Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania is on the cusp of a major climate, economic victory | Opinion
By Molly Parzen
After years of laborious work and advocacy, Pennsylvania stands on the cusp of enacting essentially the most important set of insurance policies in its historical past to sort out our planet’s local weather disaster.
Due to the steadfast management of environmental champions in Harrisburg, we are actually poised to affix the Regional Greenhouse Gasoline Initiative, a multi-state effort with a confirmed monitor document of lowering local weather air pollution from the vitality sector.
Pennsylvania, ranked fourth within the nation for emissions, is the primary oil and gasoline producing state to affix RGGI, which places a value on carbon air pollution that displays the environmental impacts of burning soiled fossil fuels. States then make investments these proceeds in tasks that decrease vitality prices for households and shoppers, create jobs and develop entry to scrub, renewable vitality like wind and solar energy.
Since 2005, the states which have joined RGGI have efficiently decreased their energy sector carbon emissions by 45%. Right here in Pennsylvania, RGGI is predicted to cut back carbon air pollution from the electrical energy sector 26% by 2025 and 80% by 2050.
RGGI will jumpstart current efforts to construct a twenty first century financial system powered by clear, renewable vitality whilst scientists warn that we’re working out time to avert a local weather disaster.
With President Biden’s local weather agenda nonetheless underneath negotiation in Congress, it’s necessary that Pennsylvania take the lead and function a mannequin for different states, significantly these with important oil and gasoline operations, to sort out this disaster head-on.
Pennsylvanians are already seeing the impacts of local weather change, with extreme storms and elevated flooding destroying houses and companies and hotter temperatures hurting the state’s agricultural business.
Becoming a member of RGGI is important if we’re to confront this rising disaster. Our vitality sector is the second largest supply of carbon air pollution in our financial system. There’s merely no option to get the carbon air pollution reductions we have to defend the well being of our households and our financial system with out cleansing up the facility sector.
RGGI doesn’t simply imply fewer emissions from soiled fossil gasoline vegetation, nonetheless. Transitioning to scrub vitality makes financial sense and can present a considerable financial increase that may create jobs, decrease vitality prices and make native companies extra aggressive.
Pennsylvania will be capable of make investments a whole bunch of tens of millions of {dollars} a yr in RGGI proceeds to turbocharge our inexperienced vitality business, rising Pennsylvania’s financial system by almost $2 billion by 2030 whereas creating greater than 30,000 jobs as we put union members to work in rising inexperienced vitality industries, putting in new photo voltaic installations and wind farms.
We’ll additionally be capable of spend money on applications that improve vitality effectivity and decrease prices for Pennsylvania’s working households and native companies.
And we are able to leverage these investments to handle the scourge of environmental racism that has plagued communities of colour in Pennsylvania for generations as we focus advantages and job creation in communities which have borne a disproportionate share of the air pollution that could be a legacy of our industrial previous.
This crucial environmental victory is being achieved as a result of environmental champions in Harrisburg have stood agency in opposition to the unprecedented assault the oil and gasoline business, and their extremist allies within the legislature, levied in opposition to RGGI.
After failing to cease the state from adopting guidelines that pave the way in which for our entrance into RGGI, legislative leaders tried to cease the laws themselves from being printed, a routine remaining step that enables them to be applied. This unprecedented try to politicize the routine workings of presidency represented an assault on the very rule of regulation that undergirds our whole political system.
To this point, the delay value Pennsylvania greater than $200 million in RGGI proceeds that would have been invested in creating jobs and decreasing prices for shoppers.
Now that these laws have lastly been formally adopted, we have to stand agency in opposition to further baseless authorized assaults on RGGI by company polluters, and their lackeys, looking for to guard their earnings on the expense of the affluent clear vitality future that we are actually constructing in Pennsylvania.
We additionally decide to working with Gov. Tom Wolf, his administration and environmental champions within the legislature to ship on a plan to take a position the proceeds of this program in ways in which maximize its advantages for the setting, for the reason for environmental justice and for the financial well being of our native companies and dealing households.
Now could be the time to grab this historic second to construct a stronger, extra sustainable Pennsylvania.
Molly Parzen serves as Government Director of Conservation Voters of Pennsylvania.
Pennsylvania
Pa. STEM center made possible by Cal Ripken, Sr. Foundation
STEM careers can lead students to earn higher salaries, but it isn’t always accessible for all children to pursue STEM programs or careers.
“Most Americans believe K-12 STEM education in the United States is either average or below average compared with other wealthy nations,” according to an April 2024 Pew Research Center survey.
The study also revealed that “recent global standardized test scores show that students in the U.S. are, in fact, lagging behind their peers in other wealthy nations when it comes to math,” but are doing better than average in science compared with pupils in other countries.
The foundation is for all students but it places centers in neighborhoods handpicked because they don’t have access to technology education or abundant financial resources. Ripken Jr. explained, “A lot of our centers are in rural (or inner-city) areas.”
Joe Rossow, executive vice president of STEM and outcome measurements at the Cal Ripken, Sr. Foundation, noted that “rural areas don’t have that tax base… it’s hard for them to get new equipment, and new furniture and new things.”
In a 2021 report, Pew research also revealed that “Black and Hispanic workers remain underrepresented in the STEM workforce compared with their share of all workers.” The research stated that while women make up half of those employed in STEM jobs, most are in health-related careers. Women are underrepresented in other occupations, according to the report.
The foundation aims to help level the field and alter the stigma that prevents students from entering STEM-related careers. Rossow said they have seen an increase in girls showing interest in their STEM center programs. An analysis of application data from students in Texas, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Maryland found that 60% of female students had a higher increase in STEM engagement, 53% of female students had a higher percentage of STEM enjoyment and 50% of female students’ chances increased to enter STEM careers.
“Some of our female students had an increase in critical thinking as problem solvers and after that study, we didn’t realize it (the centers) really had an impact on our female engineers,” Rossow said.
The foundation’s mission is to partner with youth-serving organizations and schools across the country to provide educational life skills curriculum.
A mission that Ripken Sr. believed in wholeheartedly, according to Ripken Jr.
In Pennsylvania, STEM centers have opened at Saint Aloysius Parish School in Pottstown, Scott Sixth Grade Center in Coatesville, Delta-Peach Bottom Elementary in Delta, Robert K. Shafer Middle School in Bensalem, Feltonville School of Arts & Sciences and Avery Harrington School in Philadelphia.
The organization plans to open more centers in the future.
Pennsylvania
Mostly cloudy and breezy conditions on tap this evening
Pennsylvania
Bacteria In Toothpaste: What PA Customers Need To Know
PENNSYLVANIA— Any Pennsylvania residents who use Tom’s of Maine toothpaste and have noticed a strange taste or smell from the product aren’t alone, according to the U.S. Food & Drug Administration, which recently detailed how bacteria was found in some of the company’s products and black mold was discovered at a facility.
The agency this month issued a warning letter to Tom’s of Maine Inc. about its “significant violations” of manufacturing regulations for pharmaceuticals, and discussed a May inspection of the facility in Sanford, Maine.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a type of bacteria that can cause blood and lung infections, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, was found from June 2021 to October 2022 in samples of water that was used to make Tom’s Simply White Clean Mint Paste, the letter stated. The water was also used for the final rinse in equipment cleaning.
Gram-negative cocco-bacilli Paracoccus yeei, which is associated with several infections, according to the Hartmann Science Center, was in a batch of the company’s Wicked Cool! Anticavity Toothpaste, the letter stated.
Ralstonia insidiosa, a waterborne bacteria, according to the Journal of Medical Microbiology, was repeatedly found at water points of use at the facility, the letter stated.
“A black mold-like substance” was discovered within one foot of equipment that came into contact with products, according to the letter, which stated the substance was at the base of a hose reel and behind a water storage tank.
The company received about 400 complaints related to toothpaste odor, color and taste, including in relation to products for children, but the complaints were not investigated, the letter said.
“We have always tested finished goods before they leave our control, and we remain fully confident in the safety and quality of the toothpaste we make,” Tom’s of Maine said, according to News Center Maine. “In addition, we have engaged water specialists to evaluate our systems at Sanford, have implemented additional safeguards to ensure compliance with FDA standards, and our water testing shows no issues.”
In the federal administration’s letter, dated Nov. 5, the agency directed the company to provide multiple risk assessments, reserve sample test results from all unexpired batches, and a water system remediation plan, among other things. The administration requested a written response from Tom’s of Maine within 15 working days.
With reporting by Anna Schier of Patch.
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