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Democratic debate in Detroit, near Flint, brings attention to water issues, inequality

As the 2020 Democratic candidates continue to discuss climate change in the run-up to the primary, the debate in Detroit this week will bring attention to a topic crucial in the state of Michigan: water.

Just as 2016 saw candidates visiting the city of Flint, which hosted a 2016 debate and is nationally known for a water crisis that began five years ago, the lead-up to the debate in nearby Detroit has seen at least three candidates make stops in Flint.

The decisions that exposed thousands of F

EPA proposes lead pipe rule changes after 20 years, but some advocates say it doesn't go far enough

The proposed lead and copper rule would change the requirements that local water systems must meet for testing and, if lead content is above allowable levels, the procedures to replace lead service lines from their networks.

The rules would not change the 15 parts-per-billion limit on lead in water. By comparison, Canada has a threshold of 5 parts per billion.

They would, however, require water authorities to begin developing plans when they are at risk of reaching that threshold, and to notif

Opinion | Don’t Blame Farmers for Agricultural Pollution (Published 2019)

Catherine Kling is right: “Those who cause the pollution should be required to pay for the cleanup.” But a focus on regulations, penalties and farmers is misguided.

The causes of pollution are many, and a half century of federal policy bears a large portion of the blame. So do decades of trade policy, land-grant universities whose research encouraged the use of fertilizers, agribusinesses that developed and sold the fertilizers, states that permitted excessive applications of manure and America

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