe. Send a message calling on your governor to ban Roundup today.
Glyphosate -- the main active ingredient in Bayer's Roundup -- is a probable human carcinogen. Why are we still allowing it to be sprayed where we live, work, and play?
In order to protect our health, we need to ban Roundup in states across the country unless and until it's proven safe. Send a message calling on your governor to ban Roundup today.
Glyphosate -- the main active ingredient in Bayer's Roundup -- is a probable human carcinogen. Why are we still allowing it to be sprayed where we live, work, and play?
In order to protect our health, we need to ban Roundup in states across the country unless and until it's proven safe. Send a message calling on your governor to ban Roundup today.
Glyphosate -- the main active ingredient in Bayer's Roundup -- is a probable human carcinogen. Why are we still allowing it to be sprayed where we live, work, and play?
In order to protect our health, we need to ban Roundup in states across the country unless and until it's proven safe. Send a message calling on your governor to ban Roundup today.
Glyphosate -- the main active ingredient in Bayer's Roundup -- is a probable human carcinogen. Why are we still allowing it to be sprayed where we live, work, and play?
In order to protect our health, we need to ban Roundup in states across the country unless and until it's proven safe. Send a message calling on your governor to ban Roundup today.
Glyphosate -- the main active ingredient in Bayer's Roundup -- is a probable human carcinogen. Why are we still allowing it to be sprayed where we live, work, and play?
In order to protect our health, we need to ban Roundup in states across the country unless and until it's proven safe. Send a message calling on your governor to ban Roundup today.
Glyphosate -- the main active ingredient in Bayer's Roundup -- is a probable human carcinogen. Why are we still allowing it to be sprayed where we live, work, and play?
In order to protect our health, we need to ban Roundup in states across the country unless and until it's proven safe. Send a message calling on your governor to ban Roundup today.
Glyphosate -- the main active ingredient in Bayer's Roundup -- is a probable human carcinogen. Why are we still allowing it to be sprayed where we live, work, and play?
In order to protect our health, we need to ban Roundup in states across the country unless and until it's proven safe. Send a message calling on your governor to ban Roundup today.
Glyphosate -- the main active ingredient in Bayer's Roundup -- is a probable human carcinogen. Why are we still allowing it to be sprayed where we live, work, and play?
In order to protect our health, we need to ban Roundup in states across the country unless and until it's proven safe. Send a message calling on your governor to ban Roundup today.
Glyphosate -- the main active ingredient in Bayer's Roundup -- is a probable human carcinogen. Why are we still allowing it to be sprayed where we live, work, and play?
In order to protect our health, we need to ban Roundup in states across the country unless and until it's proven safe. Send a message calling on your governor to ban Roundup today.
Glyphosate -- the main active ingredient in Bayer's Roundup -- is a probable human carcinogen. Why are we still allowing it to be sprayed where we live, work, and play?
In order to protect our health, we need to ban Roundup in states across the country unless and until it's proven safe. Send a message calling on your governor to ban Roundup today.
Glyphosate -- the main active ingredient in Bayer's Roundup -- is a probable human carcinogen. Why are we still allowing it to be sprayed where we live, work, and play?
In order to protect our health, we need to ban Roundup in states across the country unless and until it's proven safe. Send a message calling on your governor to ban Roundup today.
Glyphosate -- the main active ingredient in Bayer's Roundup -- is a probable human carcinogen. Why are we still allowing it to be sprayed where we live, work, and play?
In order to protect our health, we need to ban Roundup in states across the country unless and until it's proven safe. Send a message calling on your governor to ban Roundup today.
Glyphosate -- the main active ingredient in Bayer's Roundup -- is a probable human carcinogen. Why are we still allowing it to be sprayed where we live, work, and play?
In order to protect our health, we need to ban Roundup in states across the country unless and until it's proven safe. Send a message calling on your governor to ban Roundup today.
A new proposed rule from the Environmental Protection Agency would ensure toxic coal ash sites that are currently not regulated by federal rules are cleaned up and closed in a way that would protect communities and Georgia's waterways. Send an email to EPA today in favor of the rule.
Just one small seed has deadly consequences for birds and bees. Millions of seeds are treated with neonicotinoid pesticides, contaminating the entire plant as it grows. Plus, most of the pesticides on the seeds don't stay there -- 95% gets rubbed off or washed away, contaminating the surrounding environment. That turns a cornfield into a toxic minefield for a tiny bee or a hungry bird.
Tell your governor to ban toxic seeds that kill birds and bees.
One-third of species in the United States are currently threatened with extinction. That includes everything from bumblebees to manatees.
To protect threatened and endangered wildlife and plants, join us in calling on the U.S. Senate to support the Recovering America's Wildlife Act. If passed, this bill will give state and tribal agencies funding to protect at risk species.
One-third of species in the United States are currently threatened with extinction. That includes everything from bumblebees to manatees.
To protect threatened and endangered wildlife and plants, join us in calling on the U.S. Senate to support the Recovering America's Wildlife Act. If passed, this bill will give state and tribal agencies funding to protect at risk species.
One-third of species in the United States are currently threatened with extinction. That includes everything from bumblebees to manatees.
To protect threatened and endangered wildlife and plants, join us in calling on the U.S. Senate to support the Recovering America's Wildlife Act. If passed, this bill will give state and tribal agencies funding to protect at risk species.
One-third of species in the United States are currently threatened with extinction. That includes everything from bumblebees to manatees.
To protect threatened and endangered wildlife and plants, join us in calling on the U.S. Senate to support the Recovering America's Wildlife Act. If passed, this bill will give state and tribal agencies funding to protect at risk species.
One-third of species in the United States are currently threatened with extinction. That includes everything from bumblebees to manatees.
To protect threatened and endangered wildlife and plants, join us in calling on the U.S. Senate to support the Recovering America's Wildlife Act. If passed, this bill will give state and tribal agencies funding to protect at risk species.
One-third of species in the United States are currently threatened with extinction. That includes everything from bumblebees to manatees.
To protect threatened and endangered wildlife and plants, join us in calling on the U.S. Senate to support the Recovering America's Wildlife Act. If passed, this bill will give state and tribal agencies funding to protect at risk species.
One-third of species in the United States are currently threatened with extinction. That includes everything from bumblebees to manatees.
To protect threatened and endangered wildlife and plants, join us in calling on the U.S. Senate to support the Recovering America's Wildlife Act. If passed, this bill will give state and tribal agencies funding to protect at risk species.
One-third of species in the United States are currently threatened with extinction. That includes everything from bumblebees to manatees.
To protect threatened and endangered wildlife and plants, join us in calling on the U.S. Senate to support the Recovering America's Wildlife Act. If passed, this bill will give state and tribal agencies funding to protect at risk species.
One-third of species in the United States are currently threatened with extinction. That includes everything from bumblebees to manatees.
To protect threatened and endangered wildlife and plants, join us in calling on the U.S. Senate to support the Recovering America's Wildlife Act. If passed, this bill will give state and tribal agencies funding to protect at risk species.
One-third of species in the United States are currently threatened with extinction. That includes everything from bumblebees to manatees.
To protect threatened and endangered wildlife and plants, join us in calling on the U.S. Senate to support the Recovering America's Wildlife Act. If passed, this bill will give state and tribal agencies funding to protect at risk species.
One-third of species in the United States are currently threatened with extinction. That includes everything from bumblebees to manatees.
To protect threatened and endangered wildlife and plants, join us in calling on the U.S. Senate to support the Recovering America's Wildlife Act. If passed, this bill will give state and tribal agencies funding to protect at risk species.
One-third of species in the United States are currently threatened with extinction. That includes everything from bumblebees to manatees.
To protect threatened and endangered wildlife and plants, join us in calling on the U.S. Senate to support the Recovering America's Wildlife Act. If passed, this bill will give state and tribal agencies funding to protect at risk species.
One-third of species in the United States are currently threatened with extinction. That includes everything from bumblebees to manatees.
To protect threatened and endangered wildlife and plants, join us in calling on the U.S. Senate to support the Recovering America's Wildlife Act. If passed, this bill will give state and tribal agencies funding to protect at risk species.
One-third of species in the United States are currently threatened with extinction. That includes everything from bumblebees to manatees.
To protect threatened and endangered wildlife and plants, join us in calling on the U.S. Senate to support the Recovering America's Wildlife Act. If passed, this bill will give state and tribal agencies funding to protect at risk species.
One-third of species in the United States are currently threatened with extinction. That includes everything from bumblebees to manatees.
To protect threatened and endangered wildlife and plants, join us in calling on the U.S. Senate to support the Recovering America's Wildlife Act. If passed, this bill will give state and tribal agencies funding to protect at risk species.
One-third of species in the United States are currently threatened with extinction. That includes everything from bumblebees to manatees.
To protect threatened and endangered wildlife and plants, join us in calling on the U.S. Senate to support the Recovering America's Wildlife Act. If passed, this bill will give state and tribal agencies funding to protect at risk species.
One-third of species in the United States are currently threatened with extinction. That includes everything from bumblebees to manatees.
To protect threatened and endangered wildlife and plants, join us in calling on the U.S. Senate to support the Recovering America's Wildlife Act. If passed, this bill will give state and tribal agencies funding to protect at risk species.
One-third of species in the United States are currently threatened with extinction. That includes everything from bumblebees to manatees.
To protect threatened and endangered wildlife and plants, join us in calling on the U.S. Senate to support the Recovering America's Wildlife Act. If passed, this bill will give state and tribal agencies funding to protect at risk species.
One-third of species in the United States are currently threatened with extinction. That includes everything from bumblebees to manatees.
To protect threatened and endangered wildlife and plants, join us in calling on the U.S. Senate to support the Recovering America's Wildlife Act. If passed, this bill will give state and tribal agencies funding to protect at risk species.
One-third of species in the United States are currently threatened with extinction. That includes everything from bumblebees to manatees.
To protect threatened and endangered wildlife and plants, join us in calling on the U.S. Senate to support the Recovering America's Wildlife Act. If passed, this bill will give state and tribal agencies funding to protect at risk species.
One-third of species in the United States are currently threatened with extinction. That includes everything from bumblebees to manatees.
To protect threatened and endangered wildlife and plants, join us in calling on the U.S. Senate to support the Recovering America's Wildlife Act. If passed, this bill will give state and tribal agencies funding to protect at risk species.
One-third of species in the United States are currently threatened with extinction. That includes everything from bumblebees to manatees.
To protect threatened and endangered wildlife and plants, join us in calling on the U.S. Senate to support the Recovering America's Wildlife Act. If passed, this bill will give state and tribal agencies funding to protect at risk species.
One-third of species in the United States are currently threatened with extinction. That includes everything from bumblebees to manatees.
To protect threatened and endangered wildlife and plants, join us in calling on the U.S. Senate to support the Recovering America's Wildlife Act. If passed, this bill will give state and tribal agencies funding to protect at risk species.
One-third of species in the United States are currently threatened with extinction. That includes everything from bumblebees to manatees.
To protect threatened and endangered wildlife and plants, join us in calling on the U.S. Senate to support the Recovering America's Wildlife Act. If passed, this bill will give state and tribal agencies funding to protect at risk species.
One-third of species in the United States are currently threatened with extinction. That includes everything from bumblebees to manatees.
To protect threatened and endangered wildlife and plants, join us in calling on the U.S. Senate to support the Recovering America's Wildlife Act. If passed, this bill will give state and tribal agencies funding to protect at risk species.
One-third of species in the United States are currently threatened with extinction. That includes everything from bumblebees to manatees.
To protect threatened and endangered wildlife and plants, join us in calling on the U.S. Senate to support the Recovering America's Wildlife Act. If passed, this bill will give state and tribal agencies funding to protect at risk species.
One-third of species in the United States are currently threatened with extinction. That includes everything from bumblebees to manatees.
To protect threatened and endangered wildlife and plants, join us in calling on the U.S. Senate to support the Recovering America's Wildlife Act. If passed, this bill will give state and tribal agencies funding to protect at risk species.
One-third of species in the United States are currently threatened with extinction. That includes everything from bumblebees to manatees.
To protect threatened and endangered wildlife and plants, join us in calling on the U.S. Senate to support the Recovering America's Wildlife Act. If passed, this bill will give state and tribal agencies funding to protect at risk species.
One-third of species in the United States are currently threatened with extinction. That includes everything from bumblebees to manatees.
To protect threatened and endangered wildlife and plants, join us in calling on the U.S. Senate to support the Recovering America's Wildlife Act. If passed, this bill will give state and tribal agencies funding to protect at risk species.
One-third of species in the United States are currently threatened with extinction. That includes everything from bumblebees to manatees.
To protect threatened and endangered wildlife and plants, join us in calling on the U.S. Senate to support the Recovering America's Wildlife Act. If passed, this bill will give state and tribal agencies funding to protect at risk species.
Air travelers' complaints fall through the cracks in part because the Department of Transportation doesn't have enough resources, and because many consumers file airline complaints with their state because that's how the process works with most industries -- but not airlines.
State attorneys general should be empowered to protect consumers by enforcing laws as well, as they can do for nearly every other industry.
The Grand Canyon, one of the world's most iconic landscapes, is at risk. Surrounding the park, there are over 600 uranium mining claims, some as close as 10 miles from the park boundary.
President Biden can ensure these mining claims never become operational by designating a national monument on the area surrounding the Grand Canyon. Send a message calling on President Biden to establish the Baaj Nwaavjo I'tah Kukveni Grand Canyon National Monument today.
We can't keep leaving the fate of nearly 60 million acres of America's last wild forests, including 9.2 million acres of Alaska's Tongass, to the whims of presidents.
To keep the chainsaws and bulldozers at bay, we need permanent protections for these roadless forests.
Tell your senators: Pass the Roadless Area Conservation Act.
A recent victory for the Boundary Waters may be short-lived. Legislation introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives aims to reverse a 20-year ban in the headwaters of the Boundary Waters. If passed, toxic sulfur-ore mining could come and pollute the wildernesses' pristine waters.
With the help of environmental advocates like you, we were able to secure this ban on mining near the Boundary Waters. Now, we need your help defending it. Urge your U.S. House representative to support permanently protecting the Boundary Waters.
Send a message to the California Fish and Game Commission urging them to strengthen and expand the state's marine protected area network.
California celebrates ten years since we set aside 16% of our coastal waters as off limits to all destructive activity. The review of the network found that protecting our ocean is working. Now we need to show support to strengthen and expand the network to bring us closer to our goal of protecting 30% of our coastal waters by 2030.
Please personalize the message to make it your own.
NOAA--NMFS--2023--0027
Dear Assistant Regional Administrator David Bernhart:
We, the undersigned, support the proposal to enforce year-round, 10-knot vessel speed restrictions in parts of the Gulf of Mexico to protect the endangered Rice's whale.
Rice's whales are one of the most endangered large whale species on the planet. There are currently fewer than 100 living Rice's whales, and your own scientists have reported that even a single reproductive-age female's death would be catastrophic to the species' existence.
Any way to mitigate these whales' survival risks should be implemented immediately.
Slowing down vessel speed for the sake of Rice's whales represents a critical and essential step. In addition, we urge you to enact a mandatory 10-knot speed limit and a ban on vessel transits at night.
Sincerely,
Toxic uranium mining already poses a danger to the Grand Canyon watershed, and mining companies have asked to expand their operations.
Yet U.S. House Rep. Andy Biggs has proposed a bill that would make new protections for the Grand Canyon all but impossible.
Please join Environmental Action in telling Congress to protect the Grand Canyon and oppose the Biggs bill.
Pollinator populations are collapsing, and our ecosystems -- and even the food we eat -- are in jeopardy as a result.
As many as 3 in 4 of our food crops rely on pollinators -- especially bees -- to reproduce, along with nearly all flowering plants. As pesticide use and climate change cause more and more of our pollinators to disappear, we're facing tremendous challenges to the health of our planet.
To protect our ecosystems, we need to protect our pollinators -- and we can start by getting rid of some of the pesticides that are most harmful to some of our best pollinators.
Tell President Biden to ban the worst uses of bee-killing neonicotinoid pesticides.
Roughly one million animals are killed on America's roads every day. This includes birds, large mammals and amphibians as well as rare and endangered species such as the Florida panther, Mexican wolf and ocelot. These incidents hurt people, too. Vehicle collisions with large mammals cause over $8 billion in damages and around 200 deaths annually.
Fortunately, there's a solution: wildlife crossings over or under roads that link fragmented habitat so animals and people can travel safely. Thanks to a new Wildlife Crossing Pilot Program in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, states can now apply for federal funding to build these pathways. Tell your governor to apply and establish more wildlife crossings.
Roughly one million animals are killed on America's roads every day. This includes birds, large mammals and amphibians as well as rare and endangered species such as the Florida panther, Mexican wolf and ocelot. These incidents hurt people, too. Vehicle collisions with large mammals cause over $8 billion in damages and around 200 deaths annually.
Fortunately, there's a solution: wildlife crossings over or under roads that link fragmented habitat so animals and people can travel safely. Thanks to a new Wildlife Crossing Pilot Program in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, states can now apply for federal funding to build these pathways. Tell your governor to apply and establish more wildlife crossings.
Roughly one million animals are killed on America's roads every day. This includes birds, large mammals and amphibians as well as rare and endangered species such as the Florida panther, Mexican wolf and ocelot. These incidents hurt people, too. Vehicle collisions with large mammals cause over $8 billion in damages and around 200 deaths annually.
Fortunately, there's a solution: wildlife crossings over or under roads that link fragmented habitat so animals and people can travel safely. Thanks to a new Wildlife Crossing Pilot Program in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, states can now apply for federal funding to build these pathways. Tell your governor to apply and establish more wildlife crossings.
Roughly one million animals are killed on America's roads every day. This includes birds, large mammals and amphibians as well as rare and endangered species such as the Florida panther, Mexican wolf and ocelot. These incidents hurt people, too. Vehicle collisions with large mammals cause over $8 billion in damages and around 200 deaths annually.
Fortunately, there's a solution: wildlife crossings over or under roads that link fragmented habitat so animals and people can travel safely. Thanks to a new Wildlife Crossing Pilot Program in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, states can now apply for federal funding to build these pathways. Tell your governor to apply and establish more wildlife crossings.
Roughly one million animals are killed on America's roads every day. This includes birds, large mammals and amphibians as well as rare and endangered species such as the Florida panther, Mexican wolf and ocelot. These incidents hurt people, too. Vehicle collisions with large mammals cause over $8 billion in damages and around 200 deaths annually.
Fortunately, there's a solution: wildlife crossings over or under roads that link fragmented habitat so animals and people can travel safely. Thanks to a new Wildlife Crossing Pilot Program in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, states can now apply for federal funding to build these pathways. Tell your governor to apply and establish more wildlife crossings.
Roughly one million animals are killed on America's roads every day. This includes birds, large mammals and amphibians as well as rare and endangered species such as the Florida panther, Mexican wolf and ocelot. These incidents hurt people, too. Vehicle collisions with large mammals cause over $8 billion in damages and around 200 deaths annually.
Fortunately, there's a solution: wildlife crossings over or under roads that link fragmented habitat so animals and people can travel safely. Thanks to a new Wildlife Crossing Pilot Program in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, states can now apply for federal funding to build these pathways. Tell your governor to apply and establish more wildlife crossings.
Roughly one million animals are killed on America's roads every day. This includes birds, large mammals and amphibians as well as rare and endangered species such as the Florida panther, Mexican wolf and ocelot. These incidents hurt people, too. Vehicle collisions with large mammals cause over $8 billion in damages and around 200 deaths annually.
Fortunately, there's a solution: wildlife crossings over or under roads that link fragmented habitat so animals and people can travel safely. Thanks to a new Wildlife Crossing Pilot Program in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, states can now apply for federal funding to build these pathways. Tell your governor to apply and establish more wildlife crossings.
Roughly one million animals are killed on America's roads every day. This includes birds, large mammals and amphibians as well as rare and endangered species such as the Florida panther, Mexican wolf and ocelot. These incidents hurt people, too. Vehicle collisions with large mammals cause over $8 billion in damages and around 200 deaths annually.
Fortunately, there's a solution: wildlife crossings over or under roads that link fragmented habitat so animals and people can travel safely. Thanks to a new Wildlife Crossing Pilot Program in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, states can now apply for federal funding to build these pathways. Tell your governor to apply and establish more wildlife crossings.
Roughly one million animals are killed on America's roads every day. This includes birds, large mammals and amphibians as well as rare and endangered species such as the Florida panther, Mexican wolf and ocelot. These incidents hurt people, too. Vehicle collisions with large mammals cause over $8 billion in damages and around 200 deaths annually.
Fortunately, there's a solution: wildlife crossings over or under roads that link fragmented habitat so animals and people can travel safely. Thanks to a new Wildlife Crossing Pilot Program in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, states can now apply for federal funding to build these pathways. Tell your governor to apply and establish more wildlife crossings.
Roughly one million animals are killed on America's roads every day. This includes birds, large mammals and amphibians as well as rare and endangered species such as the Florida panther, Mexican wolf and ocelot. These incidents hurt people, too. Vehicle collisions with large mammals cause over $8 billion in damages and around 200 deaths annually.
Fortunately, there's a solution: wildlife crossings over or under roads that link fragmented habitat so animals and people can travel safely. Thanks to a new Wildlife Crossing Pilot Program in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, states can now apply for federal funding to build these pathways. Tell your governor to apply and establish more wildlife crossings.
Roughly one million animals are killed on America's roads every day. This includes birds, large mammals and amphibians as well as rare and endangered species such as the Florida panther, Mexican wolf and ocelot. These incidents hurt people, too. Vehicle collisions with large mammals cause over $8 billion in damages and around 200 deaths annually.
Fortunately, there's a solution: wildlife crossings over or under roads that link fragmented habitat so animals and people can travel safely. Thanks to a new Wildlife Crossing Pilot Program in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, states can now apply for federal funding to build these pathways. Tell your governor to apply and establish more wildlife crossings.
Roughly one million animals are killed on America's roads every day. This includes birds, large mammals and amphibians as well as rare and endangered species such as the Florida panther, Mexican wolf and ocelot. These incidents hurt people, too. Vehicle collisions with large mammals cause over $8 billion in damages and around 200 deaths annually.
Fortunately, there's a solution: wildlife crossings over or under roads that link fragmented habitat so animals and people can travel safely. Thanks to a new Wildlife Crossing Pilot Program in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, states can now apply for federal funding to build these pathways. Tell your governor to apply and establish more wildlife crossings.
Roughly one million animals are killed on America's roads every day. This includes birds, large mammals and amphibians as well as rare and endangered species such as the Florida panther, Mexican wolf and ocelot. These incidents hurt people, too. Vehicle collisions with large mammals cause over $8 billion in damages and around 200 deaths annually.
Fortunately, there's a solution: wildlife crossings over or under roads that link fragmented habitat so animals and people can travel safely. Thanks to a new Wildlife Crossing Pilot Program in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, states can now apply for federal funding to build these pathways. Tell your governor to apply and establish more wildlife crossings.
Roughly one million animals are killed on America's roads every day. This includes birds, large mammals and amphibians as well as rare and endangered species such as the Florida panther, Mexican wolf and ocelot. These incidents hurt people, too. Vehicle collisions with large mammals cause over $8 billion in damages and around 200 deaths annually.
Fortunately, there's a solution: wildlife crossings over or under roads that link fragmented habitat so animals and people can travel safely. Thanks to a new Wildlife Crossing Pilot Program in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, states can now apply for federal funding to build these pathways. Tell your governor to apply and establish more wildlife crossings.
Roughly one million animals are killed on America's roads every day. This includes birds, large mammals and amphibians as well as rare and endangered species such as the Florida panther, Mexican wolf and ocelot. These incidents hurt people, too. Vehicle collisions with large mammals cause over $8 billion in damages and around 200 deaths annually.
Fortunately, there's a solution: wildlife crossings over or under roads that link fragmented habitat so animals and people can travel safely. Thanks to a new Wildlife Crossing Pilot Program in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, states can now apply for federal funding to build these pathways. Tell your governor to apply and establish more wildlife crossings.
Roughly one million animals are killed on America's roads every day. This includes birds, large mammals and amphibians as well as rare and endangered species such as the Florida panther, Mexican wolf and ocelot. These incidents hurt people, too. Vehicle collisions with large mammals cause over $8 billion in damages and around 200 deaths annually.
Fortunately, there's a solution: wildlife crossings over or under roads that link fragmented habitat so animals and people can travel safely. Thanks to a new Wildlife Crossing Pilot Program in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, states can now apply for federal funding to build these pathways. Tell your governor to apply and establish more wildlife crossings.
Roughly one million animals are killed on America's roads every day. This includes birds, large mammals and amphibians as well as rare and endangered species such as the Florida panther, Mexican wolf and ocelot. These incidents hurt people, too. Vehicle collisions with large mammals cause over $8 billion in damages and around 200 deaths annually.
Fortunately, there's a solution: wildlife crossings over or under roads that link fragmented habitat so animals and people can travel safely. Thanks to a new Wildlife Crossing Pilot Program in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, states can now apply for federal funding to build these pathways. Tell your governor to apply and establish more wildlife crossings.
Roughly one million animals are killed on America's roads every day. This includes birds, large mammals and amphibians as well as rare and endangered species such as the Florida panther, Mexican wolf and ocelot. These incidents hurt people, too. Vehicle collisions with large mammals cause over $8 billion in damages and around 200 deaths annually.
Fortunately, there's a solution: wildlife crossings over or under roads that link fragmented habitat so animals and people can travel safely. Thanks to a new Wildlife Crossing Pilot Program in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, states can now apply for federal funding to build these pathways. Tell your governor to apply and establish more wildlife crossings.
Roughly one million animals are killed on America's roads every day. This includes birds, large mammals and amphibians as well as rare and endangered species such as the Florida panther, Mexican wolf and ocelot. These incidents hurt people, too. Vehicle collisions with large mammals cause over $8 billion in damages and around 200 deaths annually.
Fortunately, there's a solution: wildlife crossings over or under roads that link fragmented habitat so animals and people can travel safely. Thanks to a new Wildlife Crossing Pilot Program in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, states can now apply for federal funding to build these pathways. Tell your governor to apply and establish more wildlife crossings.
Roughly one million animals are killed on America's roads every day. This includes birds, large mammals and amphibians as well as rare and endangered species such as the Florida panther, Mexican wolf and ocelot. These incidents hurt people, too. Vehicle collisions with large mammals cause over $8 billion in damages and around 200 deaths annually.
Fortunately, there's a solution: wildlife crossings over or under roads that link fragmented habitat so animals and people can travel safely. Thanks to a new Wildlife Crossing Pilot Program in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, states can now apply for federal funding to build these pathways. Tell your governor to apply and establish more wildlife crossings.
Roughly one million animals are killed on America's roads every day. This includes birds, large mammals and amphibians as well as rare and endangered species such as the Florida panther, Mexican wolf and ocelot. These incidents hurt people, too. Vehicle collisions with large mammals cause over $8 billion in damages and around 200 deaths annually.
Fortunately, there's a solution: wildlife crossings over or under roads that link fragmented habitat so animals and people can travel safely. Thanks to a new Wildlife Crossing Pilot Program in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, states can now apply for federal funding to build these pathways. Tell your governor to apply and establish more wildlife crossings.
Roughly one million animals are killed on America's roads every day. This includes birds, large mammals and amphibians as well as rare and endangered species such as the Florida panther, Mexican wolf and ocelot. These incidents hurt people, too. Vehicle collisions with large mammals cause over $8 billion in damages and around 200 deaths annually.
Fortunately, there's a solution: wildlife crossings over or under roads that link fragmented habitat so animals and people can travel safely. Thanks to a new Wildlife Crossing Pilot Program in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, states can now apply for federal funding to build these pathways. Tell your governor to apply and establish more wildlife crossings.
Roughly one million animals are killed on America's roads every day. This includes birds, large mammals and amphibians as well as rare and endangered species such as the Florida panther, Mexican wolf and ocelot. These incidents hurt people, too. Vehicle collisions with large mammals cause over $8 billion in damages and around 200 deaths annually.
Fortunately, there's a solution: wildlife crossings over or under roads that link fragmented habitat so animals and people can travel safely. Thanks to a new Wildlife Crossing Pilot Program in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, states can now apply for federal funding to build these pathways. Tell your governor to apply and establish more wildlife crossings.
Roughly one million animals are killed on America's roads every day. This includes birds, large mammals and amphibians as well as rare and endangered species such as the Florida panther, Mexican wolf and ocelot. These incidents hurt people, too. Vehicle collisions with large mammals cause over $8 billion in damages and around 200 deaths annually.
Fortunately, there's a solution: wildlife crossings over or under roads that link fragmented habitat so animals and people can travel safely. Thanks to a new Wildlife Crossing Pilot Program in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, states can now apply for federal funding to build these pathways. Tell your governor to apply and establish more wildlife crossings.
Roughly one million animals are killed on America's roads every day. This includes birds, large mammals and amphibians as well as rare and endangered species such as the Florida panther, Mexican wolf and ocelot. These incidents hurt people, too. Vehicle collisions with large mammals cause over $8 billion in damages and around 200 deaths annually.
Fortunately, there's a solution: wildlife crossings over or under roads that link fragmented habitat so animals and people can travel safely. Thanks to a new Wildlife Crossing Pilot Program in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, states can now apply for federal funding to build these pathways. Tell your governor to apply and establish more wildlife crossings.
Roughly one million animals are killed on America's roads every day. This includes birds, large mammals and amphibians as well as rare and endangered species such as the Florida panther, Mexican wolf and ocelot. These incidents hurt people, too. Vehicle collisions with large mammals cause over $8 billion in damages and around 200 deaths annually.
Fortunately, there's a solution: wildlife crossings over or under roads that link fragmented habitat so animals and people can travel safely. Thanks to a new Wildlife Crossing Pilot Program in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, states can now apply for federal funding to build these pathways. Tell your governor to apply and establish more wildlife crossings.
Roughly one million animals are killed on America's roads every day. This includes birds, large mammals and amphibians as well as rare and endangered species such as the Florida panther, Mexican wolf and ocelot. These incidents hurt people, too. Vehicle collisions with large mammals cause over $8 billion in damages and around 200 deaths annually.
Fortunately, there's a solution: wildlife crossings over or under roads that link fragmented habitat so animals and people can travel safely. Thanks to a new Wildlife Crossing Pilot Program in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, states can now apply for federal funding to build these pathways. Tell your governor to apply and establish more wildlife crossings.
Roughly one million animals are killed on America's roads every day. This includes birds, large mammals and amphibians as well as rare and endangered species such as the Florida panther, Mexican wolf and ocelot. These incidents hurt people, too. Vehicle collisions with large mammals cause over $8 billion in damages and around 200 deaths annually.
Fortunately, there's a solution: wildlife crossings over or under roads that link fragmented habitat so animals and people can travel safely. Thanks to a new Wildlife Crossing Pilot Program in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, states can now apply for federal funding to build these pathways. Tell your governor to apply and establish more wildlife crossings.
NOAA--NMFS--2023--0027
Dear Assistant Regional Administrator David Bernhart:
We, the undersigned, support the proposal to enforce year-round, 10-knot vessel speed restrictions in parts of the Gulf of Mexico to protect the endangered Rice's whale.
Rice's whales are one of the most endangered large whale species on the planet. There are currently fewer than 100 living Rice's whales, and your own scientists have reported that even a single reproductive-age female's death would be catastrophic to the species' existence.
Any way to mitigate these whales' survival risks should be implemented immediately.
Slowing down vessel speed for the sake of Rice's whales represents a critical and essential step. In addition, we urge you to enact a mandatory 10-knot speed limit and a ban on vessel transits at night.
Sincerely,
From transporting building inspectors to worksites, to cleaning up parks and carrying materials from one location to another, fleets of gas- and diesel-powered vehicles eat up a significant share of state and local government budgets each year -- and even more when gas prices are high. But a confluence of factors means that now is the perfect time to transition to electric vehicles and save taxpayers a truckload of cash.
Shifting to EVs doesn't just provide financial benefits to our state and municipalities, it also improves -- or limits the damage to -- air quality, which in turn benefits public health, particularly for individuals who suffer from asthma or other respiratory illnesses.
From transporting building inspectors to worksites, to cleaning up parks and carrying materials from one location to another, fleets of gas- and diesel-powered vehicles eat up a significant share of state and local government budgets each year -- and even more when gas prices are high. But a confluence of factors means that now is the perfect time to transition to electric vehicles and save taxpayers a truckload of cash.
Shifting to EVs doesn't just provide financial benefits to our state and municipalities, it also improves -- or limits the damage to -- air quality, which in turn benefits public health, particularly for individuals who suffer from asthma or other respiratory illnesses.
From transporting building inspectors to worksites, to cleaning up parks and carrying materials from one location to another, fleets of gas- and diesel-powered vehicles eat up a significant share of state and local government budgets each year -- and even more when gas prices are high. But a confluence of factors means that now is the perfect time to transition to electric vehicles and save taxpayers a truckload of cash.
Shifting to EVs doesn't just provide financial benefits to our state and municipalities, it also improves -- or limits the damage to -- air quality, which in turn benefits public health, particularly for individuals who suffer from asthma or other respiratory illnesses.
From transporting building inspectors to worksites, to cleaning up parks and carrying materials from one location to another, fleets of gas- and diesel-powered vehicles eat up a significant share of state and local government budgets each year -- and even more when gas prices are high. But a confluence of factors means that now is the perfect time to transition to electric vehicles and save taxpayers a truckload of cash.
Shifting to EVs doesn't just provide financial benefits to our state and municipalities, it also improves -- or limits the damage to -- air quality, which in turn benefits public health, particularly for individuals who suffer from asthma or other respiratory illnesses.
From transporting building inspectors to worksites, to cleaning up parks and carrying materials from one location to another, fleets of gas- and diesel-powered vehicles eat up a significant share of state and local government budgets each year -- and even more when gas prices are high. But a confluence of factors means that now is the perfect time to transition to electric vehicles and save taxpayers a truckload of cash.
Shifting to EVs doesn't just provide financial benefits to our state and municipalities, it also improves -- or limits the damage to -- air quality, which in turn benefits public health, particularly for individuals who suffer from asthma or other respiratory illnesses.
From transporting building inspectors to worksites, to cleaning up parks and carrying materials from one location to another, fleets of gas- and diesel-powered vehicles eat up a significant share of state and local government budgets each year -- and even more when gas prices are high. But a confluence of factors means that now is the perfect time to transition to electric vehicles and save taxpayers a truckload of cash.
Shifting to EVs doesn't just provide financial benefits to our state and municipalities, it also improves -- or limits the damage to -- air quality, which in turn benefits public health, particularly for individuals who suffer from asthma or other respiratory illnesses.
From transporting building inspectors to worksites, to cleaning up parks and carrying materials from one location to another, fleets of gas- and diesel-powered vehicles eat up a significant share of state and local government budgets each year -- and even more when gas prices are high. But a confluence of factors means that now is the perfect time to transition to electric vehicles and save taxpayers a truckload of cash.
Shifting to EVs doesn't just provide financial benefits to our state and municipalities, it also improves -- or limits the damage to -- air quality, which in turn benefits public health, particularly for individuals who suffer from asthma or other respiratory illnesses.
From transporting building inspectors to worksites, to cleaning up parks and carrying materials from one location to another, fleets of gas- and diesel-powered vehicles eat up a significant share of state and local government budgets each year -- and even more when gas prices are high. But a confluence of factors means that now is the perfect time to transition to electric vehicles and save taxpayers a truckload of cash.
Shifting to EVs doesn't just provide financial benefits to our state and municipalities, it also improves -- or limits the damage to -- air quality, which in turn benefits public health, particularly for individuals who suffer from asthma or other respiratory illnesses.
From transporting building inspectors to worksites, to cleaning up parks and carrying materials from one location to another, fleets of gas- and diesel-powered vehicles eat up a significant share of state and local government budgets each year -- and even more when gas prices are high. But a confluence of factors means that now is the perfect time to transition to electric vehicles and save taxpayers a truckload of cash.
Shifting to EVs doesn't just provide financial benefits to our state and municipalities, it also improves -- or limits the damage to -- air quality, which in turn benefits public health, particularly for individuals who suffer from asthma or other respiratory illnesses.
From transporting building inspectors to worksites, to cleaning up parks and carrying materials from one location to another, fleets of gas- and diesel-powered vehicles eat up a significant share of state and local government budgets each year -- and even more when gas prices are high. But a confluence of factors means that now is the perfect time to transition to electric vehicles and save taxpayers a truckload of cash.
Shifting to EVs doesn't just provide financial benefits to our state and municipalities, it also improves -- or limits the damage to -- air quality, which in turn benefits public health, particularly for individuals who suffer from asthma or other respiratory illnesses.
From transporting building inspectors to worksites, to cleaning up parks and carrying materials from one location to another, fleets of gas- and diesel-powered vehicles eat up a significant share of state and local government budgets each year -- and even more when gas prices are high. But a confluence of factors means that now is the perfect time to transition to electric vehicles and save taxpayers a truckload of cash.
Shifting to EVs doesn't just provide financial benefits to our state and municipalities, it also improves -- or limits the damage to -- air quality, which in turn benefits public health, particularly for individuals who suffer from asthma or other respiratory illnesses.
From transporting building inspectors to worksites, to cleaning up parks and carrying materials from one location to another, fleets of gas- and diesel-powered vehicles eat up a significant share of state and local government budgets each year -- and even more when gas prices are high. But a confluence of factors means that now is the perfect time to transition to electric vehicles and save taxpayers a truckload of cash.
Shifting to EVs doesn't just provide financial benefits to our state and municipalities, it also improves -- or limits the damage to -- air quality, which in turn benefits public health, particularly for individuals who suffer from asthma or other respiratory illnesses.
From transporting building inspectors to worksites, to cleaning up parks and carrying materials from one location to another, fleets of gas- and diesel-powered vehicles eat up a significant share of state and local government budgets each year -- and even more when gas prices are high. But a confluence of factors means that now is the perfect time to transition to electric vehicles and save taxpayers a truckload of cash.
Shifting to EVs doesn't just provide financial benefits to our state and municipalities, it also improves -- or limits the damage to -- air quality, which in turn benefits public health, particularly for individuals who suffer from asthma or other respiratory illnesses.
From transporting building inspectors to worksites, to cleaning up parks and carrying materials from one location to another, fleets of gas- and diesel-powered vehicles eat up a significant share of state and local government budgets each year -- and even more when gas prices are high. But a confluence of factors means that now is the perfect time to transition to electric vehicles and save taxpayers a truckload of cash.
Shifting to EVs doesn't just provide financial benefits to our state and municipalities, it also improves -- or limits the damage to -- air quality, which in turn benefits public health, particularly for individuals who suffer from asthma or other respiratory illnesses.
From transporting building inspectors to worksites, to cleaning up parks and carrying materials from one location to another, fleets of gas- and diesel-powered vehicles eat up a significant share of state and local government budgets each year -- and even more when gas prices are high. But a confluence of factors means that now is the perfect time to transition to electric vehicles and save taxpayers a truckload of cash.
Shifting to EVs doesn't just provide financial benefits to our state and municipalities, it also improves -- or limits the damage to -- air quality, which in turn benefits public health, particularly for individuals who suffer from asthma or other respiratory illnesses.
From transporting building inspectors to worksites, to cleaning up parks and carrying materials from one location to another, fleets of gas- and diesel-powered vehicles eat up a significant share of state and local government budgets each year -- and even more when gas prices are high. But a confluence of factors means that now is the perfect time to transition to electric vehicles and save taxpayers a truckload of cash.
Shifting to EVs doesn't just provide financial benefits to our state and municipalities, it also improves -- or limits the damage to -- air quality, which in turn benefits public health, particularly for individuals who suffer from asthma or other respiratory illnesses.
From transporting building inspectors to worksites, to cleaning up parks and carrying materials from one location to another, fleets of gas- and diesel-powered vehicles eat up a significant share of state and local government budgets each year -- and even more when gas prices are high. But a confluence of factors means that now is the perfect time to transition to electric vehicles and save taxpayers a truckload of cash.
Shifting to EVs doesn't just provide financial benefits to our state and municipalities, it also improves -- or limits the damage to -- air quality, which in turn benefits public health, particularly for individuals who suffer from asthma or other respiratory illnesses.
From transporting building inspectors to worksites, to cleaning up parks and carrying materials from one location to another, fleets of gas- and diesel-powered vehicles eat up a significant share of state and local government budgets each year -- and even more when gas prices are high. But a confluence of factors means that now is the perfect time to transition to electric vehicles and save taxpayers a truckload of cash.
Shifting to EVs doesn't just provide financial benefits to our state and municipalities, it also improves -- or limits the damage to -- air quality, which in turn benefits public health, particularly for individuals who suffer from asthma or other respiratory illnesses.
From transporting building inspectors to worksites, to cleaning up parks and carrying materials from one location to another, fleets of gas- and diesel-powered vehicles eat up a significant share of state and local government budgets each year -- and even more when gas prices are high. But a confluence of factors means that now is the perfect time to transition to electric vehicles and save taxpayers a truckload of cash.
Shifting to EVs doesn't just provide financial benefits to our state and municipalities, it also improves -- or limits the damage to -- air quality, which in turn benefits public health, particularly for individuals who suffer from asthma or other respiratory illnesses.
From transporting building inspectors to worksites, to cleaning up parks and carrying materials from one location to another, fleets of gas- and diesel-powered vehicles eat up a significant share of state and local government budgets each year -- and even more when gas prices are high. But a confluence of factors means that now is the perfect time to transition to electric vehicles and save taxpayers a truckload of cash.
Shifting to EVs doesn't just provide financial benefits to our state and municipalities, it also improves -- or limits the damage to -- air quality, which in turn benefits public health, particularly for individuals who suffer from asthma or other respiratory illnesses.
From transporting building inspectors to worksites, to cleaning up parks and carrying materials from one location to another, fleets of gas- and diesel-powered vehicles eat up a significant share of state and local government budgets each year -- and even more when gas prices are high. But a confluence of factors means that now is the perfect time to transition to electric vehicles and save taxpayers a truckload of cash.
Shifting to EVs doesn't just provide financial benefits to our state and municipalities, it also improves -- or limits the damage to -- air quality, which in turn benefits public health, particularly for individuals who suffer from asthma or other respiratory illnesses.
From transporting building inspectors to worksites, to cleaning up parks and carrying materials from one location to another, fleets of gas- and diesel-powered vehicles eat up a significant share of state and local government budgets each year -- and even more when gas prices are high. But a confluence of factors means that now is the perfect time to transition to electric vehicles and save taxpayers a truckload of cash.
Shifting to EVs doesn't just provide financial benefits to our state and municipalities, it also improves -- or limits the damage to -- air quality, which in turn benefits public health, particularly for individuals who suffer from asthma or other respiratory illnesses.
From transporting building inspectors to worksites, to cleaning up parks and carrying materials from one location to another, fleets of gas- and diesel-powered vehicles eat up a significant share of state and local government budgets each year -- and even more when gas prices are high. But a confluence of factors means that now is the perfect time to transition to electric vehicles and save taxpayers a truckload of cash.
Shifting to EVs doesn't just provide financial benefits to our state and municipalities, it also improves -- or limits the damage to -- air quality, which in turn benefits public health, particularly for individuals who suffer from asthma or other respiratory illnesses.
From transporting building inspectors to worksites, to cleaning up parks and carrying materials from one location to another, fleets of gas- and diesel-powered vehicles eat up a significant share of state and local government budgets each year -- and even more when gas prices are high. But a confluence of factors means that now is the perfect time to transition to electric vehicles and save taxpayers a truckload of cash.
Shifting to EVs doesn't just provide financial benefits to our state and municipalities, it also improves -- or limits the damage to -- air quality, which in turn benefits public health, particularly for individuals who suffer from asthma or other respiratory illnesses.
Climate action can happen at the state and local level with decisions like the cars and trucks our state and local governments buy. In the next decade, close to 900,000 light-duty vehicles in government fleets will need to be replaced. If we replaced these cars and trucks with electric vehicles, we could save governments -- and taxpayers -- more than $10.8 billion because EVs have lower maintenance costs and you fill up their tanks with electricity -- not polluting gas.
EVs can be a clean air and budget winner for our local and state governments. Tell your governor to take action today by making the commitment to transition to EVs.
Climate action can happen at the state and local level with decisions like the cars and trucks our state and local governments buy. In the next decade, close to 900,000 light-duty vehicles in government fleets will need to be replaced. If we replaced these cars and trucks with electric vehicles, we could save governments -- and taxpayers -- more than $10.8 billion because EVs have lower maintenance costs and you fill up their tanks with electricity -- not polluting gas.
EVs can be a clean air and budget winner for our local and state governments. Tell your governor to take action today by making the commitment to transition to EVs.
Climate action can happen at the state and local level with decisions like the cars and trucks our state and local governments buy. In the next decade, close to 900,000 light-duty vehicles in government fleets will need to be replaced. If we replaced these cars and trucks with electric vehicles, we could save governments -- and taxpayers -- more than $10.8 billion because EVs have lower maintenance costs and you fill up their tanks with electricity -- not polluting gas.
EVs can be a clean air and budget winner for our local and state governments. Tell your governor to take action today by making the commitment to transition to EVs.
Climate action can happen at the state and local level with decisions like the cars and trucks our state and local governments buy. In the next decade, close to 900,000 light-duty vehicles in government fleets will need to be replaced. If we replaced these cars and trucks with electric vehicles, we could save governments -- and taxpayers -- more than $10.8 billion because EVs have lower maintenance costs and you fill up their tanks with electricity -- not polluting gas.
EVs can be a clean air and budget winner for our local and state governments. Tell your governor to take action today by making the commitment to transition to EVs.
Climate action can happen at the state and local level with decisions like the cars and trucks our state and local governments buy. In the next decade, close to 900,000 light-duty vehicles in government fleets will need to be replaced. If we replaced these cars and trucks with electric vehicles, we could save governments -- and taxpayers -- more than $10.8 billion because EVs have lower maintenance costs and you fill up their tanks with electricity -- not polluting gas.
EVs can be a clean air and budget winner for our local and state governments. Tell your governor to take action today by making the commitment to transition to EVs.
Climate action can happen at the state and local level with decisions like the cars and trucks our state and local governments buy. In the next decade, close to 900,000 light-duty vehicles in government fleets will need to be replaced. If we replaced these cars and trucks with electric vehicles, we could save governments -- and taxpayers -- more than $10.8 billion because EVs have lower maintenance costs and you fill up their tanks with electricity -- not polluting gas.
EVs can be a clean air and budget winner for our local and state governments. Tell your governor to take action today by making the commitment to transition to EVs.
Climate action can happen at the state and local level with decisions like the cars and trucks our state and local governments buy. In the next decade, close to 900,000 light-duty vehicles in government fleets will need to be replaced. If we replaced these cars and trucks with electric vehicles, we could save governments -- and taxpayers -- more than $10.8 billion because EVs have lower maintenance costs and you fill up their tanks with electricity -- not polluting gas.
EVs can be a clean air and budget winner for our local and state governments. Tell your governor to take action today by making the commitment to transition to EVs.
Climate action can happen at the state and local level with decisions like the cars and trucks our state and local governments buy. In the next decade, close to 900,000 light-duty vehicles in government fleets will need to be replaced. If we replaced these cars and trucks with electric vehicles, we could save governments -- and taxpayers -- more than $10.8 billion because EVs have lower maintenance costs and you fill up their tanks with electricity -- not polluting gas.
EVs can be a clean air and budget winner for our local and state governments. Tell your governor to take action today by making the commitment to transition to EVs.
Climate action can happen at the state and local level with decisions like the cars and trucks our state and local governments buy. In the next decade, close to 900,000 light-duty vehicles in government fleets will need to be replaced. If we replaced these cars and trucks with electric vehicles, we could save governments -- and taxpayers -- more than $10.8 billion because EVs have lower maintenance costs and you fill up their tanks with electricity -- not polluting gas.
EVs can be a clean air and budget winner for our local and state governments. Tell your governor to take action today by making the commitment to transition to EVs.
Climate action can happen at the state and local level with decisions like the cars and trucks our state and local governments buy. In the next decade, close to 900,000 light-duty vehicles in government fleets will need to be replaced. If we replaced these cars and trucks with electric vehicles, we could save governments -- and taxpayers -- more than $10.8 billion because EVs have lower maintenance costs and you fill up their tanks with electricity -- not polluting gas.
EVs can be a clean air and budget winner for our local and state governments. Tell your governor to take action today by making the commitment to transition to EVs.
Climate action can happen at the state and local level with decisions like the cars and trucks our state and local governments buy. In the next decade, close to 900,000 light-duty vehicles in government fleets will need to be replaced. If we replaced these cars and trucks with electric vehicles, we could save governments -- and taxpayers -- more than $10.8 billion because EVs have lower maintenance costs and you fill up their tanks with electricity -- not polluting gas.
EVs can be a clean air and budget winner for our local and state governments. Tell your governor to take action today by making the commitment to transition to EVs.
Climate action can happen at the state and local level with decisions like the cars and trucks our state and local governments buy. In the next decade, close to 900,000 light-duty vehicles in government fleets will need to be replaced. If we replaced these cars and trucks with electric vehicles, we could save governments -- and taxpayers -- more than $10.8 billion because EVs have lower maintenance costs and you fill up their tanks with electricity -- not polluting gas.
EVs can be a clean air and budget winner for our local and state governments. Tell your governor to take action today by making the commitment to transition to EVs.
Climate action can happen at the state and local level with decisions like the cars and trucks our state and local governments buy. In the next decade, close to 900,000 light-duty vehicles in government fleets will need to be replaced. If we replaced these cars and trucks with electric vehicles, we could save governments -- and taxpayers -- more than $10.8 billion because EVs have lower maintenance costs and you fill up their tanks with electricity -- not polluting gas.
EVs can be a clean air and budget winner for our local and state governments. Tell your governor to take action today by making the commitment to transition to EVs.
Climate action can happen at the state and local level with decisions like the cars and trucks our state and local governments buy. In the next decade, close to 900,000 light-duty vehicles in government fleets will need to be replaced. If we replaced these cars and trucks with electric vehicles, we could save governments -- and taxpayers -- more than $10.8 billion because EVs have lower maintenance costs and you fill up their tanks with electricity -- not polluting gas.
EVs can be a clean air and budget winner for our local and state governments. Tell your governor to take action today by making the commitment to transition to EVs.
Climate action can happen at the state and local level with decisions like the cars and trucks our state and local governments buy. In the next decade, close to 900,000 light-duty vehicles in government fleets will need to be replaced. If we replaced these cars and trucks with electric vehicles, we could save governments -- and taxpayers -- more than $10.8 billion because EVs have lower maintenance costs and you fill up their tanks with electricity -- not polluting gas.
EVs can be a clean air and budget winner for our local and state governments. Tell your governor to take action today by making the commitment to transition to EVs.
Climate action can happen at the state and local level with decisions like the cars and trucks our state and local governments buy. In the next decade, close to 900,000 light-duty vehicles in government fleets will need to be replaced. If we replaced these cars and trucks with electric vehicles, we could save governments -- and taxpayers -- more than $10.8 billion because EVs have lower maintenance costs and you fill up their tanks with electricity -- not polluting gas.
EVs can be a clean air and budget winner for our local and state governments. Tell your governor to take action today by making the commitment to transition to EVs.
Climate action can happen at the state and local level with decisions like the cars and trucks our state and local governments buy. In the next decade, close to 900,000 light-duty vehicles in government fleets will need to be replaced. If we replaced these cars and trucks with electric vehicles, we could save governments -- and taxpayers -- more than $10.8 billion because EVs have lower maintenance costs and you fill up their tanks with electricity -- not polluting gas.
EVs can be a clean air and budget winner for our local and state governments. Tell your governor to take action today by making the commitment to transition to EVs.
Climate action can happen at the state and local level with decisions like the cars and trucks our state and local governments buy. In the next decade, close to 900,000 light-duty vehicles in government fleets will need to be replaced. If we replaced these cars and trucks with electric vehicles, we could save governments -- and taxpayers -- more than $10.8 billion because EVs have lower maintenance costs and you fill up their tanks with electricity -- not polluting gas.
EVs can be a clean air and budget winner for our local and state governments. Tell your governor to take action today by making the commitment to transition to EVs.
Climate action can happen at the state and local level with decisions like the cars and trucks our state and local governments buy. In the next decade, close to 900,000 light-duty vehicles in government fleets will need to be replaced. If we replaced these cars and trucks with electric vehicles, we could save governments -- and taxpayers -- more than $10.8 billion because EVs have lower maintenance costs and you fill up their tanks with electricity -- not polluting gas.
EVs can be a clean air and budget winner for our local and state governments. Tell your governor to take action today by making the commitment to transition to EVs.
Climate action can happen at the state and local level with decisions like the cars and trucks our state and local governments buy. In the next decade, close to 900,000 light-duty vehicles in government fleets will need to be replaced. If we replaced these cars and trucks with electric vehicles, we could save governments -- and taxpayers -- more than $10.8 billion because EVs have lower maintenance costs and you fill up their tanks with electricity -- not polluting gas.
EVs can be a clean air and budget winner for our local and state governments. Tell your governor to take action today by making the commitment to transition to EVs.
Climate action can happen at the state and local level with decisions like the cars and trucks our state and local governments buy. In the next decade, close to 900,000 light-duty vehicles in government fleets will need to be replaced. If we replaced these cars and trucks with electric vehicles, we could save governments -- and taxpayers -- more than $10.8 billion because EVs have lower maintenance costs and you fill up their tanks with electricity -- not polluting gas.
EVs can be a clean air and budget winner for our local and state governments. Tell your governor to take action today by making the commitment to transition to EVs.
Climate action can happen at the state and local level with decisions like the cars and trucks our state and local governments buy. In the next decade, close to 900,000 light-duty vehicles in government fleets will need to be replaced. If we replaced these cars and trucks with electric vehicles, we could save governments -- and taxpayers -- more than $10.8 billion because EVs have lower maintenance costs and you fill up their tanks with electricity -- not polluting gas.
EVs can be a clean air and budget winner for our local and state governments. Tell your governor to take action today by making the commitment to transition to EVs.
Climate action can happen at the state and local level with decisions like the cars and trucks our state and local governments buy. In the next decade, close to 900,000 light-duty vehicles in government fleets will need to be replaced. If we replaced these cars and trucks with electric vehicles, we could save governments -- and taxpayers -- more than $10.8 billion because EVs have lower maintenance costs and you fill up their tanks with electricity -- not polluting gas.
EVs can be a clean air and budget winner for our local and state governments. Tell your governor to take action today by making the commitment to transition to EVs.
Climate action can happen at the state and local level with decisions like the cars and trucks our state and local governments buy. In the next decade, close to 900,000 light-duty vehicles in government fleets will need to be replaced. If we replaced these cars and trucks with electric vehicles, we could save governments -- and taxpayers -- more than $10.8 billion because EVs have lower maintenance costs and you fill up their tanks with electricity -- not polluting gas.
EVs can be a clean air and budget winner for our local and state governments. Tell your governor to take action today by making the commitment to transition to EVs.
Climate action can happen at the state and local level with decisions like the cars and trucks our state and local governments buy. In the next decade, close to 900,000 light-duty vehicles in government fleets will need to be replaced. If we replaced these cars and trucks with electric vehicles, we could save governments -- and taxpayers -- more than $10.8 billion because EVs have lower maintenance costs and you fill up their tanks with electricity -- not polluting gas.
EVs can be a clean air and budget winner for our local and state governments. Tell your governor to take action today by making the commitment to transition to EVs.
Climate action can happen at the state and local level with decisions like the cars and trucks our state and local governments buy. In the next decade, close to 900,000 light-duty vehicles in government fleets will need to be replaced. If we replaced these cars and trucks with electric vehicles, we could save governments -- and taxpayers -- more than $10.8 billion because EVs have lower maintenance costs and you fill up their tanks with electricity -- not polluting gas.
EVs can be a clean air and budget winner for our local and state governments. Tell your governor to take action today by making the commitment to transition to EVs.
Climate action can happen at the state and local level with decisions like the cars and trucks our state and local governments buy. In the next decade, close to 900,000 light-duty vehicles in government fleets will need to be replaced. If we replaced these cars and trucks with electric vehicles, we could save governments -- and taxpayers -- more than $10.8 billion because EVs have lower maintenance costs and you fill up their tanks with electricity -- not polluting gas.
EVs can be a clean air and budget winner for our local and state governments. Tell your governor to take action today by making the commitment to transition to EVs.
Climate action can happen at the state and local level with decisions like the cars and trucks our state and local governments buy. In the next decade, close to 900,000 light-duty vehicles in government fleets will need to be replaced. If we replaced these cars and trucks with electric vehicles, we could save governments -- and taxpayers -- more than $10.8 billion because EVs have lower maintenance costs and you fill up their tanks with electricity -- not polluting gas.
EVs can be a clean air and budget winner for our local and state governments. Tell your governor to take action today by making the commitment to transition to EVs.
Climate action can happen at the state and local level with decisions like the cars and trucks our state and local governments buy. In the next decade, close to 900,000 light-duty vehicles in government fleets will need to be replaced. If we replaced these cars and trucks with electric vehicles, we could save governments -- and taxpayers -- more than $10.8 billion because EVs have lower maintenance costs and you fill up their tanks with electricity -- not polluting gas.
EVs can be a clean air and budget winner for our local and state governments. Tell your governor to take action today by making the commitment to transition to EVs.
P&G CEO John Moeller,
The North American boreal is our planet's largest intact forest. Logging is steadily flushing these trees down the toilet. Destroying this bountiful forest is a disaster. P&G should move away from virgin wood fibers and incorporate more recycled and forest-free fibers in its home paper products, including Charmin toilet paper, Puffs tissues and Bounty paper towels.
Customers would "enjoy the go" even more if your toilet paper didn't come at the expense of our forests. P&G's Charmin Ultra Eco bamboo toilet paper is a step in the right direction and we hope it is available online again soon. P&G should make a stronger commitment to switch to forest-free tissue products. We, the undersigned, urge P&G to commit to protect the boreal and reduce the amount of virgin wood fibers in your tissue products by 50% or more by 2025.
P&G CEO John Moeller,
The North American boreal is our planet's largest intact forest. Logging is steadily flushing these trees down the toilet. Destroying this bountiful forest is a disaster. P&G should move away from virgin wood fibers and incorporate more recycled and forest-free fibers in its home paper products, including Charmin toilet paper, Puffs tissues and Bounty paper towels.
Customers would "enjoy the go" even more if your toilet paper didn't come at the expense of our forests. P&G's Charmin Ultra Eco bamboo toilet paper is a step in the right direction and we hope it is available online again soon. P&G should make a stronger commitment to switch to forest-free tissue products. We, the undersigned, urge P&G to commit to protect the boreal and reduce the amount of virgin wood fibers in your tissue products by 50% or more by 2025.
P&G CEO John Moeller,
The North American boreal is our planet's largest intact forest. Logging is steadily flushing these trees down the toilet. Destroying this bountiful forest is a disaster. P&G should move away from virgin wood fibers and incorporate more recycled and forest-free fibers in its home paper products, including Charmin toilet paper, Puffs tissues and Bounty paper towels.
Customers would "enjoy the go" even more if your toilet paper didn't come at the expense of our forests. P&G's Charmin Ultra Eco bamboo toilet paper is a step in the right direction and we hope it is available online again soon. P&G should make a stronger commitment to switch to forest-free tissue products. We, the undersigned, urge P&G to commit to protect the boreal and reduce the amount of virgin wood fibers in your tissue products by 50% or more by 2025.
P&G CEO John Moeller,
The North American boreal is our planet's largest intact forest. Logging is steadily flushing these trees down the toilet. Destroying this bountiful forest is a disaster. P&G should move away from virgin wood fibers and incorporate more recycled and forest-free fibers in its home paper products, including Charmin toilet paper, Puffs tissues and Bounty paper towels.
Customers would "enjoy the go" even more if your toilet paper didn't come at the expense of our forests. P&G's Charmin Ultra Eco bamboo toilet paper is a step in the right direction and we hope it is available online again soon. P&G should make a stronger commitment to switch to forest-free tissue products. We, the undersigned, urge P&G to commit to protect the boreal and reduce the amount of virgin wood fibers in your tissue products by 50% or more by 2025.
P&G CEO John Moeller,
The North American boreal is our planet's largest intact forest. Logging is steadily flushing these trees down the toilet. Destroying this bountiful forest is a disaster. P&G should move away from virgin wood fibers and incorporate more recycled and forest-free fibers in its home paper products, including Charmin toilet paper, Puffs tissues and Bounty paper towels.
Customers would "enjoy the go" even more if your toilet paper didn't come at the expense of our forests. P&G's Charmin Ultra Eco bamboo toilet paper is a step in the right direction and we hope it is available online again soon. P&G should make a stronger commitment to switch to forest-free tissue products. We, the undersigned, urge P&G to commit to protect the boreal and reduce the amount of virgin wood fibers in your tissue products by 50% or more by 2025.
P&G CEO John Moeller,
The North American boreal is our planet's largest intact forest. Logging is steadily flushing these trees down the toilet. Destroying this bountiful forest is a disaster. P&G should move away from virgin wood fibers and incorporate more recycled and forest-free fibers in its home paper products, including Charmin toilet paper, Puffs tissues and Bounty paper towels.
Customers would "enjoy the go" even more if your toilet paper didn't come at the expense of our forests. P&G's Charmin Ultra Eco bamboo toilet paper is a step in the right direction and we hope it is available online again soon. P&G should make a stronger commitment to switch to forest-free tissue products. We, the undersigned, urge P&G to commit to protect the boreal and reduce the amount of virgin wood fibers in your tissue products by 50% or more by 2025.
P&G CEO John Moeller,
The North American boreal is our planet's largest intact forest. Logging is steadily flushing these trees down the toilet. Destroying this bountiful forest is a disaster. P&G should move away from virgin wood fibers and incorporate more recycled and forest-free fibers in its home paper products, including Charmin toilet paper, Puffs tissues and Bounty paper towels.
Customers would "enjoy the go" even more if your toilet paper didn't come at the expense of our forests. P&G's Charmin Ultra Eco bamboo toilet paper is a step in the right direction and we hope it is available online again soon. P&G should make a stronger commitment to switch to forest-free tissue products. We, the undersigned, urge P&G to commit to protect the boreal and reduce the amount of virgin wood fibers in your tissue products by 50% or more by 2025.
P&G CEO John Moeller,
The North American boreal is our planet's largest intact forest. Logging is steadily flushing these trees down the toilet. Destroying this bountiful forest is a disaster. P&G should move away from virgin wood fibers and incorporate more recycled and forest-free fibers in its home paper products, including Charmin toilet paper, Puffs tissues and Bounty paper towels.
Customers would "enjoy the go" even more if your toilet paper didn't come at the expense of our forests. P&G's Charmin Ultra Eco bamboo toilet paper is a step in the right direction and we hope it is available online again soon. P&G should make a stronger commitment to switch to forest-free tissue products. We, the undersigned, urge P&G to commit to protect the boreal and reduce the amount of virgin wood fibers in your tissue products by 50% or more by 2025.
P&G CEO John Moeller,
The North American boreal is our planet's largest intact forest. Logging is steadily flushing these trees down the toilet. Destroying this bountiful forest is a disaster. P&G should move away from virgin wood fibers and incorporate more recycled and forest-free fibers in its home paper products, including Charmin toilet paper, Puffs tissues and Bounty paper towels.
Customers would "enjoy the go" even more if your toilet paper didn't come at the expense of our forests. P&G's Charmin Ultra Eco bamboo toilet paper is a step in the right direction and we hope it is available online again soon. P&G should make a stronger commitment to switch to forest-free tissue products. We, the undersigned, urge P&G to commit to protect the boreal and reduce the amount of virgin wood fibers in your tissue products by 50% or more by 2025.
P&G CEO John Moeller,
The North American boreal is our planet's largest intact forest. Logging is steadily flushing these trees down the toilet. Destroying this bountiful forest is a disaster. P&G should move away from virgin wood fibers and incorporate more recycled and forest-free fibers in its home paper products, including Charmin toilet paper, Puffs tissues and Bounty paper towels.
Customers would "enjoy the go" even more if your toilet paper didn't come at the expense of our forests. P&G's Charmin Ultra Eco bamboo toilet paper is a step in the right direction and we hope it is available online again soon. P&G should make a stronger commitment to switch to forest-free tissue products. We, the undersigned, urge P&G to commit to protect the boreal and reduce the amount of virgin wood fibers in your tissue products by 50% or more by 2025.
P&G CEO John Moeller,
The North American boreal is our planet's largest intact forest. Logging is steadily flushing these trees down the toilet. Destroying this bountiful forest is a disaster. P&G should move away from virgin wood fibers and incorporate more recycled and forest-free fibers in its home paper products, including Charmin toilet paper, Puffs tissues and Bounty paper towels.
Customers would "enjoy the go" even more if your toilet paper didn't come at the expense of our forests. P&G's Charmin Ultra Eco bamboo toilet paper is a step in the right direction and we hope it is available online again soon. P&G should make a stronger commitment to switch to forest-free tissue products. We, the undersigned, urge P&G to commit to protect the boreal and reduce the amount of virgin wood fibers in your tissue products by 50% or more by 2025.
P&G CEO John Moeller,
The North American boreal is our planet's largest intact forest. Logging is steadily flushing these trees down the toilet. Destroying this bountiful forest is a disaster. P&G should move away from virgin wood fibers and incorporate more recycled and forest-free fibers in its home paper products, including Charmin toilet paper, Puffs tissues and Bounty paper towels.
Customers would "enjoy the go" even more if your toilet paper didn't come at the expense of our forests. P&G's Charmin Ultra Eco bamboo toilet paper is a step in the right direction and we hope it is available online again soon. P&G should make a stronger commitment to switch to forest-free tissue products. We, the undersigned, urge P&G to commit to protect the boreal and reduce the amount of virgin wood fibers in your tissue products by 50% or more by 2025.
P&G CEO John Moeller,
The North American boreal is our planet's largest intact forest. Logging is steadily flushing these trees down the toilet. Destroying this bountiful forest is a disaster. P&G should move away from virgin wood fibers and incorporate more recycled and forest-free fibers in its home paper products, including Charmin toilet paper, Puffs tissues and Bounty paper towels.
Customers would "enjoy the go" even more if your toilet paper didn't come at the expense of our forests. P&G's Charmin Ultra Eco bamboo toilet paper is a step in the right direction and we hope it is available online again soon. P&G should make a stronger commitment to switch to forest-free tissue products. We, the undersigned, urge P&G to commit to protect the boreal and reduce the amount of virgin wood fibers in your tissue products by 50% or more by 2025.
P&G CEO John Moeller,
The North American boreal is our planet's largest intact forest. Logging is steadily flushing these trees down the toilet. Destroying this bountiful forest is a disaster. P&G should move away from virgin wood fibers and incorporate more recycled and forest-free fibers in its home paper products, including Charmin toilet paper, Puffs tissues and Bounty paper towels.
Customers would "enjoy the go" even more if your toilet paper didn't come at the expense of our forests. P&G's Charmin Ultra Eco bamboo toilet paper is a step in the right direction and we hope it is available online again soon. P&G should make a stronger commitment to switch to forest-free tissue products. We, the undersigned, urge P&G to commit to protect the boreal and reduce the amount of virgin wood fibers in your tissue products by 50% or more by 2025.
P&G CEO John Moeller,
The North American boreal is our planet's largest intact forest. Logging is steadily flushing these trees down the toilet. Destroying this bountiful forest is a disaster. P&G should move away from virgin wood fibers and incorporate more recycled and forest-free fibers in its home paper products, including Charmin toilet paper, Puffs tissues and Bounty paper towels.
Customers would "enjoy the go" even more if your toilet paper didn't come at the expense of our forests. P&G's Charmin Ultra Eco bamboo toilet paper is a step in the right direction and we hope it is available online again soon. P&G should make a stronger commitment to switch to forest-free tissue products. We, the undersigned, urge P&G to commit to protect the boreal and reduce the amount of virgin wood fibers in your tissue products by 50% or more by 2025.
P&G CEO John Moeller,
The North American boreal is our planet's largest intact forest. Logging is steadily flushing these trees down the toilet. Destroying this bountiful forest is a disaster. P&G should move away from virgin wood fibers and incorporate more recycled and forest-free fibers in its home paper products, including Charmin toilet paper, Puffs tissues and Bounty paper towels.
Customers would "enjoy the go" even more if your toilet paper didn't come at the expense of our forests. P&G's Charmin Ultra Eco bamboo toilet paper is a step in the right direction and we hope it is available online again soon. P&G should make a stronger commitment to switch to forest-free tissue products. We, the undersigned, urge P&G to commit to protect the boreal and reduce the amount of virgin wood fibers in your tissue products by 50% or more by 2025.
P&G CEO John Moeller,
The North American boreal is our planet's largest intact forest. Logging is steadily flushing these trees down the toilet. Destroying this bountiful forest is a disaster. P&G should move away from virgin wood fibers and incorporate more recycled and forest-free fibers in its home paper products, including Charmin toilet paper, Puffs tissues and Bounty paper towels.
Customers would "enjoy the go" even more if your toilet paper didn't come at the expense of our forests. P&G's Charmin Ultra Eco bamboo toilet paper is a step in the right direction and we hope it is available online again soon. P&G should make a stronger commitment to switch to forest-free tissue products. We, the undersigned, urge P&G to commit to protect the boreal and reduce the amount of virgin wood fibers in your tissue products by 50% or more by 2025.
P&G CEO John Moeller,
The North American boreal is our planet's largest intact forest. Logging is steadily flushing these trees down the toilet. Destroying this bountiful forest is a disaster. P&G should move away from virgin wood fibers and incorporate more recycled and forest-free fibers in its home paper products, including Charmin toilet paper, Puffs tissues and Bounty paper towels.
Customers would "enjoy the go" even more if your toilet paper didn't come at the expense of our forests. P&G's Charmin Ultra Eco bamboo toilet paper is a step in the right direction and we hope it is available online again soon. P&G should make a stronger commitment to switch to forest-free tissue products. We, the undersigned, urge P&G to commit to protect the boreal and reduce the amount of virgin wood fibers in your tissue products by 50% or more by 2025.
P&G CEO John Moeller,
The North American boreal is our planet's largest intact forest. Logging is steadily flushing these trees down the toilet. Destroying this bountiful forest is a disaster. P&G should move away from virgin wood fibers and incorporate more recycled and forest-free fibers in its home paper products, including Charmin toilet paper, Puffs tissues and Bounty paper towels.
Customers would "enjoy the go" even more if your toilet paper didn't come at the expense of our forests. P&G's Charmin Ultra Eco bamboo toilet paper is a step in the right direction and we hope it is available online again soon. P&G should make a stronger commitment to switch to forest-free tissue products. We, the undersigned, urge P&G to commit to protect the boreal and reduce the amount of virgin wood fibers in your tissue products by 50% or more by 2025.
P&G CEO John Moeller,
The North American boreal is our planet's largest intact forest. Logging is steadily flushing these trees down the toilet. Destroying this bountiful forest is a disaster. P&G should move away from virgin wood fibers and incorporate more recycled and forest-free fibers in its home paper products, including Charmin toilet paper, Puffs tissues and Bounty paper towels.
Customers would "enjoy the go" even more if your toilet paper didn't come at the expense of our forests. P&G's Charmin Ultra Eco bamboo toilet paper is a step in the right direction and we hope it is available online again soon. P&G should make a stronger commitment to switch to forest-free tissue products. We, the undersigned, urge P&G to commit to protect the boreal and reduce the amount of virgin wood fibers in your tissue products by 50% or more by 2025.
P&G CEO John Moeller,
The North American boreal is our planet's largest intact forest. Logging is steadily flushing these trees down the toilet. Destroying this bountiful forest is a disaster. P&G should move away from virgin wood fibers and incorporate more recycled and forest-free fibers in its home paper products, including Charmin toilet paper, Puffs tissues and Bounty paper towels.
Customers would "enjoy the go" even more if your toilet paper didn't come at the expense of our forests. P&G's Charmin Ultra Eco bamboo toilet paper is a step in the right direction and we hope it is available online again soon. P&G should make a stronger commitment to switch to forest-free tissue products. We, the undersigned, urge P&G to commit to protect the boreal and reduce the amount of virgin wood fibers in your tissue products by 50% or more by 2025.
P&G CEO John Moeller,
The North American boreal is our planet's largest intact forest. Logging is steadily flushing these trees down the toilet. Destroying this bountiful forest is a disaster. P&G should move away from virgin wood fibers and incorporate more recycled and forest-free fibers in its home paper products, including Charmin toilet paper, Puffs tissues and Bounty paper towels.
Customers would "enjoy the go" even more if your toilet paper didn't come at the expense of our forests. P&G's Charmin Ultra Eco bamboo toilet paper is a step in the right direction and we hope it is available online again soon. P&G should make a stronger commitment to switch to forest-free tissue products. We, the undersigned, urge P&G to commit to protect the boreal and reduce the amount of virgin wood fibers in your tissue products by 50% or more by 2025.
P&G CEO John Moeller,
The North American boreal is our planet's largest intact forest. Logging is steadily flushing these trees down the toilet. Destroying this bountiful forest is a disaster. P&G should move away from virgin wood fibers and incorporate more recycled and forest-free fibers in its home paper products, including Charmin toilet paper, Puffs tissues and Bounty paper towels.
Customers would "enjoy the go" even more if your toilet paper didn't come at the expense of our forests. P&G's Charmin Ultra Eco bamboo toilet paper is a step in the right direction and we hope it is available online again soon. P&G should make a stronger commitment to switch to forest-free tissue products. We, the undersigned, urge P&G to commit to protect the boreal and reduce the amount of virgin wood fibers in your tissue products by 50% or more by 2025.
P&G CEO John Moeller,
The North American boreal is our planet's largest intact forest. Logging is steadily flushing these trees down the toilet. Destroying this bountiful forest is a disaster. P&G should move away from virgin wood fibers and incorporate more recycled and forest-free fibers in its home paper products, including Charmin toilet paper, Puffs tissues and Bounty paper towels.
Customers would "enjoy the go" even more if your toilet paper didn't come at the expense of our forests. P&G's Charmin Ultra Eco bamboo toilet paper is a step in the right direction and we hope it is available online again soon. P&G should make a stronger commitment to switch to forest-free tissue products. We, the undersigned, urge P&G to commit to protect the boreal and reduce the amount of virgin wood fibers in your tissue products by 50% or more by 2025.
P&G CEO John Moeller,
The North American boreal is our planet's largest intact forest. Logging is steadily flushing these trees down the toilet. Destroying this bountiful forest is a disaster. P&G should move away from virgin wood fibers and incorporate more recycled and forest-free fibers in its home paper products, including Charmin toilet paper, Puffs tissues and Bounty paper towels.
Customers would "enjoy the go" even more if your toilet paper didn't come at the expense of our forests. P&G's Charmin Ultra Eco bamboo toilet paper is a step in the right direction and we hope it is available online again soon. P&G should make a stronger commitment to switch to forest-free tissue products. We, the undersigned, urge P&G to commit to protect the boreal and reduce the amount of virgin wood fibers in your tissue products by 50% or more by 2025.
P&G CEO John Moeller,
The North American boreal is our planet's largest intact forest. Logging is steadily flushing these trees down the toilet. Destroying this bountiful forest is a disaster. P&G should move away from virgin wood fibers and incorporate more recycled and forest-free fibers in its home paper products, including Charmin toilet paper, Puffs tissues and Bounty paper towels.
Customers would "enjoy the go" even more if your toilet paper didn't come at the expense of our forests. P&G's Charmin Ultra Eco bamboo toilet paper is a step in the right direction and we hope it is available online again soon. P&G should make a stronger commitment to switch to forest-free tissue products. We, the undersigned, urge P&G to commit to protect the boreal and reduce the amount of virgin wood fibers in your tissue products by 50% or more by 2025.
P&G CEO John Moeller,
The North American boreal is our planet's largest intact forest. Logging is steadily flushing these trees down the toilet. Destroying this bountiful forest is a disaster. P&G should move away from virgin wood fibers and incorporate more recycled and forest-free fibers in its home paper products, including Charmin toilet paper, Puffs tissues and Bounty paper towels.
Customers would "enjoy the go" even more if your toilet paper didn't come at the expense of our forests. P&G's Charmin Ultra Eco bamboo toilet paper is a step in the right direction and we hope it is available online again soon. P&G should make a stronger commitment to switch to forest-free tissue products. We, the undersigned, urge P&G to commit to protect the boreal and reduce the amount of virgin wood fibers in your tissue products by 50% or more by 2025.
P&G CEO John Moeller,
The North American boreal is our planet's largest intact forest. Logging is steadily flushing these trees down the toilet. Destroying this bountiful forest is a disaster. P&G should move away from virgin wood fibers and incorporate more recycled and forest-free fibers in its home paper products, including Charmin toilet paper, Puffs tissues and Bounty paper towels.
Customers would "enjoy the go" even more if your toilet paper didn't come at the expense of our forests. P&G's Charmin Ultra Eco bamboo toilet paper is a step in the right direction and we hope it is available online again soon. P&G should make a stronger commitment to switch to forest-free tissue products. We, the undersigned, urge P&G to commit to protect the boreal and reduce the amount of virgin wood fibers in your tissue products by 50% or more by 2025.
P&G CEO John Moeller,
The North American boreal is our planet's largest intact forest. Logging is steadily flushing these trees down the toilet. Destroying this bountiful forest is a disaster. P&G should move away from virgin wood fibers and incorporate more recycled and forest-free fibers in its home paper products, including Charmin toilet paper, Puffs tissues and Bounty paper towels.
Customers would "enjoy the go" even more if your toilet paper didn't come at the expense of our forests. P&G's Charmin Ultra Eco bamboo toilet paper is a step in the right direction and we hope it is available online again soon. P&G should make a stronger commitment to switch to forest-free tissue products. We, the undersigned, urge P&G to commit to protect the boreal and reduce the amount of virgin wood fibers in your tissue products by 50% or more by 2025.
Costco CEO W. Craig Jelinek:
Costco is contributing to our waste crisis with its oversized and excessive packaging, and our environment is paying the price.
There's no good reason to package a tiny product in an oversized plastic or coated cardboard shell -- such as the example recently spotted in your stores of a 2-inch jar of eye cream encased in 10-inch by 11-inch packaging.
We need to be producing less waste, not more. I urge Costco to reduce its product packaging.
Sincerely,
Costco CEO W. Craig Jelinek:
Costco is contributing to our waste crisis with its oversized and excessive packaging, and our environment is paying the price.
There's no good reason to package a tiny product in an oversized plastic or coated cardboard shell -- such as the example recently spotted in your stores of a 2-inch jar of eye cream encased in 10-inch by 11-inch packaging.
We need to be producing less waste, not more. I urge Costco to reduce its product packaging.
Sincerely,
Costco CEO W. Craig Jelinek:
Costco is contributing to our waste crisis with its oversized and excessive packaging, and our environment is paying the price.
There's no good reason to package a tiny product in an oversized plastic or coated cardboard shell -- such as the example recently spotted in your stores of a 2-inch jar of eye cream encased in 10-inch by 11-inch packaging.
We need to be producing less waste, not more. I urge Costco to reduce its product packaging.
Sincerely,
Costco CEO W. Craig Jelinek:
Costco is contributing to our waste crisis with its oversized and excessive packaging, and our environment is paying the price.
There's no good reason to package a tiny product in an oversized plastic or coated cardboard shell -- such as the example recently spotted in your stores of a 2-inch jar of eye cream encased in 10-inch by 11-inch packaging.
We need to be producing less waste, not more. I urge Costco to reduce its product packaging.
Sincerely,
Costco CEO W. Craig Jelinek:
Costco is contributing to our waste crisis with its oversized and excessive packaging, and our environment is paying the price.
There's no good reason to package a tiny product in an oversized plastic or coated cardboard shell -- such as the example recently spotted in your stores of a 2-inch jar of eye cream encased in 10-inch by 11-inch packaging.
We need to be producing less waste, not more. I urge Costco to reduce its product packaging.
Sincerely,
Costco CEO W. Craig Jelinek:
Costco is contributing to our waste crisis with its oversized and excessive packaging, and our environment is paying the price.
There's no good reason to package a tiny product in an oversized plastic or coated cardboard shell -- such as the example recently spotted in your stores of a 2-inch jar of eye cream encased in 10-inch by 11-inch packaging.
We need to be producing less waste, not more. I urge Costco to reduce its product packaging.
Sincerely,
Costco CEO W. Craig Jelinek:
Costco is contributing to our waste crisis with its oversized and excessive packaging, and our environment is paying the price.
There's no good reason to package a tiny product in an oversized plastic or coated cardboard shell -- such as the example recently spotted in your stores of a 2-inch jar of eye cream encased in 10-inch by 11-inch packaging.
We need to be producing less waste, not more. I urge Costco to reduce its product packaging.
Sincerely,
Costco CEO W. Craig Jelinek:
Costco is contributing to our waste crisis with its oversized and excessive packaging, and our environment is paying the price.
There's no good reason to package a tiny product in an oversized plastic or coated cardboard shell -- such as the example recently spotted in your stores of a 2-inch jar of eye cream encased in 10-inch by 11-inch packaging.
We need to be producing less waste, not more. I urge Costco to reduce its product packaging.
Sincerely,
Costco CEO W. Craig Jelinek:
Costco is contributing to our waste crisis with its oversized and excessive packaging, and our environment is paying the price.
There's no good reason to package a tiny product in an oversized plastic or coated cardboard shell -- such as the example recently spotted in your stores of a 2-inch jar of eye cream encased in 10-inch by 11-inch packaging.
We need to be producing less waste, not more. I urge Costco to reduce its product packaging.
Sincerely,
Costco CEO W. Craig Jelinek:
Costco is contributing to our waste crisis with its oversized and excessive packaging, and our environment is paying the price.
There's no good reason to package a tiny product in an oversized plastic or coated cardboard shell -- such as the example recently spotted in your stores of a 2-inch jar of eye cream encased in 10-inch by 11-inch packaging.
We need to be producing less waste, not more. I urge Costco to reduce its product packaging.
Sincerely,
Costco CEO W. Craig Jelinek:
Costco is contributing to our waste crisis with its oversized and excessive packaging, and our environment is paying the price.
There's no good reason to package a tiny product in an oversized plastic or coated cardboard shell -- such as the example recently spotted in your stores of a 2-inch jar of eye cream encased in 10-inch by 11-inch packaging.
We need to be producing less waste, not more. I urge Costco to reduce its product packaging.
Sincerely,
Costco CEO W. Craig Jelinek:
Costco is contributing to our waste crisis with its oversized and excessive packaging, and our environment is paying the price.
There's no good reason to package a tiny product in an oversized plastic or coated cardboard shell -- such as the example recently spotted in your stores of a 2-inch jar of eye cream encased in 10-inch by 11-inch packaging.
We need to be producing less waste, not more. I urge Costco to reduce its product packaging.
Sincerely,
Costco CEO W. Craig Jelinek:
Costco is contributing to our waste crisis with its oversized and excessive packaging, and our environment is paying the price.
There's no good reason to package a tiny product in an oversized plastic or coated cardboard shell -- such as the example recently spotted in your stores of a 2-inch jar of eye cream encased in 10-inch by 11-inch packaging.
We need to be producing less waste, not more. I urge Costco to reduce its product packaging.
Sincerely,
Costco CEO W. Craig Jelinek:
Costco is contributing to our waste crisis with its oversized and excessive packaging, and our environment is paying the price.
There's no good reason to package a tiny product in an oversized plastic or coated cardboard shell -- such as the example recently spotted in your stores of a 2-inch jar of eye cream encased in 10-inch by 11-inch packaging.
We need to be producing less waste, not more. I urge Costco to reduce its product packaging.
Sincerely,
Costco CEO W. Craig Jelinek:
Costco is contributing to our waste crisis with its oversized and excessive packaging, and our environment is paying the price.
There's no good reason to package a tiny product in an oversized plastic or coated cardboard shell -- such as the example recently spotted in your stores of a 2-inch jar of eye cream encased in 10-inch by 11-inch packaging.
We need to be producing less waste, not more. I urge Costco to reduce its product packaging.
Sincerely,
Costco CEO W. Craig Jelinek:
Costco is contributing to our waste crisis with its oversized and excessive packaging, and our environment is paying the price.
There's no good reason to package a tiny product in an oversized plastic or coated cardboard shell -- such as the example recently spotted in your stores of a 2-inch jar of eye cream encased in 10-inch by 11-inch packaging.
We need to be producing less waste, not more. I urge Costco to reduce its product packaging.
Sincerely,
Costco CEO W. Craig Jelinek:
Costco is contributing to our waste crisis with its oversized and excessive packaging, and our environment is paying the price.
There's no good reason to package a tiny product in an oversized plastic or coated cardboard shell -- such as the example recently spotted in your stores of a 2-inch jar of eye cream encased in 10-inch by 11-inch packaging.
We need to be producing less waste, not more. I urge Costco to reduce its product packaging.
Sincerely,
Costco CEO W. Craig Jelinek:
Costco is contributing to our waste crisis with its oversized and excessive packaging, and our environment is paying the price.
There's no good reason to package a tiny product in an oversized plastic or coated cardboard shell -- such as the example recently spotted in your stores of a 2-inch jar of eye cream encased in 10-inch by 11-inch packaging.
We need to be producing less waste, not more. I urge Costco to reduce its product packaging.
Sincerely,
Costco CEO W. Craig Jelinek:
Costco is contributing to our waste crisis with its oversized and excessive packaging, and our environment is paying the price.
There's no good reason to package a tiny product in an oversized plastic or coated cardboard shell -- such as the example recently spotted in your stores of a 2-inch jar of eye cream encased in 10-inch by 11-inch packaging.
We need to be producing less waste, not more. I urge Costco to reduce its product packaging.
Sincerely,
Costco CEO W. Craig Jelinek:
Costco is contributing to our waste crisis with its oversized and excessive packaging, and our environment is paying the price.
There's no good reason to package a tiny product in an oversized plastic or coated cardboard shell -- such as the example recently spotted in your stores of a 2-inch jar of eye cream encased in 10-inch by 11-inch packaging.
We need to be producing less waste, not more. I urge Costco to reduce its product packaging.
Sincerely,
Costco CEO W. Craig Jelinek:
Costco is contributing to our waste crisis with its oversized and excessive packaging, and our environment is paying the price.
There's no good reason to package a tiny product in an oversized plastic or coated cardboard shell -- such as the example recently spotted in your stores of a 2-inch jar of eye cream encased in 10-inch by 11-inch packaging.
We need to be producing less waste, not more. I urge Costco to reduce its product packaging.
Sincerely,
Costco CEO W. Craig Jelinek:
Costco is contributing to our waste crisis with its oversized and excessive packaging, and our environment is paying the price.
There's no good reason to package a tiny product in an oversized plastic or coated cardboard shell -- such as the example recently spotted in your stores of a 2-inch jar of eye cream encased in 10-inch by 11-inch packaging.
We need to be producing less waste, not more. I urge Costco to reduce its product packaging.
Sincerely,
Costco CEO W. Craig Jelinek:
Costco is contributing to our waste crisis with its oversized and excessive packaging, and our environment is paying the price.
There's no good reason to package a tiny product in an oversized plastic or coated cardboard shell -- such as the example recently spotted in your stores of a 2-inch jar of eye cream encased in 10-inch by 11-inch packaging.
We need to be producing less waste, not more. I urge Costco to reduce its product packaging.
Sincerely,
Costco CEO W. Craig Jelinek:
Costco is contributing to our waste crisis with its oversized and excessive packaging, and our environment is paying the price.
There's no good reason to package a tiny product in an oversized plastic or coated cardboard shell -- such as the example recently spotted in your stores of a 2-inch jar of eye cream encased in 10-inch by 11-inch packaging.
We need to be producing less waste, not more. I urge Costco to reduce its product packaging.
Sincerely,
Costco CEO W. Craig Jelinek:
Costco is contributing to our waste crisis with its oversized and excessive packaging, and our environment is paying the price.
There's no good reason to package a tiny product in an oversized plastic or coated cardboard shell -- such as the example recently spotted in your stores of a 2-inch jar of eye cream encased in 10-inch by 11-inch packaging.
We need to be producing less waste, not more. I urge Costco to reduce its product packaging.
Sincerely,
Costco CEO W. Craig Jelinek:
Costco is contributing to our waste crisis with its oversized and excessive packaging, and our environment is paying the price.
There's no good reason to package a tiny product in an oversized plastic or coated cardboard shell -- such as the example recently spotted in your stores of a 2-inch jar of eye cream encased in 10-inch by 11-inch packaging.
We need to be producing less waste, not more. I urge Costco to reduce its product packaging.
Sincerely,
Costco CEO W. Craig Jelinek:
Costco is contributing to our waste crisis with its oversized and excessive packaging, and our environment is paying the price.
There's no good reason to package a tiny product in an oversized plastic or coated cardboard shell -- such as the example recently spotted in your stores of a 2-inch jar of eye cream encased in 10-inch by 11-inch packaging.
We need to be producing less waste, not more. I urge Costco to reduce its product packaging.
Sincerely,
Costco CEO W. Craig Jelinek:
Costco is contributing to our waste crisis with its oversized and excessive packaging, and our environment is paying the price.
There's no good reason to package a tiny product in an oversized plastic or coated cardboard shell -- such as the example recently spotted in your stores of a 2-inch jar of eye cream encased in 10-inch by 11-inch packaging.
We need to be producing less waste, not more. I urge Costco to reduce its product packaging.
Sincerely,
Home Depot CEO Ted Decker,
We, the undersigned, urge you to stop selling Roundup and other glyphosate products in all of Home Depot's stores. Killing weeds more easily isn't worth the irreparable damage that glyphosate, the main active ingredient in Roundup, inflicts on people and our environment.
In the past few decades, monarch butterfly populations have plummeted by as much as 95%.
One big reason? The pervasive use of Roundup, which devastates the milkweed that monarchs need to survive.
Research has also linked glyphosate to serious health risks, including cancer. The World Health Organization has labeled glyphosate as "probably carcinogenic to humans." One study estimates that exposure can raise the risk of cancer by 41%.
Home Depot can make a difference on this issue by ending the sale of Roundup until it's been reformulated and proven safe.
Sincerely,
Walmart CEO Doug McMillon:
We, the undersigned, urge Walmart to commit to taking single-use plastic packaging off store shelves, especially in the grocery section.
Walmart is America's largest grocer by revenue -- but far too many shoppers are coming home with a pile of single-use plastic packaging that they didn't ask for, which can clog our landfills and pollute our environment for centuries to come.
Nothing we use for a few minutes should threaten our communities and our planet for hundreds of years. Walmart can reduce its plastic waste and even set a precedent for other superstores to follow by eliminating single-use plastic packaging.
Sincerely,
Walmart CEO Doug McMillon:
We, the undersigned, urge Walmart to commit to taking single-use plastic packaging off store shelves, especially in the grocery section.
Walmart is America's largest grocer by revenue -- but far too many shoppers are coming home with a pile of single-use plastic packaging that they didn't ask for, which can clog our landfills and pollute our environment for centuries to come.
Nothing we use for a few minutes should threaten our communities and our planet for hundreds of years. Walmart can reduce its plastic waste and even set a precedent for other superstores to follow by eliminating single-use plastic packaging.
Sincerely,
Walmart CEO Doug McMillon:
We, the undersigned, urge Walmart to commit to taking single-use plastic packaging off store shelves, especially in the grocery section.
Walmart is America's largest grocer by revenue -- but far too many shoppers are coming home with a pile of single-use plastic packaging that they didn't ask for, which can clog our landfills and pollute our environment for centuries to come.
Nothing we use for a few minutes should threaten our communities and our planet for hundreds of years. Walmart can reduce its plastic waste and even set a precedent for other superstores to follow by eliminating single-use plastic packaging.
Sincerely,
Walmart CEO Doug McMillon:
We, the undersigned, urge Walmart to commit to taking single-use plastic packaging off store shelves, especially in the grocery section.
Walmart is America's largest grocer by revenue -- but far too many shoppers are coming home with a pile of single-use plastic packaging that they didn't ask for, which can clog our landfills and pollute our environment for centuries to come.
Nothing we use for a few minutes should threaten our communities and our planet for hundreds of years. Walmart can reduce its plastic waste and even set a precedent for other superstores to follow by eliminating single-use plastic packaging.
Sincerely,
Walmart CEO Doug McMillon:
We, the undersigned, urge Walmart to commit to taking single-use plastic packaging off store shelves, especially in the grocery section.
Walmart is America's largest grocer by revenue -- but far too many shoppers are coming home with a pile of single-use plastic packaging that they didn't ask for, which can clog our landfills and pollute our environment for centuries to come.
Nothing we use for a few minutes should threaten our communities and our planet for hundreds of years. Walmart can reduce its plastic waste and even set a precedent for other superstores to follow by eliminating single-use plastic packaging.
Sincerely,
Walmart CEO Doug McMillon:
We, the undersigned, urge Walmart to commit to taking single-use plastic packaging off store shelves, especially in the grocery section.
Walmart is America's largest grocer by revenue -- but far too many shoppers are coming home with a pile of single-use plastic packaging that they didn't ask for, which can clog our landfills and pollute our environment for centuries to come.
Nothing we use for a few minutes should threaten our communities and our planet for hundreds of years. Walmart can reduce its plastic waste and even set a precedent for other superstores to follow by eliminating single-use plastic packaging.
Sincerely,
Walmart CEO Doug McMillon:
We, the undersigned, urge Walmart to commit to taking single-use plastic packaging off store shelves, especially in the grocery section.
Walmart is America's largest grocer by revenue -- but far too many shoppers are coming home with a pile of single-use plastic packaging that they didn't ask for, which can clog our landfills and pollute our environment for centuries to come.
Nothing we use for a few minutes should threaten our communities and our planet for hundreds of years. Walmart can reduce its plastic waste and even set a precedent for other superstores to follow by eliminating single-use plastic packaging.
Sincerely,
Walmart CEO Doug McMillon:
We, the undersigned, urge Walmart to commit to taking single-use plastic packaging off store shelves, especially in the grocery section.
Walmart is America's largest grocer by revenue -- but far too many shoppers are coming home with a pile of single-use plastic packaging that they didn't ask for, which can clog our landfills and pollute our environment for centuries to come.
Nothing we use for a few minutes should threaten our communities and our planet for hundreds of years. Walmart can reduce its plastic waste and even set a precedent for other superstores to follow by eliminating single-use plastic packaging.
Sincerely,
Walmart CEO Doug McMillon:
We, the undersigned, urge Walmart to commit to taking single-use plastic packaging off store shelves, especially in the grocery section.
Walmart is America's largest grocer by revenue -- but far too many shoppers are coming home with a pile of single-use plastic packaging that they didn't ask for, which can clog our landfills and pollute our environment for centuries to come.
Nothing we use for a few minutes should threaten our communities and our planet for hundreds of years. Walmart can reduce its plastic waste and even set a precedent for other superstores to follow by eliminating single-use plastic packaging.
Sincerely,
Walmart CEO Doug McMillon:
We, the undersigned, urge Walmart to commit to taking single-use plastic packaging off store shelves, especially in the grocery section.
Walmart is America's largest grocer by revenue -- but far too many shoppers are coming home with a pile of single-use plastic packaging that they didn't ask for, which can clog our landfills and pollute our environment for centuries to come.
Nothing we use for a few minutes should threaten our communities and our planet for hundreds of years. Walmart can reduce its plastic waste and even set a precedent for other superstores to follow by eliminating single-use plastic packaging.
Sincerely,
Walmart CEO Doug McMillon:
We, the undersigned, urge Walmart to commit to taking single-use plastic packaging off store shelves, especially in the grocery section.
Walmart is America's largest grocer by revenue -- but far too many shoppers are coming home with a pile of single-use plastic packaging that they didn't ask for, which can clog our landfills and pollute our environment for centuries to come.
Nothing we use for a few minutes should threaten our communities and our planet for hundreds of years. Walmart can reduce its plastic waste and even set a precedent for other superstores to follow by eliminating single-use plastic packaging.
Sincerely,
Walmart CEO Doug McMillon:
We, the undersigned, urge Walmart to commit to taking single-use plastic packaging off store shelves, especially in the grocery section.
Walmart is America's largest grocer by revenue -- but far too many shoppers are coming home with a pile of single-use plastic packaging that they didn't ask for, which can clog our landfills and pollute our environment for centuries to come.
Nothing we use for a few minutes should threaten our communities and our planet for hundreds of years. Walmart can reduce its plastic waste and even set a precedent for other superstores to follow by eliminating single-use plastic packaging.
Sincerely,
Walmart CEO Doug McMillon:
We, the undersigned, urge Walmart to commit to taking single-use plastic packaging off store shelves, especially in the grocery section.
Walmart is America's largest grocer by revenue -- but far too many shoppers are coming home with a pile of single-use plastic packaging that they didn't ask for, which can clog our landfills and pollute our environment for centuries to come.
Nothing we use for a few minutes should threaten our communities and our planet for hundreds of years. Walmart can reduce its plastic waste and even set a precedent for other superstores to follow by eliminating single-use plastic packaging.
Sincerely,
Walmart CEO Doug McMillon:
We, the undersigned, urge Walmart to commit to taking single-use plastic packaging off store shelves, especially in the grocery section.
Walmart is America's largest grocer by revenue -- but far too many shoppers are coming home with a pile of single-use plastic packaging that they didn't ask for, which can clog our landfills and pollute our environment for centuries to come.
Nothing we use for a few minutes should threaten our communities and our planet for hundreds of years. Walmart can reduce its plastic waste and even set a precedent for other superstores to follow by eliminating single-use plastic packaging.
Sincerely,
Walmart CEO Doug McMillon:
We, the undersigned, urge Walmart to commit to taking single-use plastic packaging off store shelves, especially in the grocery section.
Walmart is America's largest grocer by revenue -- but far too many shoppers are coming home with a pile of single-use plastic packaging that they didn't ask for, which can clog our landfills and pollute our environment for centuries to come.
Nothing we use for a few minutes should threaten our communities and our planet for hundreds of years. Walmart can reduce its plastic waste and even set a precedent for other superstores to follow by eliminating single-use plastic packaging.
Sincerely,
Walmart CEO Doug McMillon:
We, the undersigned, urge Walmart to commit to taking single-use plastic packaging off store shelves, especially in the grocery section.
Walmart is America's largest grocer by revenue -- but far too many shoppers are coming home with a pile of single-use plastic packaging that they didn't ask for, which can clog our landfills and pollute our environment for centuries to come.
Nothing we use for a few minutes should threaten our communities and our planet for hundreds of years. Walmart can reduce its plastic waste and even set a precedent for other superstores to follow by eliminating single-use plastic packaging.
Sincerely,
Walmart CEO Doug McMillon:
We, the undersigned, urge Walmart to commit to taking single-use plastic packaging off store shelves, especially in the grocery section.
Walmart is America's largest grocer by revenue -- but far too many shoppers are coming home with a pile of single-use plastic packaging that they didn't ask for, which can clog our landfills and pollute our environment for centuries to come.
Nothing we use for a few minutes should threaten our communities and our planet for hundreds of years. Walmart can reduce its plastic waste and even set a precedent for other superstores to follow by eliminating single-use plastic packaging.
Sincerely,
Walmart CEO Doug McMillon:
We, the undersigned, urge Walmart to commit to taking single-use plastic packaging off store shelves, especially in the grocery section.
Walmart is America's largest grocer by revenue -- but far too many shoppers are coming home with a pile of single-use plastic packaging that they didn't ask for, which can clog our landfills and pollute our environment for centuries to come.
Nothing we use for a few minutes should threaten our communities and our planet for hundreds of years. Walmart can reduce its plastic waste and even set a precedent for other superstores to follow by eliminating single-use plastic packaging.
Sincerely,
Walmart CEO Doug McMillon:
We, the undersigned, urge Walmart to commit to taking single-use plastic packaging off store shelves, especially in the grocery section.
Walmart is America's largest grocer by revenue -- but far too many shoppers are coming home with a pile of single-use plastic packaging that they didn't ask for, which can clog our landfills and pollute our environment for centuries to come.
Nothing we use for a few minutes should threaten our communities and our planet for hundreds of years. Walmart can reduce its plastic waste and even set a precedent for other superstores to follow by eliminating single-use plastic packaging.
Sincerely,
Walmart CEO Doug McMillon:
We, the undersigned, urge Walmart to commit to taking single-use plastic packaging off store shelves, especially in the grocery section.
Walmart is America's largest grocer by revenue -- but far too many shoppers are coming home with a pile of single-use plastic packaging that they didn't ask for, which can clog our landfills and pollute our environment for centuries to come.
Nothing we use for a few minutes should threaten our communities and our planet for hundreds of years. Walmart can reduce its plastic waste and even set a precedent for other superstores to follow by eliminating single-use plastic packaging.
Sincerely,
Walmart CEO Doug McMillon:
We, the undersigned, urge Walmart to commit to taking single-use plastic packaging off store shelves, especially in the grocery section.
Walmart is America's largest grocer by revenue -- but far too many shoppers are coming home with a pile of single-use plastic packaging that they didn't ask for, which can clog our landfills and pollute our environment for centuries to come.
Nothing we use for a few minutes should threaten our communities and our planet for hundreds of years. Walmart can reduce its plastic waste and even set a precedent for other superstores to follow by eliminating single-use plastic packaging.
Sincerely,
Walmart CEO Doug McMillon:
We, the undersigned, urge Walmart to commit to taking single-use plastic packaging off store shelves, especially in the grocery section.
Walmart is America's largest grocer by revenue -- but far too many shoppers are coming home with a pile of single-use plastic packaging that they didn't ask for, which can clog our landfills and pollute our environment for centuries to come.
Nothing we use for a few minutes should threaten our communities and our planet for hundreds of years. Walmart can reduce its plastic waste and even set a precedent for other superstores to follow by eliminating single-use plastic packaging.
Sincerely,
Walmart CEO Doug McMillon:
We, the undersigned, urge Walmart to commit to taking single-use plastic packaging off store shelves, especially in the grocery section.
Walmart is America's largest grocer by revenue -- but far too many shoppers are coming home with a pile of single-use plastic packaging that they didn't ask for, which can clog our landfills and pollute our environment for centuries to come.
Nothing we use for a few minutes should threaten our communities and our planet for hundreds of years. Walmart can reduce its plastic waste and even set a precedent for other superstores to follow by eliminating single-use plastic packaging.
Sincerely,
Walmart CEO Doug McMillon:
We, the undersigned, urge Walmart to commit to taking single-use plastic packaging off store shelves, especially in the grocery section.
Walmart is America's largest grocer by revenue -- but far too many shoppers are coming home with a pile of single-use plastic packaging that they didn't ask for, which can clog our landfills and pollute our environment for centuries to come.
Nothing we use for a few minutes should threaten our communities and our planet for hundreds of years. Walmart can reduce its plastic waste and even set a precedent for other superstores to follow by eliminating single-use plastic packaging.
Sincerely,
The Bottle Bill is the state's most effective recycling tool. But it's more than 40 years old and it needs to be updated. With so many more beverages on the market now -- like water, sports drinks, iced teas and more -- there's more litter and plastic waste everywhere. We need to modernize the law to cover these containers and more.
California has the opportunity to go big on clean energy by repurposing developed areas, like spaces along highways and parking lots, to accommodate solar panels. Tell your state assemblymember to pass Senate Bill 49 to go solar along highways and parking lots in California.
Single use plastics are seemingly everywhere we go and hard to avoid. But, with studies estimating that humans eat an average of a credit card's worth of plastic every single week, we need urgent action to reduce our plastic waste and its environmental and health impacts anywhere we can.
A commonsense bill to reduce plastic waste in our state agencies passed the House with near unanimous support, but is now stalled in the Senate. Send a message now to tell the Senate Rules Chair to assign this bill to a committee to keep it moving before the end of the legislative session.
Are you concerned about the impacts of toxic PFAS? Do you want legislators to do more to protect you and wildlife?
Here's your chance!
An Act to protect Massachusetts public health from PFAS (S1356/H2197) is a bill to:
The Alliance for a Healthy Tomorrow, a coalition including Environment Massachusetts, Clean Water Action, Massachusetts Sierra Club, Community Action Works and 60 other local environmental and public health organizations in Massachusetts working to pass this bill. We need your help.
Because this will be submitted as testimony, lawmakers ask that you include your name, address, and email to this petition which we will submit to the legislature's Joint Committee on Public Health when Environment Massachusetts' legislative director testifies in support of the bill this summer. We know the committee will be hearing from the chemical industry. We want to make sure they hear from you.
Enough sun shines on America every day to power our country many times over. One of the best places to put solar panels is on big, flat, sunny roofs of warehouses. FedEx owns and operates more than 5,000 facilities with thousands of acres of rooftop space, but the company has not publicly announced a goal or plan to install solar on its rooftops. FedEx, please bring the benefits of cleaner air, less pollution and greater resilience to our communities by announcing plans to go solar wherever viable, including rooftops and parking lots, by 2035.
Are you concerned about the impacts of toxic PFAS? Do you want legislators to do more to protect you?
Here's your chance!
An Act to protect Massachusetts public health from PFAS (S1356/H2197) is a bill to:
The Alliance for a Healthy Tomorrow, a coalition including MASSPIRG, Clean Water Action, Massachusetts Sierra Club, Community Action Works and 60 other local environmental and public health organizations in Massachusetts are working to pass this bill. We need your help.
Because this will be submitted as testimony, lawmakers ask that you include your name, address, and email to this petition which we will submit to the legislature's Joint Committee on Public Health when MASSPIRG's legislative director testifies in support of the bill this summer. We know the committee will be hearing from the chemical industry. We want to make sure they hear from you.
Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OLEM-2023-0228
I applaud the EPA's Draft National Strategy to Prevent Plastic Pollution for asserting that the practice of converting plastic waste to fuel or fuel substitutes is not "recycling."
However, I urge the agency to significantly strengthen the proposals on reducing plastic waste, especially from single-use plastics, at the source.
Given that less than 10% of all plastic ever made has actually been recycled, it's clear we need to stop producing so much wasteful plastic in the first place. In order to truly address our country's plastic pollution crisis, it's crucial that the Draft National Strategy to Prevent Plastic Pollution includes strong, concrete policies to ensure that fewer single-use items are produced in the first place, and to make plastic producers responsible for reducing their plastic footprint.
Bears Ears National Monument and its red rock formations and canyons are irreplaceable. It's the last place we should allow to be threatened by toxic uranium mining, and yet Atomic Minerals Corp. says it has a green light from the Bureau of Land Management to drill up to 25 exploratory holes just outside Bears Ears in search of uranium.
Wherever it takes place, uranium mining is devastating to land, air and water. Every uranium mine ever operated in the United States has needed toxic waste cleanup, and we can't let Bears Ears be next. I urge you to block uranium mining near the borders of Bears Ears National Monument.
The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge is a fragile and irreplaceable wilderness. We can't allow it to be destroyed by oil exploration and drilling.
Transporting oil by pipeline or ship can result in devastating oil spills -- and spills on frozen tundra or in icy northern waters are particularly hazardous and expensive to clean. Roads and wellpads destroy fragile tundra, and drilling operations belch toxic chemicals that can cause major health problems for wildlife and people.
Arctic exploration is not worth the risk to wildlife, people, and our planet. I strongly urge you to commit to not providing insurance cover for any energy project in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.
The fashion and clothing industry generates massive amounts of waste -- and contributes to pollution in the process. Clothing overproduction is poisoning our water, contributing to climate change, and generating enough waste to fill the Great Wall of China twice by 2050. California has an opportunity to be a leader in tackling our clothing waste problem. Tell your state Assemblymember to vote yes on the Responsible Textile Recovery Act.
Agency/Docket Numbers:
LLCO923000-L1440000-ET0000
COC-080815
I support the proposed Administrative Mineral Withdrawal for the Thompson Divide and thank the Forest Service for working to provide meaningful protection for these spectacular public lands in the White River and Gunnison National Forests.
The Thompson Divide in Western Colorado is a landscape rich with expansive aspen groves and old-growth spruce-fir forests. Black bears, mule-deer and elk herds are prodigious because with the surrounding areas, the Thompson Divide constitutes one of the largest expanses of unfragmented, roadless forests in the state.
Developing land for oil and gas drilling can devastate the environment. It often requires tearing down forests to build roads, importing heavy machinery, and initiating a steady stream of trucks to carry in millions of gallons of water and fracking fluid. This kind of destructive activity has no place in the Thompson Divide.
Sincerely,
Agency/Docket Numbers:
LLCO923000-L1440000-ET0000
COC-080815
I support the proposed Administrative Mineral Withdrawal for the Thompson Divide and thank the Forest Service for working to provide meaningful protection for these spectacular public lands in the White River and Gunnison National Forests.
The Thompson Divide in Western Colorado is a landscape rich with expansive aspen groves and old-growth spruce-fir forests. Black bears, mule-deer and elk herds are prodigious because with the surrounding areas, the Thompson Divide constitutes one of the largest expanses of unfragmented, roadless forests in the state.
Developing land for oil and gas drilling can devastate the environment. It often requires tearing down forests to build roads, importing heavy machinery, and initiating a steady stream of trucks to carry in millions of gallons of water and fracking fluid. This kind of destructive activity has no place in the Thompson Divide.
Sincerely,
Costco consumers can buy nearly everything they need in its stores ... with the caveat that they will bring home plenty of unnecessary plastic packaging.
Plastic packaging is the single-largest contributor to our country's plastic pollution crisis -- more than 91% of plastic gets sent to a landfill or incinerated. This wholesale retailer isn't doing enough to reduce its plastic footprint, earning an "F" for its excessive plastic use.
If Costco takes action to reduce its use of plastic packaging, it would set an example for other stores to follow. Will you join us in calling on Costco to move beyond plastic?
Dear Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella,
Don't junk millions of computers. Microsoft's decision to end support for Windows 10 could cause the single biggest jump in junked computers ever, and make it impossible for them to hit their sustainability goals. The new version of their operating system's stringent hardware requirements could result in 40% of PCs in use being left behind.
Microsoft's decision to stop supporting millions of functional computers in our hospitals, businesses, and homes is a raw deal for customers who expect their expensive devices to last.
All software reaches a point at which it's no longer supported, but when the consequences to our environment are this large we shouldn't accept it.
Dear Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella,
Don't junk millions of computers. Microsoft's decision to end support for Windows 10 could cause the single biggest jump in junked computers ever, and make it impossible for them to hit their sustainability goals. The new version of their operating system's stringent hardware requirements could result in 40% of PCs in use being left behind.
Microsoft's decision to stop supporting millions of functional computers in our hospitals, businesses, and homes is a raw deal for customers who expect their expensive devices to last.
All software reaches a point at which it's no longer supported, but when the consequences to our environment are this large we shouldn't accept it.
Dear Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella,
Don't junk millions of computers. Microsoft's decision to end support for Windows 10 could cause the single biggest jump in junked computers ever, and make it impossible for them to hit their sustainability goals. The new version of their operating system's stringent hardware requirements could result in 40% of PCs in use being left behind.
Microsoft's decision to stop supporting millions of functional computers in our hospitals, businesses, and homes is a raw deal for customers who expect their expensive devices to last.
All software reaches a point at which it's no longer supported, but when the consequences to our environment are this large we shouldn't accept it.
Dear Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella,
Don't junk millions of computers. Microsoft's decision to end support for Windows 10 could cause the single biggest jump in junked computers ever, and make it impossible for them to hit their sustainability goals. The new version of their operating system's stringent hardware requirements could result in 40% of PCs in use being left behind.
Microsoft's decision to stop supporting millions of functional computers in our hospitals, businesses, and homes is a raw deal for customers who expect their expensive devices to last.
All software reaches a point at which it's no longer supported, but when the consequences to our environment are this large we shouldn't accept it.
Dear Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella,
Don't junk millions of computers. Microsoft's decision to end support for Windows 10 could cause the single biggest jump in junked computers ever, and make it impossible for them to hit their sustainability goals. The new version of their operating system's stringent hardware requirements could result in 40% of PCs in use being left behind.
Microsoft's decision to stop supporting millions of functional computers in our hospitals, businesses, and homes is a raw deal for customers who expect their expensive devices to last.
All software reaches a point at which it's no longer supported, but when the consequences to our environment are this large we shouldn't accept it.
Dear Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella,
Don't junk millions of computers. Microsoft's decision to end support for Windows 10 could cause the single biggest jump in junked computers ever, and make it impossible for them to hit their sustainability goals. The new version of their operating system's stringent hardware requirements could result in 40% of PCs in use being left behind.
Microsoft's decision to stop supporting millions of functional computers in our hospitals, businesses, and homes is a raw deal for customers who expect their expensive devices to last.
All software reaches a point at which it's no longer supported, but when the consequences to our environment are this large we shouldn't accept it.
Dear Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella,
Don't junk millions of computers. Microsoft's decision to end support for Windows 10 could cause the single biggest jump in junked computers ever, and make it impossible for them to hit their sustainability goals. The new version of their operating system's stringent hardware requirements could result in 40% of PCs in use being left behind.
Microsoft's decision to stop supporting millions of functional computers in our hospitals, businesses, and homes is a raw deal for customers who expect their expensive devices to last.
All software reaches a point at which it's no longer supported, but when the consequences to our environment are this large we shouldn't accept it.
Dear Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella,
Don't junk millions of computers. Microsoft's decision to end support for Windows 10 could cause the single biggest jump in junked computers ever, and make it impossible for them to hit their sustainability goals. The new version of their operating system's stringent hardware requirements could result in 40% of PCs in use being left behind.
Microsoft's decision to stop supporting millions of functional computers in our hospitals, businesses, and homes is a raw deal for customers who expect their expensive devices to last.
All software reaches a point at which it's no longer supported, but when the consequences to our environment are this large we shouldn't accept it.
Dear Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella,
Don't junk millions of computers. Microsoft's decision to end support for Windows 10 could cause the single biggest jump in junked computers ever, and make it impossible for them to hit their sustainability goals. The new version of their operating system's stringent hardware requirements could result in 40% of PCs in use being left behind.
Microsoft's decision to stop supporting millions of functional computers in our hospitals, businesses, and homes is a raw deal for customers who expect their expensive devices to last.
All software reaches a point at which it's no longer supported, but when the consequences to our environment are this large we shouldn't accept it.
Dear Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella,
Don't junk millions of computers. Microsoft's decision to end support for Windows 10 could cause the single biggest jump in junked computers ever, and make it impossible for them to hit their sustainability goals. The new version of their operating system's stringent hardware requirements could result in 40% of PCs in use being left behind.
Microsoft's decision to stop supporting millions of functional computers in our hospitals, businesses, and homes is a raw deal for customers who expect their expensive devices to last.
All software reaches a point at which it's no longer supported, but when the consequences to our environment are this large we shouldn't accept it.
Dear Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella,
Don't junk millions of computers. Microsoft's decision to end support for Windows 10 could cause the single biggest jump in junked computers ever, and make it impossible for them to hit their sustainability goals. The new version of their operating system's stringent hardware requirements could result in 40% of PCs in use being left behind.
Microsoft's decision to stop supporting millions of functional computers in our hospitals, businesses, and homes is a raw deal for customers who expect their expensive devices to last.
All software reaches a point at which it's no longer supported, but when the consequences to our environment are this large we shouldn't accept it.
Dear Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella,
Don't junk millions of computers. Microsoft's decision to end support for Windows 10 could cause the single biggest jump in junked computers ever, and make it impossible for them to hit their sustainability goals. The new version of their operating system's stringent hardware requirements could result in 40% of PCs in use being left behind.
Microsoft's decision to stop supporting millions of functional computers in our hospitals, businesses, and homes is a raw deal for customers who expect their expensive devices to last.
All software reaches a point at which it's no longer supported, but when the consequences to our environment are this large we shouldn't accept it.
Dear Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella,
Don't junk millions of computers. Microsoft's decision to end support for Windows 10 could cause the single biggest jump in junked computers ever, and make it impossible for them to hit their sustainability goals. The new version of their operating system's stringent hardware requirements could result in 40% of PCs in use being left behind.
Microsoft's decision to stop supporting millions of functional computers in our hospitals, businesses, and homes is a raw deal for customers who expect their expensive devices to last.
All software reaches a point at which it's no longer supported, but when the consequences to our environment are this large we shouldn't accept it.
Dear Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella,
Don't junk millions of computers. Microsoft's decision to end support for Windows 10 could cause the single biggest jump in junked computers ever, and make it impossible for them to hit their sustainability goals. The new version of their operating system's stringent hardware requirements could result in 40% of PCs in use being left behind.
Microsoft's decision to stop supporting millions of functional computers in our hospitals, businesses, and homes is a raw deal for customers who expect their expensive devices to last.
All software reaches a point at which it's no longer supported, but when the consequences to our environment are this large we shouldn't accept it.
Dear Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella,
Don't junk millions of computers. Microsoft's decision to end support for Windows 10 could cause the single biggest jump in junked computers ever, and make it impossible for them to hit their sustainability goals. The new version of their operating system's stringent hardware requirements could result in 40% of PCs in use being left behind.
Microsoft's decision to stop supporting millions of functional computers in our hospitals, businesses, and homes is a raw deal for customers who expect their expensive devices to last.
All software reaches a point at which it's no longer supported, but when the consequences to our environment are this large we shouldn't accept it.
Dear Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella,
Don't junk millions of computers. Microsoft's decision to end support for Windows 10 could cause the single biggest jump in junked computers ever, and make it impossible for them to hit their sustainability goals. The new version of their operating system's stringent hardware requirements could result in 40% of PCs in use being left behind.
Microsoft's decision to stop supporting millions of functional computers in our hospitals, businesses, and homes is a raw deal for customers who expect their expensive devices to last.
All software reaches a point at which it's no longer supported, but when the consequences to our environment are this large we shouldn't accept it.
Dear Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella,
Don't junk millions of computers. Microsoft's decision to end support for Windows 10 could cause the single biggest jump in junked computers ever, and make it impossible for them to hit their sustainability goals. The new version of their operating system's stringent hardware requirements could result in 40% of PCs in use being left behind.
Microsoft's decision to stop supporting millions of functional computers in our hospitals, businesses, and homes is a raw deal for customers who expect their expensive devices to last.
All software reaches a point at which it's no longer supported, but when the consequences to our environment are this large we shouldn't accept it.
Dear Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella,
Don't junk millions of computers. Microsoft's decision to end support for Windows 10 could cause the single biggest jump in junked computers ever, and make it impossible for them to hit their sustainability goals. The new version of their operating system's stringent hardware requirements could result in 40% of PCs in use being left behind.
Microsoft's decision to stop supporting millions of functional computers in our hospitals, businesses, and homes is a raw deal for customers who expect their expensive devices to last.
All software reaches a point at which it's no longer supported, but when the consequences to our environment are this large we shouldn't accept it.
Dear Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella,
Don't junk millions of computers. Microsoft's decision to end support for Windows 10 could cause the single biggest jump in junked computers ever, and make it impossible for them to hit their sustainability goals. The new version of their operating system's stringent hardware requirements could result in 40% of PCs in use being left behind.
Microsoft's decision to stop supporting millions of functional computers in our hospitals, businesses, and homes is a raw deal for customers who expect their expensive devices to last.
All software reaches a point at which it's no longer supported, but when the consequences to our environment are this large we shouldn't accept it.
Dear Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella,
Don't junk millions of computers. Microsoft's decision to end support for Windows 10 could cause the single biggest jump in junked computers ever, and make it impossible for them to hit their sustainability goals. The new version of their operating system's stringent hardware requirements could result in 40% of PCs in use being left behind.
Microsoft's decision to stop supporting millions of functional computers in our hospitals, businesses, and homes is a raw deal for customers who expect their expensive devices to last.
All software reaches a point at which it's no longer supported, but when the consequences to our environment are this large we shouldn't accept it.
Dear Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella,
Don't junk millions of computers. Microsoft's decision to end support for Windows 10 could cause the single biggest jump in junked computers ever, and make it impossible for them to hit their sustainability goals. The new version of their operating system's stringent hardware requirements could result in 40% of PCs in use being left behind.
Microsoft's decision to stop supporting millions of functional computers in our hospitals, businesses, and homes is a raw deal for customers who expect their expensive devices to last.
All software reaches a point at which it's no longer supported, but when the consequences to our environment are this large we shouldn't accept it.
Dear Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella,
Don't junk millions of computers. Microsoft's decision to end support for Windows 10 could cause the single biggest jump in junked computers ever, and make it impossible for them to hit their sustainability goals. The new version of their operating system's stringent hardware requirements could result in 40% of PCs in use being left behind.
Microsoft's decision to stop supporting millions of functional computers in our hospitals, businesses, and homes is a raw deal for customers who expect their expensive devices to last.
All software reaches a point at which it's no longer supported, but when the consequences to our environment are this large we shouldn't accept it.
Dear Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella,
Don't junk millions of computers. Microsoft's decision to end support for Windows 10 could cause the single biggest jump in junked computers ever, and make it impossible for them to hit their sustainability goals. The new version of their operating system's stringent hardware requirements could result in 40% of PCs in use being left behind.
Microsoft's decision to stop supporting millions of functional computers in our hospitals, businesses, and homes is a raw deal for customers who expect their expensive devices to last.
All software reaches a point at which it's no longer supported, but when the consequences to our environment are this large we shouldn't accept it.
Dear Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella,
Don't junk millions of computers. Microsoft's decision to end support for Windows 10 could cause the single biggest jump in junked computers ever, and make it impossible for them to hit their sustainability goals. The new version of their operating system's stringent hardware requirements could result in 40% of PCs in use being left behind.
Microsoft's decision to stop supporting millions of functional computers in our hospitals, businesses, and homes is a raw deal for customers who expect their expensive devices to last.
All software reaches a point at which it's no longer supported, but when the consequences to our environment are this large we shouldn't accept it.
EPA Administrator Michael Regan,
Thank you for proposing to cut global warming pollution from power plants. We must require America's biggest polluters to clean up their act, instead of continuing to harm our climate and our health, and we shouldn't allow new power plants to make these problems worse.
The proposal allows more pollution from some coal plants and smaller or intermittently running gas plants -- we urge you to extend the limits to even more power plants to accelerate the transition away from dirty, polluting energy.
Most of the top 50 polluters in the U.S. are coal and gas-fired power plants. Together, those 45 power plants emitted 28% of all greenhouse gases from electricity generation nationwide, while generating only 11% of the nation's power.
Please finalize the strongest possible limits to cut global warming pollution from power plants.
EPA Administrator Michael Regan,
Thank you for proposing to cut global warming pollution from power plants. We must require America's biggest polluters to clean up their act, instead of continuing to harm our climate and our health, and we shouldn't allow new power plants to make these problems worse.
The proposal allows more pollution from some coal plants and smaller or intermittently running gas plants -- we urge you to extend the limits to even more power plants to accelerate the transition away from dirty, polluting energy.
Most of the top 50 polluters in the U.S. are coal and gas-fired power plants. Together, those 45 power plants emitted 28% of all greenhouse gases from electricity generation nationwide, while generating only 11% of the nation's power.
Please finalize the strongest possible limits to cut global warming pollution from power plants.
EPA Administrator Michael Regan,
Thank you for proposing to cut global warming pollution from power plants. We must require America's biggest polluters to clean up their act, instead of continuing to harm our climate and our health, and we shouldn't allow new power plants to make these problems worse.
The proposal allows more pollution from some coal plants and smaller or intermittently running gas plants -- we urge you to extend the limits to even more power plants to accelerate the transition away from dirty, polluting energy.
Most of the top 50 polluters in the U.S. are coal and gas-fired power plants. Together, those 45 power plants emitted 28% of all greenhouse gases from electricity generation nationwide, while generating only 11% of the nation's power.
Please finalize the strongest possible limits to cut global warming pollution from power plants.
EPA Administrator Michael Regan,
Thank you for proposing to cut global warming pollution from power plants. We must require America's biggest polluters to clean up their act, instead of continuing to harm our climate and our health, and we shouldn't allow new power plants to make these problems worse.
The proposal allows more pollution from some coal plants and smaller or intermittently running gas plants -- we urge you to extend the limits to even more power plants to accelerate the transition away from dirty, polluting energy.
Most of the top 50 polluters in the U.S. are coal and gas-fired power plants. Together, those 45 power plants emitted 28% of all greenhouse gases from electricity generation nationwide, while generating only 11% of the nation's power.
Please finalize the strongest possible limits to cut global warming pollution from power plants.
EPA Administrator Michael Regan,
Thank you for proposing to cut global warming pollution from power plants. We must require America's biggest polluters to clean up their act, instead of continuing to harm our climate and our health, and we shouldn't allow new power plants to make these problems worse.
The proposal allows more pollution from some coal plants and smaller or intermittently running gas plants -- we urge you to extend the limits to even more power plants to accelerate the transition away from dirty, polluting energy.
Most of the top 50 polluters in the U.S. are coal and gas-fired power plants. Together, those 45 power plants emitted 28% of all greenhouse gases from electricity generation nationwide, while generating only 11% of the nation's power.
Please finalize the strongest possible limits to cut global warming pollution from power plants.
EPA Administrator Michael Regan,
Thank you for proposing to cut global warming pollution from power plants. We must require America's biggest polluters to clean up their act, instead of continuing to harm our climate and our health, and we shouldn't allow new power plants to make these problems worse.
The proposal allows more pollution from some coal plants and smaller or intermittently running gas plants -- we urge you to extend the limits to even more power plants to accelerate the transition away from dirty, polluting energy.
Most of the top 50 polluters in the U.S. are coal and gas-fired power plants. Together, those 45 power plants emitted 28% of all greenhouse gases from electricity generation nationwide, while generating only 11% of the nation's power.
Please finalize the strongest possible limits to cut global warming pollution from power plants.
EPA Administrator Michael Regan,
Thank you for proposing to cut global warming pollution from power plants. We must require America's biggest polluters to clean up their act, instead of continuing to harm our climate and our health, and we shouldn't allow new power plants to make these problems worse.
The proposal allows more pollution from some coal plants and smaller or intermittently running gas plants -- we urge you to extend the limits to even more power plants to accelerate the transition away from dirty, polluting energy.
Most of the top 50 polluters in the U.S. are coal and gas-fired power plants. Together, those 45 power plants emitted 28% of all greenhouse gases from electricity generation nationwide, while generating only 11% of the nation's power.
Please finalize the strongest possible limits to cut global warming pollution from power plants.
EPA Administrator Michael Regan,
Thank you for proposing to cut global warming pollution from power plants. We must require America's biggest polluters to clean up their act, instead of continuing to harm our climate and our health, and we shouldn't allow new power plants to make these problems worse.
The proposal allows more pollution from some coal plants and smaller or intermittently running gas plants -- we urge you to extend the limits to even more power plants to accelerate the transition away from dirty, polluting energy.
Most of the top 50 polluters in the U.S. are coal and gas-fired power plants. Together, those 45 power plants emitted 28% of all greenhouse gases from electricity generation nationwide, while generating only 11% of the nation's power.
Please finalize the strongest possible limits to cut global warming pollution from power plants.
EPA Administrator Michael Regan,
Thank you for proposing to cut global warming pollution from power plants. We must require America's biggest polluters to clean up their act, instead of continuing to harm our climate and our health, and we shouldn't allow new power plants to make these problems worse.
The proposal allows more pollution from some coal plants and smaller or intermittently running gas plants -- we urge you to extend the limits to even more power plants to accelerate the transition away from dirty, polluting energy.
Most of the top 50 polluters in the U.S. are coal and gas-fired power plants. Together, those 45 power plants emitted 28% of all greenhouse gases from electricity generation nationwide, while generating only 11% of the nation's power.
Please finalize the strongest possible limits to cut global warming pollution from power plants.
EPA Administrator Michael Regan,
Thank you for proposing to cut global warming pollution from power plants. We must require America's biggest polluters to clean up their act, instead of continuing to harm our climate and our health, and we shouldn't allow new power plants to make these problems worse.
The proposal allows more pollution from some coal plants and smaller or intermittently running gas plants -- we urge you to extend the limits to even more power plants to accelerate the transition away from dirty, polluting energy.
Most of the top 50 polluters in the U.S. are coal and gas-fired power plants. Together, those 45 power plants emitted 28% of all greenhouse gases from electricity generation nationwide, while generating only 11% of the nation's power.
Please finalize the strongest possible limits to cut global warming pollution from power plants.
EPA Administrator Michael Regan,
Thank you for proposing to cut global warming pollution from power plants. We must require America's biggest polluters to clean up their act, instead of continuing to harm our climate and our health, and we shouldn't allow new power plants to make these problems worse.
The proposal allows more pollution from some coal plants and smaller or intermittently running gas plants -- we urge you to extend the limits to even more power plants to accelerate the transition away from dirty, polluting energy.
Most of the top 50 polluters in the U.S. are coal and gas-fired power plants. Together, those 45 power plants emitted 28% of all greenhouse gases from electricity generation nationwide, while generating only 11% of the nation's power.
Please finalize the strongest possible limits to cut global warming pollution from power plants.
EPA Administrator Michael Regan,
Thank you for proposing to cut global warming pollution from power plants. We must require America's biggest polluters to clean up their act, instead of continuing to harm our climate and our health, and we shouldn't allow new power plants to make these problems worse.
The proposal allows more pollution from some coal plants and smaller or intermittently running gas plants -- we urge you to extend the limits to even more power plants to accelerate the transition away from dirty, polluting energy.
Most of the top 50 polluters in the U.S. are coal and gas-fired power plants. Together, those 45 power plants emitted 28% of all greenhouse gases from electricity generation nationwide, while generating only 11% of the nation's power.
Please finalize the strongest possible limits to cut global warming pollution from power plants.
EPA Administrator Michael Regan,
Thank you for proposing to cut global warming pollution from power plants. We must require America's biggest polluters to clean up their act, instead of continuing to harm our climate and our health, and we shouldn't allow new power plants to make these problems worse.
The proposal allows more pollution from some coal plants and smaller or intermittently running gas plants -- we urge you to extend the limits to even more power plants to accelerate the transition away from dirty, polluting energy.
Most of the top 50 polluters in the U.S. are coal and gas-fired power plants. Together, those 45 power plants emitted 28% of all greenhouse gases from electricity generation nationwide, while generating only 11% of the nation's power.
Please finalize the strongest possible limits to cut global warming pollution from power plants.
EPA Administrator Michael Regan,
Thank you for proposing to cut global warming pollution from power plants. We must require America's biggest polluters to clean up their act, instead of continuing to harm our climate and our health, and we shouldn't allow new power plants to make these problems worse.
The proposal allows more pollution from some coal plants and smaller or intermittently running gas plants -- we urge you to extend the limits to even more power plants to accelerate the transition away from dirty, polluting energy.
Most of the top 50 polluters in the U.S. are coal and gas-fired power plants. Together, those 45 power plants emitted 28% of all greenhouse gases from electricity generation nationwide, while generating only 11% of the nation's power.
Please finalize the strongest possible limits to cut global warming pollution from power plants.
EPA Administrator Michael Regan,
Thank you for proposing to cut global warming pollution from power plants. We must require America's biggest polluters to clean up their act, instead of continuing to harm our climate and our health, and we shouldn't allow new power plants to make these problems worse.
The proposal allows more pollution from some coal plants and smaller or intermittently running gas plants -- we urge you to extend the limits to even more power plants to accelerate the transition away from dirty, polluting energy.
Most of the top 50 polluters in the U.S. are coal and gas-fired power plants. Together, those 45 power plants emitted 28% of all greenhouse gases from electricity generation nationwide, while generating only 11% of the nation's power.
Please finalize the strongest possible limits to cut global warming pollution from power plants.
EPA Administrator Michael Regan,
Thank you for proposing to cut global warming pollution from power plants. We must require America's biggest polluters to clean up their act, instead of continuing to harm our climate and our health, and we shouldn't allow new power plants to make these problems worse.
The proposal allows more pollution from some coal plants and smaller or intermittently running gas plants -- we urge you to extend the limits to even more power plants to accelerate the transition away from dirty, polluting energy.
Most of the top 50 polluters in the U.S. are coal and gas-fired power plants. Together, those 45 power plants emitted 28% of all greenhouse gases from electricity generation nationwide, while generating only 11% of the nation's power.
Please finalize the strongest possible limits to cut global warming pollution from power plants.
EPA Administrator Michael Regan,
Thank you for proposing to cut global warming pollution from power plants. We must require America's biggest polluters to clean up their act, instead of continuing to harm our climate and our health, and we shouldn't allow new power plants to make these problems worse.
The proposal allows more pollution from some coal plants and smaller or intermittently running gas plants -- we urge you to extend the limits to even more power plants to accelerate the transition away from dirty, polluting energy.
Most of the top 50 polluters in the U.S. are coal and gas-fired power plants. Together, those 45 power plants emitted 28% of all greenhouse gases from electricity generation nationwide, while generating only 11% of the nation's power.
Please finalize the strongest possible limits to cut global warming pollution from power plants.
EPA Administrator Michael Regan,
Thank you for proposing to cut global warming pollution from power plants. We must require America's biggest polluters to clean up their act, instead of continuing to harm our climate and our health, and we shouldn't allow new power plants to make these problems worse.
The proposal allows more pollution from some coal plants and smaller or intermittently running gas plants -- we urge you to extend the limits to even more power plants to accelerate the transition away from dirty, polluting energy.
Most of the top 50 polluters in the U.S. are coal and gas-fired power plants. Together, those 45 power plants emitted 28% of all greenhouse gases from electricity generation nationwide, while generating only 11% of the nation's power.
Please finalize the strongest possible limits to cut global warming pollution from power plants.
EPA Administrator Michael Regan,
Thank you for proposing to cut global warming pollution from power plants. We must require America's biggest polluters to clean up their act, instead of continuing to harm our climate and our health, and we shouldn't allow new power plants to make these problems worse.
The proposal allows more pollution from some coal plants and smaller or intermittently running gas plants -- we urge you to extend the limits to even more power plants to accelerate the transition away from dirty, polluting energy.
Most of the top 50 polluters in the U.S. are coal and gas-fired power plants. Together, those 45 power plants emitted 28% of all greenhouse gases from electricity generation nationwide, while generating only 11% of the nation's power.
Please finalize the strongest possible limits to cut global warming pollution from power plants.
EPA Administrator Michael Regan,
Thank you for proposing to cut global warming pollution from power plants. We must require America's biggest polluters to clean up their act, instead of continuing to harm our climate and our health, and we shouldn't allow new power plants to make these problems worse.
The proposal allows more pollution from some coal plants and smaller or intermittently running gas plants -- we urge you to extend the limits to even more power plants to accelerate the transition away from dirty, polluting energy.
Most of the top 50 polluters in the U.S. are coal and gas-fired power plants. Together, those 45 power plants emitted 28% of all greenhouse gases from electricity generation nationwide, while generating only 11% of the nation's power.
Please finalize the strongest possible limits to cut global warming pollution from power plants.
EPA Administrator Michael Regan,
Thank you for proposing to cut global warming pollution from power plants. We must require America's biggest polluters to clean up their act, instead of continuing to harm our climate and our health, and we shouldn't allow new power plants to make these problems worse.
The proposal allows more pollution from some coal plants and smaller or intermittently running gas plants -- we urge you to extend the limits to even more power plants to accelerate the transition away from dirty, polluting energy.
Most of the top 50 polluters in the U.S. are coal and gas-fired power plants. Together, those 45 power plants emitted 28% of all greenhouse gases from electricity generation nationwide, while generating only 11% of the nation's power.
Please finalize the strongest possible limits to cut global warming pollution from power plants.
EPA Administrator Michael Regan,
Thank you for proposing to cut global warming pollution from power plants. We must require America's biggest polluters to clean up their act, instead of continuing to harm our climate and our health, and we shouldn't allow new power plants to make these problems worse.
The proposal allows more pollution from some coal plants and smaller or intermittently running gas plants -- we urge you to extend the limits to even more power plants to accelerate the transition away from dirty, polluting energy.
Most of the top 50 polluters in the U.S. are coal and gas-fired power plants. Together, those 45 power plants emitted 28% of all greenhouse gases from electricity generation nationwide, while generating only 11% of the nation's power.
Please finalize the strongest possible limits to cut global warming pollution from power plants.
EPA Administrator Michael Regan,
Thank you for proposing to cut global warming pollution from power plants. We must require America's biggest polluters to clean up their act, instead of continuing to harm our climate and our health, and we shouldn't allow new power plants to make these problems worse.
The proposal allows more pollution from some coal plants and smaller or intermittently running gas plants -- we urge you to extend the limits to even more power plants to accelerate the transition away from dirty, polluting energy.
Most of the top 50 polluters in the U.S. are coal and gas-fired power plants. Together, those 45 power plants emitted 28% of all greenhouse gases from electricity generation nationwide, while generating only 11% of the nation's power.
Please finalize the strongest possible limits to cut global warming pollution from power plants.
EPA Administrator Michael Regan,
Thank you for proposing to cut global warming pollution from power plants. We must require America's biggest polluters to clean up their act, instead of continuing to harm our climate and our health, and we shouldn't allow new power plants to make these problems worse.
The proposal allows more pollution from some coal plants and smaller or intermittently running gas plants -- we urge you to extend the limits to even more power plants to accelerate the transition away from dirty, polluting energy.
Most of the top 50 polluters in the U.S. are coal and gas-fired power plants. Together, those 45 power plants emitted 28% of all greenhouse gases from electricity generation nationwide, while generating only 11% of the nation's power.
Please finalize the strongest possible limits to cut global warming pollution from power plants.
EPA Administrator Michael Regan,
Thank you for proposing to cut global warming pollution from power plants. We must require America's biggest polluters to clean up their act, instead of continuing to harm our climate and our health, and we shouldn't allow new power plants to make these problems worse.
The proposal allows more pollution from some coal plants and smaller or intermittently running gas plants -- we urge you to extend the limits to even more power plants to accelerate the transition away from dirty, polluting energy.
Most of the top 50 polluters in the U.S. are coal and gas-fired power plants. Together, those 45 power plants emitted 28% of all greenhouse gases from electricity generation nationwide, while generating only 11% of the nation's power.
Please finalize the strongest possible limits to cut global warming pollution from power plants.
EPA Administrator Michael Regan,
Thank you for proposing to cut global warming pollution from power plants. We must require America's biggest polluters to clean up their act, instead of continuing to harm our climate and our health, and we shouldn't allow new power plants to make these problems worse.
The proposal allows more pollution from some coal plants and smaller or intermittently running gas plants -- we urge you to extend the limits to even more power plants to accelerate the transition away from dirty, polluting energy.
Most of the top 50 polluters in the U.S. are coal and gas-fired power plants. Together, those 45 power plants emitted 28% of all greenhouse gases from electricity generation nationwide, while generating only 11% of the nation's power.
Please finalize the strongest possible limits to cut global warming pollution from power plants.
EPA Administrator Michael Regan,
Thank you for proposing to cut global warming pollution from power plants. We must require America's biggest polluters to clean up their act, instead of continuing to harm our climate and our health, and we shouldn't allow new power plants to make these problems worse.
The proposal allows more pollution from some coal plants and smaller or intermittently running gas plants -- we urge you to extend the limits to even more power plants to accelerate the transition away from dirty, polluting energy.
Most of the top 50 polluters in the U.S. are coal and gas-fired power plants. Together, those 45 power plants emitted 28% of all greenhouse gases from electricity generation nationwide, while generating only 11% of the nation's power.
Please finalize the strongest possible limits to cut global warming pollution from power plants.
EPA Administrator Michael Regan,
Thank you for proposing to cut global warming pollution from power plants. We must require America's biggest polluters to clean up their act, instead of continuing to harm our climate and our health, and we shouldn't allow new power plants to make these problems worse.
The proposal allows more pollution from some coal plants and smaller or intermittently running gas plants -- we urge you to extend the limits to even more power plants to accelerate the transition away from dirty, polluting energy.
Most of the top 50 polluters in the U.S. are coal and gas-fired power plants. Together, those 45 power plants emitted 28% of all greenhouse gases from electricity generation nationwide, while generating only 11% of the nation's power.
Please finalize the strongest possible limits to cut global warming pollution from power plants.
EPA Administrator Michael Regan,
Thank you for proposing to cut global warming pollution from power plants. We must require America's biggest polluters to clean up their act, instead of continuing to harm our climate and our health, and we shouldn't allow new power plants to make these problems worse.
The proposal allows more pollution from some coal plants and smaller or intermittently running gas plants -- we urge you to extend the limits to even more power plants to accelerate the transition away from dirty, polluting energy.
Most of the top 50 polluters in the U.S. are coal and gas-fired power plants. Together, those 45 power plants emitted 28% of all greenhouse gases from electricity generation nationwide, while generating only 11% of the nation's power.
Please finalize the strongest possible limits to cut global warming pollution from power plants.
To the Department of the Interior:
When companies mine for uranium, they leave toxic waste behind. Mining disturbs the land, pollutes the water, and disrupts the ecological balance of nature.
That's why we strongly oppose plans by Atomic Minerals Corp. to drill in search of uranium just outside of Bears Ears National Monument. The red rock canyons, high desert wildlife and remains of ancient Indigenous cultures within Bears Ears are priceless and must be protected.
I urge you: Do not allow this new uranium drilling so close to Bears Ears National Monument.
Sincerely,
I am writing in support of the EPA's proposed emissions regulations to cut air pollutants from chemical plants. This would greatly reduce risks of cancer and other serious illnesses in communities across the nation and prevent over 6,000 tons of air pollution every year.
Millions of Americans live close to chemical plants that release massive amounts of toxic substances, causing severe health problems like lung and heart disease. The proposed emissions standards will greatly help protect public and environmental health as well as reduce overall air pollution. I urge you to put this plan into action to keep people and the air healthy.
I am writing in support of the EPA's proposed emissions regulations to cut air pollutants from chemical plants. This would greatly reduce risks of cancer and other serious illnesses in communities across the nation and prevent over 6,000 tons of air pollution every year.
Millions of Americans live close to chemical plants that release massive amounts of toxic substances, causing severe health problems like lung and heart disease. The proposed emissions standards will greatly help protect public and environmental health as well as reduce overall air pollution. I urge you to put this plan into action to keep people and the air healthy.
I am writing in support of the EPA's proposed emissions regulations to cut air pollutants from chemical plants. This would greatly reduce risks of cancer and other serious illnesses in communities across the nation and prevent over 6,000 tons of air pollution every year.
Millions of Americans live close to chemical plants that release massive amounts of toxic substances, causing severe health problems like lung and heart disease. The proposed emissions standards will greatly help protect public and environmental health as well as reduce overall air pollution. I urge you to put this plan into action to keep people and the air healthy.
I am writing in support of the EPA's proposed emissions regulations to cut air pollutants from chemical plants. This would greatly reduce risks of cancer and other serious illnesses in communities across the nation and prevent over 6,000 tons of air pollution every year.
Millions of Americans live close to chemical plants that release massive amounts of toxic substances, causing severe health problems like lung and heart disease. The proposed emissions standards will greatly help protect public and environmental health as well as reduce overall air pollution. I urge you to put this plan into action to keep people and the air healthy.
I am writing in support of the EPA's proposed emissions regulations to cut air pollutants from chemical plants. This would greatly reduce risks of cancer and other serious illnesses in communities across the nation and prevent over 6,000 tons of air pollution every year.
Millions of Americans live close to chemical plants that release massive amounts of toxic substances, causing severe health problems like lung and heart disease. The proposed emissions standards will greatly help protect public and environmental health as well as reduce overall air pollution. I urge you to put this plan into action to keep people and the air healthy.
I am writing in support of the EPA's proposed emissions regulations to cut air pollutants from chemical plants. This would greatly reduce risks of cancer and other serious illnesses in communities across the nation and prevent over 6,000 tons of air pollution every year.
Millions of Americans live close to chemical plants that release massive amounts of toxic substances, causing severe health problems like lung and heart disease. The proposed emissions standards will greatly help protect public and environmental health as well as reduce overall air pollution. I urge you to put this plan into action to keep people and the air healthy.
I am writing in support of the EPA's proposed emissions regulations to cut air pollutants from chemical plants. This would greatly reduce risks of cancer and other serious illnesses in communities across the nation and prevent over 6,000 tons of air pollution every year.
Millions of Americans live close to chemical plants that release massive amounts of toxic substances, causing severe health problems like lung and heart disease. The proposed emissions standards will greatly help protect public and environmental health as well as reduce overall air pollution. I urge you to put this plan into action to keep people and the air healthy.
I am writing in support of the EPA's proposed emissions regulations to cut air pollutants from chemical plants. This would greatly reduce risks of cancer and other serious illnesses in communities across the nation and prevent over 6,000 tons of air pollution every year.
Millions of Americans live close to chemical plants that release massive amounts of toxic substances, causing severe health problems like lung and heart disease. The proposed emissions standards will greatly help protect public and environmental health as well as reduce overall air pollution. I urge you to put this plan into action to keep people and the air healthy.
I am writing in support of the EPA's proposed emissions regulations to cut air pollutants from chemical plants. This would greatly reduce risks of cancer and other serious illnesses in communities across the nation and prevent over 6,000 tons of air pollution every year.
Millions of Americans live close to chemical plants that release massive amounts of toxic substances, causing severe health problems like lung and heart disease. The proposed emissions standards will greatly help protect public and environmental health as well as reduce overall air pollution. I urge you to put this plan into action to keep people and the air healthy.
I am writing in support of the EPA's proposed emissions regulations to cut air pollutants from chemical plants. This would greatly reduce risks of cancer and other serious illnesses in communities across the nation and prevent over 6,000 tons of air pollution every year.
Millions of Americans live close to chemical plants that release massive amounts of toxic substances, causing severe health problems like lung and heart disease. The proposed emissions standards will greatly help protect public and environmental health as well as reduce overall air pollution. I urge you to put this plan into action to keep people and the air healthy.
I am writing in support of the EPA's proposed emissions regulations to cut air pollutants from chemical plants. This would greatly reduce risks of cancer and other serious illnesses in communities across the nation and prevent over 6,000 tons of air pollution every year.
Millions of Americans live close to chemical plants that release massive amounts of toxic substances, causing severe health problems like lung and heart disease. The proposed emissions standards will greatly help protect public and environmental health as well as reduce overall air pollution. I urge you to put this plan into action to keep people and the air healthy.
I am writing in support of the EPA's proposed emissions regulations to cut air pollutants from chemical plants. This would greatly reduce risks of cancer and other serious illnesses in communities across the nation and prevent over 6,000 tons of air pollution every year.
Millions of Americans live close to chemical plants that release massive amounts of toxic substances, causing severe health problems like lung and heart disease. The proposed emissions standards will greatly help protect public and environmental health as well as reduce overall air pollution. I urge you to put this plan into action to keep people and the air healthy.
I am writing in support of the EPA's proposed emissions regulations to cut air pollutants from chemical plants. This would greatly reduce risks of cancer and other serious illnesses in communities across the nation and prevent over 6,000 tons of air pollution every year.
Millions of Americans live close to chemical plants that release massive amounts of toxic substances, causing severe health problems like lung and heart disease. The proposed emissions standards will greatly help protect public and environmental health as well as reduce overall air pollution. I urge you to put this plan into action to keep people and the air healthy.
I am writing in support of the EPA's proposed emissions regulations to cut air pollutants from chemical plants. This would greatly reduce risks of cancer and other serious illnesses in communities across the nation and prevent over 6,000 tons of air pollution every year.
Millions of Americans live close to chemical plants that release massive amounts of toxic substances, causing severe health problems like lung and heart disease. The proposed emissions standards will greatly help protect public and environmental health as well as reduce overall air pollution. I urge you to put this plan into action to keep people and the air healthy.
I am writing in support of the EPA's proposed emissions regulations to cut air pollutants from chemical plants. This would greatly reduce risks of cancer and other serious illnesses in communities across the nation and prevent over 6,000 tons of air pollution every year.
Millions of Americans live close to chemical plants that release massive amounts of toxic substances, causing severe health problems like lung and heart disease. The proposed emissions standards will greatly help protect public and environmental health as well as reduce overall air pollution. I urge you to put this plan into action to keep people and the air healthy.
I am writing in support of the EPA's proposed emissions regulations to cut air pollutants from chemical plants. This would greatly reduce risks of cancer and other serious illnesses in communities across the nation and prevent over 6,000 tons of air pollution every year.
Millions of Americans live close to chemical plants that release massive amounts of toxic substances, causing severe health problems like lung and heart disease. The proposed emissions standards will greatly help protect public and environmental health as well as reduce overall air pollution. I urge you to put this plan into action to keep people and the air healthy.
I am writing in support of the EPA's proposed emissions regulations to cut air pollutants from chemical plants. This would greatly reduce risks of cancer and other serious illnesses in communities across the nation and prevent over 6,000 tons of air pollution every year.
Millions of Americans live close to chemical plants that release massive amounts of toxic substances, causing severe health problems like lung and heart disease. The proposed emissions standards will greatly help protect public and environmental health as well as reduce overall air pollution. I urge you to put this plan into action to keep people and the air healthy.
I am writing in support of the EPA's proposed emissions regulations to cut air pollutants from chemical plants. This would greatly reduce risks of cancer and other serious illnesses in communities across the nation and prevent over 6,000 tons of air pollution every year.
Millions of Americans live close to chemical plants that release massive amounts of toxic substances, causing severe health problems like lung and heart disease. The proposed emissions standards will greatly help protect public and environmental health as well as reduce overall air pollution. I urge you to put this plan into action to keep people and the air healthy.
I am writing in support of the EPA's proposed emissions regulations to cut air pollutants from chemical plants. This would greatly reduce risks of cancer and other serious illnesses in communities across the nation and prevent over 6,000 tons of air pollution every year.
Millions of Americans live close to chemical plants that release massive amounts of toxic substances, causing severe health problems like lung and heart disease. The proposed emissions standards will greatly help protect public and environmental health as well as reduce overall air pollution. I urge you to put this plan into action to keep people and the air healthy.
I am writing in support of the EPA's proposed emissions regulations to cut air pollutants from chemical plants. This would greatly reduce risks of cancer and other serious illnesses in communities across the nation and prevent over 6,000 tons of air pollution every year.
Millions of Americans live close to chemical plants that release massive amounts of toxic substances, causing severe health problems like lung and heart disease. The proposed emissions standards will greatly help protect public and environmental health as well as reduce overall air pollution. I urge you to put this plan into action to keep people and the air healthy.
I am writing in support of the EPA's proposed emissions regulations to cut air pollutants from chemical plants. This would greatly reduce risks of cancer and other serious illnesses in communities across the nation and prevent over 6,000 tons of air pollution every year.
Millions of Americans live close to chemical plants that release massive amounts of toxic substances, causing severe health problems like lung and heart disease. The proposed emissions standards will greatly help protect public and environmental health as well as reduce overall air pollution. I urge you to put this plan into action to keep people and the air healthy.
I am writing in support of the EPA's proposed emissions regulations to cut air pollutants from chemical plants. This would greatly reduce risks of cancer and other serious illnesses in communities across the nation and prevent over 6,000 tons of air pollution every year.
Millions of Americans live close to chemical plants that release massive amounts of toxic substances, causing severe health problems like lung and heart disease. The proposed emissions standards will greatly help protect public and environmental health as well as reduce overall air pollution. I urge you to put this plan into action to keep people and the air healthy.
I am writing in support of the EPA's proposed emissions regulations to cut air pollutants from chemical plants. This would greatly reduce risks of cancer and other serious illnesses in communities across the nation and prevent over 6,000 tons of air pollution every year.
Millions of Americans live close to chemical plants that release massive amounts of toxic substances, causing severe health problems like lung and heart disease. The proposed emissions standards will greatly help protect public and environmental health as well as reduce overall air pollution. I urge you to put this plan into action to keep people and the air healthy.
I am writing in support of the EPA's proposed emissions regulations to cut air pollutants from chemical plants. This would greatly reduce risks of cancer and other serious illnesses in communities across the nation and prevent over 6,000 tons of air pollution every year.
Millions of Americans live close to chemical plants that release massive amounts of toxic substances, causing severe health problems like lung and heart disease. The proposed emissions standards will greatly help protect public and environmental health as well as reduce overall air pollution. I urge you to put this plan into action to keep people and the air healthy.
I am writing in support of the EPA's proposed emissions regulations to cut air pollutants from chemical plants. This would greatly reduce risks of cancer and other serious illnesses in communities across the nation and prevent over 6,000 tons of air pollution every year.
Millions of Americans live close to chemical plants that release massive amounts of toxic substances, causing severe health problems like lung and heart disease. The proposed emissions standards will greatly help protect public and environmental health as well as reduce overall air pollution. I urge you to put this plan into action to keep people and the air healthy.
I am writing in support of the EPA's proposed emissions regulations to cut air pollutants from chemical plants. This would greatly reduce risks of cancer and other serious illnesses in communities across the nation and prevent over 6,000 tons of air pollution every year.
Millions of Americans live close to chemical plants that release massive amounts of toxic substances, causing severe health problems like lung and heart disease. The proposed emissions standards will greatly help protect public and environmental health as well as reduce overall air pollution. I urge you to put this plan into action to keep people and the air healthy.
I am writing in support of the EPA's proposed emissions regulations to cut air pollutants from chemical plants. This would greatly reduce risks of cancer and other serious illnesses in communities across the nation and prevent over 6,000 tons of air pollution every year.
Millions of Americans live close to chemical plants that release massive amounts of toxic substances, causing severe health problems like lung and heart disease. The proposed emissions standards will greatly help protect public and environmental health as well as reduce overall air pollution. I urge you to put this plan into action to keep people and the air healthy.
I am writing in support of the EPA's proposed emissions regulations to cut air pollutants from chemical plants. This would greatly reduce risks of cancer and other serious illnesses in communities across the nation and prevent over 6,000 tons of air pollution every year.
Millions of Americans live close to chemical plants that release massive amounts of toxic substances, causing severe health problems like lung and heart disease. The proposed emissions standards will greatly help protect public and environmental health as well as reduce overall air pollution. I urge you to put this plan into action to keep people and the air healthy.
Logging and other threats are encroaching on what little mature and old-growth forests we have left.
Our oldest forests support a vast network of plants, animals and insects, sheltering the diversity of nature. And trees grow even faster the older they get, storing more carbon from the atmosphere and acting as a natural climate solution. Protecting our old-growth and mature forests is one of the best things we can do to help tackle climate change, save wildlife habitat, and keep our country beautiful.
Our oldest forests deserve to be kept whole and wild. We, the undersigned, urge you to choose to permanently protect mature and old-growth trees and not sell them to logging companies.
Sincerely,
Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OLEM- 2023-0228
I applaud the EPA's Draft National Strategy to Prevent Plastic Pollution for asserting that the practice of converting plastic waste to fuel or fuel substitutes is not "recycling."
However, I urge the agency to significantly strengthen the proposals on reducing plastic waste, especially from single-use plastics, at the source.
Given that less than 10% of all plastic ever made has actually been recycled, it's clear we need to stop producing so much wasteful plastic in the first place. In order to truly address our country's plastic pollution crisis, it's crucial that the Draft National Strategy to Prevent Plastic Pollution include strong, concrete policies to ensure that fewer single-use items are produced in the first place, and to make plastic producers responsible for reducing their plastic footprint.
Logging and other threats are encroaching on what little mature and old-growth forests we have left.
Our oldest forests support a vast network of plants, animals and insects, sheltering the diversity of nature. And trees grow even faster the older they get, storing more carbon from the atmosphere and acting as a natural climate solution. Protecting our old-growth and mature forests is one of the best things we can do to help tackle climate change, save wildlife habitat, and keep our country beautiful.
Our oldest forests deserve to be kept whole and wild. We, the undersigned, urge you to choose to permanently protect mature and old-growth trees and not sell them to logging companies.
Single-use plastics are polluting every corner of the Earth. Plastic waste has been found everywhere from the Arctic to ocean trenches to the very air we breathe.
New York could pass one of the strongest laws in the country to fight plastic packaging waste -- but we're up against fierce opposition from Amazon, McDonald's and industry lobbyists.
The state's legislative session ends on Thursday. There's no time to lose.
Will you send a message to your state legislators right now, urging them to put our planet over plastic? Take action.
Southern Resident orcas eat almost exclusively Chinook salmon, but their primary food source is in scarce supply all throughout their range. The Lower Snake River has historically held some of the largest salmon runs in the region and has been an important food source for the Southern Resident orcas, but unfortunately, the Chinook salmon that endangered Southern Resident orcas depend on are on a path to extinction.
I support breaching the Lower Snake River dams and restoring a free-flowing Lower Snake River. This is the single biggest opportunity we have to restore salmon to abundance. We have alternatives for how we can power our society and move goods from one place to another. Salmon don't have this choice. They need a river, and orcas need salmon.
Southern Resident orcas eat almost exclusively Chinook salmon, but their primary food source is in scarce supply all throughout their range. The Lower Snake River has historically held some of the largest salmon runs in the region and has been an important food source for the Southern Resident orcas, but unfortunately, the Chinook salmon that endangered Southern Resident orcas depend on are on a path to extinction.
I support breaching the Lower Snake River dams and restoring a free-flowing Lower Snake River. This is the single biggest opportunity we have to restore salmon to abundance. We have alternatives for how we can power our society and move goods from one place to another. Salmon don't have this choice. They need a river, and orcas need salmon.
California bees are dying -- the American bumblebee population plummeted by 90% in the past 20 years, and nearly 1 in 4 native bee species is at risk of extinction.
Pesticides, habitat loss and global warming are threatening bees, and we need to take on each of these issues head on. The California legislature is considering legislation to restrict bee-killing pesticides across the state, but opposition from agricultural and chemical companies threatens the bill. We need to ensure Gov. Newsom signs these bills when they come to his desk at the end of the summer.
Send a message to Gov. Newsom today to urge him to save the bees.
The Hartford CEO Christopher J. Swift:
We, the undersigned, urge your company to protect investors and consumers from undue risk and stop insuring new fossil fuel supplies.
Investors whose portfolios include stocks in your company could suffer meaningful losses due to climate risks fueled by your insurance coverage of new oil and gas supplies.
By insuring the expansion of fossil fuel projects, you are increasing the likelihood of insured losses from climate change-related natural disasters, which in turn puts your shareholders' retirement savings and other investments at risk of losses too. Severe weather events can result not only in property owners' deaths, injuries, property loss, property damage or diminished property values, but also higher insurance premiums for consumers.
We ask you to do your part in reducing these substantial risks by no longer insuring new fossil fuel projects.
Sincerely,
The Hartford CEO Christopher J. Swift:
We, the undersigned, urge your company to protect investors and consumers from undue risk and stop insuring new fossil fuel supplies.
Investors whose portfolios include stocks in your company could suffer meaningful losses due to climate risks fueled by your insurance coverage of new oil and gas supplies.
By insuring the expansion of fossil fuel projects, you are increasing the likelihood of insured losses from climate change-related natural disasters, which in turn puts your shareholders' retirement savings and other investments at risk of losses too. Severe weather events can result not only in property owners' deaths, injuries, property loss, property damage or diminished property values, but also higher insurance premiums for consumers.
We ask you to do your part in reducing these substantial risks by no longer insuring new fossil fuel projects.
Sincerely,
The Hartford CEO Christopher J. Swift:
We, the undersigned, urge your company to protect investors and consumers from undue risk and stop insuring new fossil fuel supplies.
Investors whose portfolios include stocks in your company could suffer meaningful losses due to climate risks fueled by your insurance coverage of new oil and gas supplies.
By insuring the expansion of fossil fuel projects, you are increasing the likelihood of insured losses from climate change-related natural disasters, which in turn puts your shareholders' retirement savings and other investments at risk of losses too. Severe weather events can result not only in property owners' deaths, injuries, property loss, property damage or diminished property values, but also higher insurance premiums for consumers.
We ask you to do your part in reducing these substantial risks by no longer insuring new fossil fuel projects.
Sincerely,
The Hartford CEO Christopher J. Swift:
We, the undersigned, urge your company to protect investors and consumers from undue risk and stop insuring new fossil fuel supplies.
Investors whose portfolios include stocks in your company could suffer meaningful losses due to climate risks fueled by your insurance coverage of new oil and gas supplies.
By insuring the expansion of fossil fuel projects, you are increasing the likelihood of insured losses from climate change-related natural disasters, which in turn puts your shareholders' retirement savings and other investments at risk of losses too. Severe weather events can result not only in property owners' deaths, injuries, property loss, property damage or diminished property values, but also higher insurance premiums for consumers.
We ask you to do your part in reducing these substantial risks by no longer insuring new fossil fuel projects.
Sincerely,
The Hartford CEO Christopher J. Swift:
We, the undersigned, urge your company to protect investors and consumers from undue risk and stop insuring new fossil fuel supplies.
Investors whose portfolios include stocks in your company could suffer meaningful losses due to climate risks fueled by your insurance coverage of new oil and gas supplies.
By insuring the expansion of fossil fuel projects, you are increasing the likelihood of insured losses from climate change-related natural disasters, which in turn puts your shareholders' retirement savings and other investments at risk of losses too. Severe weather events can result not only in property owners' deaths, injuries, property loss, property damage or diminished property values, but also higher insurance premiums for consumers.
We ask you to do your part in reducing these substantial risks by no longer insuring new fossil fuel projects.
Sincerely,
The Hartford CEO Christopher J. Swift:
We, the undersigned, urge your company to protect investors and consumers from undue risk and stop insuring new fossil fuel supplies.
Investors whose portfolios include stocks in your company could suffer meaningful losses due to climate risks fueled by your insurance coverage of new oil and gas supplies.
By insuring the expansion of fossil fuel projects, you are increasing the likelihood of insured losses from climate change-related natural disasters, which in turn puts your shareholders' retirement savings and other investments at risk of losses too. Severe weather events can result not only in property owners' deaths, injuries, property loss, property damage or diminished property values, but also higher insurance premiums for consumers.
We ask you to do your part in reducing these substantial risks by no longer insuring new fossil fuel projects.
Sincerely,
The Hartford CEO Christopher J. Swift:
We, the undersigned, urge your company to protect investors and consumers from undue risk and stop insuring new fossil fuel supplies.
Investors whose portfolios include stocks in your company could suffer meaningful losses due to climate risks fueled by your insurance coverage of new oil and gas supplies.
By insuring the expansion of fossil fuel projects, you are increasing the likelihood of insured losses from climate change-related natural disasters, which in turn puts your shareholders' retirement savings and other investments at risk of losses too. Severe weather events can result not only in property owners' deaths, injuries, property loss, property damage or diminished property values, but also higher insurance premiums for consumers.
We ask you to do your part in reducing these substantial risks by no longer insuring new fossil fuel projects.
Sincerely,
The Hartford CEO Christopher J. Swift:
We, the undersigned, urge your company to protect investors and consumers from undue risk and stop insuring new fossil fuel supplies.
Investors whose portfolios include stocks in your company could suffer meaningful losses due to climate risks fueled by your insurance coverage of new oil and gas supplies.
By insuring the expansion of fossil fuel projects, you are increasing the likelihood of insured losses from climate change-related natural disasters, which in turn puts your shareholders' retirement savings and other investments at risk of losses too. Severe weather events can result not only in property owners' deaths, injuries, property loss, property damage or diminished property values, but also higher insurance premiums for consumers.
We ask you to do your part in reducing these substantial risks by no longer insuring new fossil fuel projects.
Sincerely,
The Hartford CEO Christopher J. Swift:
We, the undersigned, urge your company to protect investors and consumers from undue risk and stop insuring new fossil fuel supplies.
Investors whose portfolios include stocks in your company could suffer meaningful losses due to climate risks fueled by your insurance coverage of new oil and gas supplies.
By insuring the expansion of fossil fuel projects, you are increasing the likelihood of insured losses from climate change-related natural disasters, which in turn puts your shareholders' retirement savings and other investments at risk of losses too. Severe weather events can result not only in property owners' deaths, injuries, property loss, property damage or diminished property values, but also higher insurance premiums for consumers.
We ask you to do your part in reducing these substantial risks by no longer insuring new fossil fuel projects.
Sincerely,
The Hartford CEO Christopher J. Swift:
We, the undersigned, urge your company to protect investors and consumers from undue risk and stop insuring new fossil fuel supplies.
Investors whose portfolios include stocks in your company could suffer meaningful losses due to climate risks fueled by your insurance coverage of new oil and gas supplies.
By insuring the expansion of fossil fuel projects, you are increasing the likelihood of insured losses from climate change-related natural disasters, which in turn puts your shareholders' retirement savings and other investments at risk of losses too. Severe weather events can result not only in property owners' deaths, injuries, property loss, property damage or diminished property values, but also higher insurance premiums for consumers.
We ask you to do your part in reducing these substantial risks by no longer insuring new fossil fuel projects.
Sincerely,
The Hartford CEO Christopher J. Swift:
We, the undersigned, urge your company to protect investors and consumers from undue risk and stop insuring new fossil fuel supplies.
Investors whose portfolios include stocks in your company could suffer meaningful losses due to climate risks fueled by your insurance coverage of new oil and gas supplies.
By insuring the expansion of fossil fuel projects, you are increasing the likelihood of insured losses from climate change-related natural disasters, which in turn puts your shareholders' retirement savings and other investments at risk of losses too. Severe weather events can result not only in property owners' deaths, injuries, property loss, property damage or diminished property values, but also higher insurance premiums for consumers.
We ask you to do your part in reducing these substantial risks by no longer insuring new fossil fuel projects.
Sincerely,
The Hartford CEO Christopher J. Swift:
We, the undersigned, urge your company to protect investors and consumers from undue risk and stop insuring new fossil fuel supplies.
Investors whose portfolios include stocks in your company could suffer meaningful losses due to climate risks fueled by your insurance coverage of new oil and gas supplies.
By insuring the expansion of fossil fuel projects, you are increasing the likelihood of insured losses from climate change-related natural disasters, which in turn puts your shareholders' retirement savings and other investments at risk of losses too. Severe weather events can result not only in property owners' deaths, injuries, property loss, property damage or diminished property values, but also higher insurance premiums for consumers.
We ask you to do your part in reducing these substantial risks by no longer insuring new fossil fuel projects.
Sincerely,
The Hartford CEO Christopher J. Swift:
We, the undersigned, urge your company to protect investors and consumers from undue risk and stop insuring new fossil fuel supplies.
Investors whose portfolios include stocks in your company could suffer meaningful losses due to climate risks fueled by your insurance coverage of new oil and gas supplies.
By insuring the expansion of fossil fuel projects, you are increasing the likelihood of insured losses from climate change-related natural disasters, which in turn puts your shareholders' retirement savings and other investments at risk of losses too. Severe weather events can result not only in property owners' deaths, injuries, property loss, property damage or diminished property values, but also higher insurance premiums for consumers.
We ask you to do your part in reducing these substantial risks by no longer insuring new fossil fuel projects.
Sincerely,
The Hartford CEO Christopher J. Swift:
We, the undersigned, urge your company to protect investors and consumers from undue risk and stop insuring new fossil fuel supplies.
Investors whose portfolios include stocks in your company could suffer meaningful losses due to climate risks fueled by your insurance coverage of new oil and gas supplies.
By insuring the expansion of fossil fuel projects, you are increasing the likelihood of insured losses from climate change-related natural disasters, which in turn puts your shareholders' retirement savings and other investments at risk of losses too. Severe weather events can result not only in property owners' deaths, injuries, property loss, property damage or diminished property values, but also higher insurance premiums for consumers.
We ask you to do your part in reducing these substantial risks by no longer insuring new fossil fuel projects.
Sincerely,
The Hartford CEO Christopher J. Swift:
We, the undersigned, urge your company to protect investors and consumers from undue risk and stop insuring new fossil fuel supplies.
Investors whose portfolios include stocks in your company could suffer meaningful losses due to climate risks fueled by your insurance coverage of new oil and gas supplies.
By insuring the expansion of fossil fuel projects, you are increasing the likelihood of insured losses from climate change-related natural disasters, which in turn puts your shareholders' retirement savings and other investments at risk of losses too. Severe weather events can result not only in property owners' deaths, injuries, property loss, property damage or diminished property values, but also higher insurance premiums for consumers.
We ask you to do your part in reducing these substantial risks by no longer insuring new fossil fuel projects.
Sincerely,
The Hartford CEO Christopher J. Swift:
We, the undersigned, urge your company to protect investors and consumers from undue risk and stop insuring new fossil fuel supplies.
Investors whose portfolios include stocks in your company could suffer meaningful losses due to climate risks fueled by your insurance coverage of new oil and gas supplies.
By insuring the expansion of fossil fuel projects, you are increasing the likelihood of insured losses from climate change-related natural disasters, which in turn puts your shareholders' retirement savings and other investments at risk of losses too. Severe weather events can result not only in property owners' deaths, injuries, property loss, property damage or diminished property values, but also higher insurance premiums for consumers.
We ask you to do your part in reducing these substantial risks by no longer insuring new fossil fuel projects.
Sincerely,
The Hartford CEO Christopher J. Swift:
We, the undersigned, urge your company to protect investors and consumers from undue risk and stop insuring new fossil fuel supplies.
Investors whose portfolios include stocks in your company could suffer meaningful losses due to climate risks fueled by your insurance coverage of new oil and gas supplies.
By insuring the expansion of fossil fuel projects, you are increasing the likelihood of insured losses from climate change-related natural disasters, which in turn puts your shareholders' retirement savings and other investments at risk of losses too. Severe weather events can result not only in property owners' deaths, injuries, property loss, property damage or diminished property values, but also higher insurance premiums for consumers.
We ask you to do your part in reducing these substantial risks by no longer insuring new fossil fuel projects.
Sincerely,