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Daily Grist: EXXON &THE SUPREME'S!

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At 12:05 PM 10/30/07, you wrote:

>TODAY'S NEWS

>

>Exx Appeal

>U.S. Supreme Court to hear appeal of Exxon Valdez damage award

>

>The U.S. Supreme Court agreed this week to hear ExxonMobil's appeal of the

>$2.5 billion in damages it was ordered to pay for the disastrous 1989

>Exxon Valdez oil spill. An Alaskan jury in 1994 originally ordered the

>company to pay $5 billion in damages, but the amount was cut in half by an

>appeals court last December. Now the $39.5-billion-a-year company is

>hoping the Supremes will further reduce or eliminate the damage award,

>arguing it's already paid a few billion in cleanup costs and that it was

>the ship captain's fault anyway. For its part, the court will review the

>case based on whether the Clean Water Act and maritime laws allow for

>punitive damages, and if so, whether the award is excessive. The case

>could end in a tie when it's decided next year since Justice Samuel Alito

>will not take part in the case (he owns over $100,000 in Exxon stock). The

>Exxon Valdez spilled 11 million gallons of crude oil, polluting about

>1,200 miles of Alaskan coastline.

>

>[ email | discuss | + digg | + del.icio.us ]

>sources: Associated Press, The Washington Post, The New York Times

>

>

>The Weight of Water

>U.S. states face water shortages

>

>The catastrophic California wildfires have been getting the lion's share

>of the press these days, but it's worth paying attention to an equally

>intimidating but slower-moving threat: water shortages. From Georgia to

>Massachusetts, Florida to New York, the Great Lakes to the West, U.S.

>states are getting thirstier. In fact, the government predicts that at

>least 36 states will face challenges from inadequate water supplies within

>five years, thanks to a combination of rising temperatures, drought,

>population growth, sprawl, waste, and overuse. " Is it a crisis? If we

>don't do some decent water planning, it could be, " says Jack Hoffbuhr of

>the American Water Works Association. Officials hope that measures such as

>water recycling, efficiency, and desalination will save the day.

>Meanwhile, local officials are tightening their grasp on any available

>supplies, and debates over how to address the problem are simmering.

>

>[ email | discuss | + digg | + del.icio.us ]

>sources: Associated Press, Chicago Tribune, Agence France-Presse, The

>Boston Globe, The New York Times

 

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Kraig and Shirley Carroll ... in the woods of SE Kentucky

http://www.thehavens.com/

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