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The Environmental Protection Agency is set to announce $4.3 billion in funding on Monday afternoon for 25 new projects proposed by states, tribes, local governments and territories to tackle climate change. The funding could reduce greenhouse gas emissions by as much as 971 million metric tons by 2050, or roughly the emissions of five million homes over 25 years, according to the agency. Among the jurisdictions that will get funding, Nebraska will receive $307 million to reduce agricultural waste and enhance energy efficiency in homes and buildings. Pennsylvania will get $396 million to reduce industrial pollution and create about 6,000 jobs,. Ms. Baird said the funds could reduce Lincoln’s greenhouse gas emissions by 77 percent by 2050.
Persons: , Leirion Gaylor Baird, Ms, Baird Organizations: Environmental Protection Agency, Lincoln, Nebraska Locations: Nebraska, Pennsylvania, Lincoln, Neb, Southern California, Michigan, Alaska
Read previewDuring a rally in Michigan on Saturday, Donald Trump had high praise for Elon Musk, calling the Tesla CEO a "great" and "brilliant guy." Musk came out with an endorsement of Trump on July 13, the day of the assassination attempt. "I read — I didn't even know this, he didn't even tell me about it, but he gives me $45 million a month," Trump said. Related storiesDuring the Saturday rally, Trump said he thinks electric cars are "incredible, but they're not for everybody." It will only help Tesla," Musk said on X on July 16.
Persons: , Donald Trump, Elon Musk, Musk, Trump, Elon, DJT, they're, Biden, Tesla Organizations: Service, Trump, Street, Business, Environmental Protection Agency, Twitter Locations: Michigan
What Trump 2.0 Could Mean for the Environment
  + stars: | 2024-07-16 | by ( Brad Plumer | Lisa Friedman | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
As president, Donald Trump’s sweeping attempts to roll back federal environmental regulations were often stymied — by the courts, by a lack of experience, even by internal resistance from government employees. “It’s going to be easier,” said Myron Ebell, who led the transition at the Environmental Protection Agency after Mr. Trump won in 2016. “They’re going to have better people, more committed people, more experienced people. They will be able to move more quickly, and more successfully, in my view.”On the campaign trail, Mr. Trump has promised to repeal federal regulations designed to cut greenhouse gas pollution that is rapidly heating the planet. They are drafting plans to slash budgets, oust career staffers, embed loyalists in key offices and scale back the government’s powers to tackle climate change, regulate industries and restrict hazardous chemicals.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, Trump, “ It’s, , Myron Ebell, “ They’re Organizations: House, Mr, Environmental, Agency
Advertisement"So that is, in theory, taking power away from unelected officials," Justin Crowe, a professor of political science at Williams University who researches the Supreme Court, told Business Insider. With Corner Post, Entin said, the Supreme Court created a statute of limitations that, from the standpoint of federal agencies, never really expires. But the Court didn't stop at giving itself the reins to interpret regulations that federal agencies are beholden to. In the Trump case, the Supreme Court offered Trump broad immunity for some of his acts concerning his January 6 election interference case. In the July 6 episode of Slate's Supreme Court analysis podcast "Amicus with Dahlia Lithwick," Senior Court Reporter Mark Joseph Stern said the Court spent this term expanding its power and "restructuring representative democracy to make it less representative and less democratic."
Persons: , Raimondo, Reagan, presidentially, Justin Crowe, wouldn't, Loper, Jonathan Entin, Entin, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Ketanji Brown Jackson, Trump, Tanya Chutkan, Dahlia Lithwick, Mark Joseph Stern Organizations: Service, Loper Bright Enterprises, Inc, Governors, Federal Reserve System, Business, Chevron, Environmental Protection Agency, Congress, Williams University, EPA, Securities Exchange Commission, of Health, Human Service, Case Western Reserve University, Federal Reserve Board, Supreme, DC Circuit, Federal, Trump v ., Trump, DC Locations: Chevron, Trump v, Trump v . United States
Marathon Oil agreed to spend $241.5 million to resolve federal allegations that it unlawfully emitted methane, a planet-warming greenhouse gas, and other pollutants from oil and gas facilities in North Dakota. Under the proposed settlement announced on Thursday, the oil and gas producer, based in Houston, would pay a $64.5 million civil penalty. The federal government said it was the largest-ever fine for alleged violations of the Clean Air Act that took place at stationary infrastructure. The settlement is part of a wider effort by the E.P.A. to rein in greenhouse gas emissions at oil and gas facilities.
Organizations: Oil, Fort, Environmental Protection Agency Locations: North Dakota, Houston, Fort Berthold
CNN —The average menstruating person will spend about five years of their total reproductive lifespan using an estimated 11,000 tampons, sanitary pads, panty liners and other menstrual products, experts say. What if some of those menstrual aids contain heavy metals or potentially toxic chemicals linked to chronic diseases and reproductive and developmental problems? “I do not want people to panic, but to be aware that heavy metals have been found in these menstrual products,” Schilling said. “However, there is no reason for people to be afraid to use menstrual products at this time,” she added. The team ran tests for 16 heavy metals: arsenic, barium, calcium, cadmium, cobalt, chromium, copper, iron, manganese, mercury, nickel, lead, selenium, strontium, vanadium and zinc.
Persons: Kathrin Schilling, ” Schilling, Amanda Hils, ” Hils, Anna Pollack, , Pollack, , tampons Schilling, nonorganic tampons, hasn’t, Nancy King Reame, Reame Organizations: CNN, US Environmental Protection Agency, Columbia University’s Mailman, of Public Health, US Food and Drug Administration, George Mason University, US Geological Survey . Chemicals, Environmental Health, Institute for Green Science, Carnegie Mellon University, American Chemistry Council, , for Disease Control, Prevention, FDA, School of Nursing, Columbia University Medical Center Locations: New York City, , Fairfax , Virginia, United States, United Kingdom, Greece, tampons, Pittsburgh
Scientists have uncovered a new source of hazardous "forever chemical" pollution: the rechargeable lithium-ion batteries found in most electric vehicles. Some lithium-ion battery technologies use a class of PFAS chemicals, or per-and polyfluoroalkyl substances, that helps make batteries less flammable and conduct electricity. Scientists tested more than a dozen lithium-ion batteries used in EVs and consumer electronics like laptops, and found bis-FASIs at various concentrations. They can also leach into the environment from landfills, where the majority of lithium-ion batteries end up. AdvertisementThe study said only about 5% of lithium-ion batteries are recycled, and by 2040, there could be some 8 million tons of lithium-ion battery waste.
Persons: They've, Jennifer Guelfo, PFAS, Lee Ferguson, Guelfo, PFOA, hasn't, Corteva Organizations: Service, Nature Communications, Business, Texas Tech University, Duke University, Environmental Protection Agency, Solvay, Chemours, DuPont Locations: US, Belgium, France, Minnesota , Kentucky, Antwerp, Salindres
The Biden administration reached a settlement with General Motors after determining that the automaker sold nearly six million cars that emitted more planet-warming carbon dioxide than the company had claimed, violating federal regulations. An investigation by the Environmental Protection Agency found that in those years G.M. had sold about 4.6 million full-sized pickup trucks and sport-utility vehicles, and 1.3 million midsize sport-utility vehicles, that it claimed met the pollution standards, but in fact hadn’t. “E.P.A.’s vehicle standards depend on strong oversight in order to deliver public health benefits in the real world,” said E.P.A. “Our investigation has achieved accountability and upholds an important program that’s reducing air pollution and protecting communities across the country.”
Persons: , , Michael S, Regan Organizations: Biden, General Motors, Obama, Environmental Protection Agency
CNN —In the first week of a new Trump administration, President Joe Biden’s climate wins would get put through the shredder. “He has said he’s going to come back with a vengeance,” former US special climate envoy John Kerry told CNN. He has railed against Biden’s climate policies at rallies and derided clean energy, vowing to push America back to fossil fuels. He has openly courted the oil industry at fundraising events, the Washington Post reported, promising regulation rollbacks in exchange for campaign cash. It could happen “very fast,” said David Bernhardt, who served as Interior Secretary in the Trump administration.
Persons: Trump, Joe Biden’s, nix, , John Kerry, it’s, , Joe Biden, ” Trump, Karoline Leavitt, Leavitt, Anna Moneymaker, ” Mandy Gunasekara, David Bernhardt, Bernhardt, Biden, Trump’s, Sarah Palin, ’ pocketbooks, Diana Furchtgott, Roth, Gavin Newsom, ” Newsom, “ We’re, Newsome, David Paul Morris, John Bozzella, Bozzella, ” Bozzella, he’s, ” Bob McNally, George W, Bush, Scott Olson, , ” Bernhardt, McNally, ” McNally, ’ Trump, Nate Hultman, Frederic J . Brown, haven’t, Kerry, ” Kerry, CNN’s Alayna Treene, Bill Weir, Julian Quinones Organizations: CNN, Trump, Washington Post, White, Environmental, Agency, EVs, Environmental Protection Agency, Republicans, Treasury Department, Former Trump Department of Transportation, Heritage Foundation, California Gov, Bloomberg, Alliance, Automotive Innovation, Biden, Fox News, Energy, Rapidan Energy Group, Bush White House, US Energy Information Administration, Trump Interior, Trump’s, Center for Global Sustainability, University of Maryland, State Department, Getty, United Nations Locations: Alaska, Paris, United States, Philadelphia, California, Washington ,, San Francisco, CNN California, Montebello , California, AFP
download the appSign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. "Most, if not all, of that conduct would fall on the 'presumptively-official' side of the line," said Michel Paradis, an attorney who teaches national security and constitutional law at Columbia Law School. AdvertisementUnder Monday's decision, "courts may not inquire into the President's motives" in deciding if a presidential act is official or unofficial. "And this opinion, more than any other in the Supreme Court's history, gives the president king-like powers," Sloan added. "Everybody was horrified" when Trump's lawyer first raised immunity in that circumstance as a possible consequence, Sloan said.
Persons: , Richard Nixon, — Nixon, Michel Paradis, Paradis, Trump, Trump's, Rudy Giuliani, Neama Rahmani, Rahmani, Cliff Sloan, Sloan, Sonya Sotomayor Organizations: Service, FBI, CIA, Business, Columbia Law School, Department of Education, Environmental Protection Agency, Biden, Trump, West, Georgetown Law, Supreme Locations: Independence
CNN —A major Supreme Court ruling Friday that shifted power from the executive branch to the judiciary stands to transform how the federal government works. By overturning a 1984 precedent, the court’s conservative majority has made countless regulations vulnerable to legal challenge. The Supreme Court ruling could boost efforts by conservatives who have taken aim at the Biden Environmental Protection Agency’s rules limiting planet-warming pollution from vehicles, oil and gas wells and pipelines, and power plants. The ruling has injected legal uncertainty into regulations of all types, including those on technology, labor, the environment and health care. But the Supreme Court has yet to decide a case heard this term that might gut that limitation.
Persons: , Kent Barnett, , Thomas Berry, John Roberts, Roberts, Elena Kagan, Sonia Sotomayor, Joe Biden, Shawn ThewPool, Adam Rust, ” Rust, Andrew Schwartzman, Alexander MacDonald, ” MacDonald, Sharon Block, ” Block, Biden, Andrew Twinamatsiko, ” Twinamatsiko, , Paul Gallant, TD Cowen, David Vladeck, Chevron —, Ann Carlson, Carlson, David Doniger Organizations: CNN, Biden, University of Georgia School of Law, Chevron, Natural Resources Defense, Republican, Democratic, Cato Institute . Chief, State of, Consumer, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Federal Trade Commission, Consumer Federation of America, , Supreme, Securities, Exchange Commission, Benton Institute for Broadband & Society, Department of Labor, National Labor Relations Board, Opportunity Commission, Harvard Law School, Center, Labor, American Cancer Society, US Food and Drug Administration, US Department of Health, Human Services, Medicare, Services, Medicaid, Human Services Department, HHS, O’Neill Institute for National, Global Health Law, Georgetown University, FDA, Federal Communications Commission, EPA, National, Traffic Safety Administration, University of California, Natural Resources Defense Council Locations: Obamacare, Chevron, State, Washington , DC, Texas, Littler, Los Angeles
A spate of decisions over the past two years by the Supreme Court has significantly impaired the Environmental Protection Agency’s authority to limit pollution in the air and water, regulate the use of toxic chemicals and reduce the greenhouse gasses that are heating the planet. This term, the court’s conservative supermajority handed down several rulings that chip away at the power of many federal agencies. But the environmental agency has been under particular fire, the result of a series of cases brought since 2022 by conservative activists who say that E.P.A. regulations have driven up costs for industries ranging from electric utilities to home building. That decision threatens the authority of many federal agencies to regulate the environment and also health care, workplace safety, telecommunications, the financial sector and more.
Persons: Chevron
The court’s decision in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, which overruled the 40-year-old Chevron v. Natural Resources Defense Council, won’t affect Americans’ lives in as stark and immediate a way as the 2022 decision overruling Roe v. Wade. But like Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, Loper Bright has the potential to fundamentally transform major aspects of the health, safety and well-being of most Americans. That’s especially true when it is viewed alongside some of the other major cases about agency power the court has handed down in recent terms — and indeed in recent days — that have stripped agencies of power and shifted that power directly to federal courts. Just this week, the court eliminated a key mechanism used by the Securities and Exchange Commission to enforce securities laws and enjoined an important Environmental Protection Agency emissions standard based on, in the words of Justice Amy Coney Barrett in dissent, an “underdeveloped theory that is unlikely to succeed on the merits.”Out of the 1984 Chevron decision came the doctrine of Chevron deference. In essence, Chevron deference allowed agencies to use their expertise to determine how to carry out laws passed by Congress — laws intended to keep our air and water clean, our drugs safe and effective, and our securities markets protected from fraud and deception.
Persons: Raimondo, , overruling Roe, Wade, Dobbs, Loper Bright, Amy Coney Barrett Organizations: Loper Bright Enterprises, Natural Resources Defense Council, Jackson, Health Organization, Securities and Exchange Commission, Environmental Protection Agency, Congress Locations: Chevron
Some states, municipalities and private-sector companies are pushing to make composting as commonplace as recycling. Yet data from the Environmental Protection Agency shows little residential food waste is composted in the U.S. — 3.7% as of an April 2023 report. These include at-home options, curbside bins, drop-off locations and private valet services that pick up food waste from multi-family homes. Thousands of composting facilities neededFranciosi said his organization has been fielding more calls from municipalities that are interested in composting, but funding challenges remain. Another challenge is the dearth of composting facilities.
Persons: Scott Smithline, Jenny Grant, Frank Franciosi, Stacy Savage, Franciosi, Grant, Lauren Organizations: PepsiCo, Environmental Protection Agency, California Department of Resources Recycling, Zero, Local Locations: U.S, Vermont, California, Europe, REA, New York City, Bronx, Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, Staten
While criminal charges against corporations are fairly common, the overwhelming majority are against small, closely-held companies. Earlier criminal settlement now at riskThe potential charges hanging over Boeing currently revolve around that January 2021 deferred prosecution agreement. They have argued Boeing should face new criminal charges and pay a fine as great as $24.9 billion. In May, the Justice Department said it was looking into bringing criminal charges against Boeing once again due to a potential violation of that January 2021 agreement. Arlen said it is common for smaller companies to be forced out of business by criminal charges and the penalties that follow.
Persons: , Jennifer Arlen, Arlen, Lindsey Wasson, ” Arlen, , Max, David Burns, Mark Forkner, Eduardo Soteras, Arthur Andersen Organizations: New, New York CNN, Justice Department, Boeing, Dow Jones, New York University, Control, Max, Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, Alaska Airlines Flight, NTSB, Getty, Alaska Airlines, Prosecutors, CNN, Oil, BP, US Environmental Protection Agency, Ethiopian Airlines Locations: New York, China, Renton , Washington, Alaska, AFP
The Supreme Court on Friday overturned a decades-long legal precedent that has empowered the federal government to regulate the environment and other issues, unleashing a potential threat to President Joe Biden's climate policies. The court overruled the Chevron doctrine, one of the most important principles guiding federal regulation for the past 40 years. Last year, the Supreme Court significantly narrowed how many wetlands EPA can regulate to keep them clean. How did this case end up at the Supreme Court? They argued the Chevron doctrine injures small businesses and individuals who have little power to influence federal agencies.
Persons: Joe Biden's, Chevron, John Roberts, Joe Biden, Biden, Raimondo, Charles Koch Organizations: Service, Business, Environmental Protection Agency, Republican, Bright Enterprises, Inc, Department of Commerce, Action Institute, Chevron, Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit, National Marine Fisheries Service Locations: Chevron
CNN —The Supreme Court on Friday significantly weakened the power of federal agencies to approve regulations in a major decision that could have sweeping implications for the environment, public health and the workplace. But the decision will net a far wider swath of federal regulations affecting many facets of American life. The decision overturns the Chevron v. Natural Resources Defense Council precedent that required courts to give deference to federal agencies when creating regulations based on an ambiguous law. The justices have been incrementally diminishing federal power for years, but the new case gave the court an opportunity to take a much broader stride. The Supreme Court had been trending in that direction for years, knocking back attempts by federal agencies in other contexts to approve regulations on their own.
Persons: Chevron, John Roberts, , Neil Gorsuch, Elana Kagan, ” Kagan, Biden, Trump Organizations: CNN, Commerce Department, Chevron, Natural Resources Defense, Environmental Protection Agency, Conservatives Locations: Chevron, Washington
Birds fly outside the U.S. Supreme Court on the day justices issue orders in pending appeals in Washington, U.S., June 24, 2024. Republican lawmakers and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce praised the Supreme Court decision Friday overturning the so-called Chevron Doctrine, which for four decades led judges to defer to how federal agencies interpreted a law when its language was not clear. GOP lawmakers said the 6-3 decision by the Supreme Court undid a precedent that they argued had unjustly strengthened the power of unelected government officials. "After forty years of Chevron deference, the Supreme Court made it clear today that our system of government leaves no room for an unelected bureaucracy to co-opt this authority for itself," McConnell said. "It's a huge blow to the administrative state in Washington, D.C. No one elects bureaucrats to make these decisions," Cotton said of the decision, which overturned the Supreme Court's ruling in 1984 in a case known as Chevron v. Natural Resources Defense Council.
Persons: Mitch McConnell, McConnell, Suzanne Clark, Clark, Jeff Holmstead, Bracewell, Holmstead, Chevron, Sen, Tom Cotton, Raimondo, Cotton Organizations: U.S, Supreme, Republican, U.S . Chamber, Commerce, GOP, Air, Environmental Protection Agency, Fox News, Loper Bright Enterprises, Constitutional, Chevron, Natural Resources Defense Locations: Washington , U.S, Ky, Washington ,
With its decision in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo on Friday, the Supreme Court has put new limits on how government regulators can interpret the law. The court’s decision will limit the power of federal agencies like the Environmental Protection Agency, the Federal Communications Commission and the Food and Drug Administration to interpret the laws they administer — as, for example, in the E.P.A.’s mandating reduced emissions from power plants on the basis of its own interpretation of the Clean Air Act. This decision has set off alarms for some, but it actually points the way toward a role for the courts that is less divisive — because it pushes everyone in our system, including judges and Congress, toward their proper constitutional work. By narrowing the so-called Chevron deference, the court has reasserted its authority over the meaning of vague legislation. Doing so may press Congress to make its law-writing more definitive and call on administrative agencies to apply substantive subject-matter expertise, rather than conjure the meanings of the laws they are meant to carry out.
Persons: Raimondo Organizations: Loper Bright Enterprises, Environmental Protection Agency, Federal Communications Commission, Food and Drug Administration, Act Locations:
Then, according to Hockett, the case would be heard by an administrative court. Straight to federal court. "These two rulings largely amputate the two most important arms that our regulatory agencies use every day in overseeing our industrial economy," Hockett said. AdvertisementIn overturning the Chevron doctrine in a 6-3 decision, the high court has hamstrung federal agencies' regulatory powers. Panuccio said that he supported the decisions and called them "important checks on administrative power."
Persons: , Elena Kagan, Robert Hockett, SCOTUS, Friday's, Hockett, John Roberts, Roberts, Jonathan Siegel, Siegel, Jarkesy, It's, Rachel Weintraub, Weintraub, Jesse Panuccio, Trump, Panuccio Organizations: Service, United States, Securities, Exchange, Business, Cornell University, Environmental Protection Agency, EPA, Chevron, Natural Resources Defense Council, SEC, George Washington University, Coalition, Sensible Locations: North America
But that gave too much power to unelected government officials, according to conservatives, who ran a coordinated, multiyear campaign to end the Chevron doctrine. The Environmental Protection AgencyEnvironmentalists fear that the end of the Chevron doctrine will mean the elimination of hundreds of E.P.A. “I would expect the industry to attack the F.D.A.’s authority to do premarket review at all,” said Desmond Jenson, deputy director of the commercial tobacco control program at the Public Health Law Center. Others noted the Chevron decision could have a chilling effect, compelling the F.D.A. “The Supreme Court has not relied on Chevron in quite a few years,” she said.
Persons: , Lisa Heinzerling, Donald J, Trump, Mandy Gunasekara, President Trump, Jonathan Berry, doesn’t, ” Rather, Berry, ” Mr, Chevron, Biden, Garden, , Desmond Jenson, Nicholas Bagley, Rachel Sachs, Louis, Abbe R, Gluck, Ms Organizations: Georgetown University, , Congress, Labor, Act, Republican, Trump, Chevron, Labor Department, Mr, Environmental Protection Agency, Biden, University of Minnesota, The National Labor Relations Board, Food, Drug Administration, Public Health Law Center, Health, Affordable Care, University of Michigan, Washington University School of Law, Department of Health, Human Services, Centers, Medicare, Services, Yale Law School, Treasury, Internal Revenue, Treasury Department, Internal Revenue Service Locations: Chevron, St
Climate advocates and business groups are closely watching the US Supreme Court this week. The court could issue a ruling that sharply curtails the federal government's power to regulate the environment, including President Joe Biden's climate policies. Legal experts say the Supreme Court, with its conservative majority, is likely to overturn or significantly limit the Chevron doctrine. Meanwhile, he added, administrative lawyers have been preparing for this very scenario at the Supreme Court. Biden's EPA hasn't relied on the Chevron doctrine to defend its climate rules.
Persons: Joe Biden's, Charles Koch, Chevron, Biden, isn't, Ronald Reagan, David Doniger, Reagan, Doniger, Obama, Neil Gorsuch, Elena Kagan, Trump Organizations: Service, Business, Action Institute, Environmental, Agency, Natural Resources Defense Council, Chevron, Trump, EPA, Republican, Supreme Locations: Chevron
The City of Wichita recently had an experience that's become all too common — its water system was hacked. The cyberattack, which targeted water metering, billing and payment processing, followed the targeting of water utilities across the U.S. in recent years. While the methods may be simple, an attack last year by an Iranian-backed activist group against 12 water utilities in the U.S. reinforced how purposeful "an attacker's mindset" can be, according to Witt. The targeted utilities all contained equipment that was Israeli-made. Attacks on U.S. water utilities' IT systems can have a similar psychological impact, and even if the attacks don't directly interfere with the operations of the utility, still lessen public trust in water supply.
Persons: that's, Ryan Witt, Witt, Adam Isles, Stuart Madnick Organizations: Environmental Protection Agency, FBI, NSA, Congress, U.S . Air Force, Chertoff Group, CNBC, Colonial Pipeline, Infrastructure Security Agency, Cybersecurity, MIT Sloan Locations: City, Wichita, Iranian, U.S, Israeli, United States, Texas,
How does the planetary health diet compare to other diets? But what makes the planetary health diet different from other popular eating patterns like the Mediterranean diet or the heart-healthy DASH diet? And maybe in higher quantities than the planetary health diet, because it's not looking specifically at planetary health," Vadiveloo notes. The planetary health diet also places more limits on total fat consumption than the DASH diet does, she adds. The popular diet has a higher emphasis on unsaturated fat components like olive oil and fish compared to the planetary health diet.
Persons: Vadiveloo, wasn't, it's Organizations: Lancet, University of Rhode, American, Nutrition, U.S . Environmental Protection Agency, CNBC Locations: University of Rhode Island
Extreme heat takes toll on outdoor workers
  + stars: | 2024-06-21 | by ( Alicia Wallace | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +11 min
There’s little to no escape from sweltering temperatures for construction workers like Eva Marroquin, who cleans work sites in Austin, Texas, and has worked in the industry for 17 years. Since 2010, she’s worked closely with the Workers Defense Project, an organization that advocates for protections for low-wage, immigrant workers in the Texas construction industry. Slowing down small businessesIt’s barely just now summer, and heatwaves are already slowing down small businesses, according to Homebase, which provides payroll software to more than 100,000 small businesses, covering 2 million hourly workers. “I think anything that impacts small businesses is affecting the economy as a whole,” he said, noting how small businesses account for half the jobs in the country. For herself, the high heat is more of an inconvenience; the car’s hotter and she just needs to pack some extra water.
Persons: Eva Marroquin, ” Marroquin, Christine Bolaños, she’s, Chris Lafakis, , Joshua, Gina Ferazzi, Gregory P, Casey, Jenny Schuetz, Brian Snyder, aren’t, , John Waldmann, They’re, Katie Parent, Joseph Prezioso, Greer, Denise Greer Jamerson, Norman, Greer Jamerson, you’ve, , “ It’s, it’s, Tamara Lovewell, café, panini, Tamara Lovewell “, Lovewell Organizations: CNN, Capitol, Workers Defense Project, Moody’s, Federal Reserve Bank of San, Williams College, Triple, Los Angeles Times, Environmental Protection Agency, Brookings Metro, Reuters, University of California, Stanford University, Getty, National Weather Service, Ruska Coffee Company Locations: Austin , Texas, Washington ,, Texas, Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, Massachusetts, Joshua Tree , California, Boston, Greater Boston, AFP, Princeton , Indiana, , Maine, United States, Caribou .
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