News

The EPA announced Wednesday its plan to re-register dicamba, a herbicide widely used on soybean and cotton farms that has been banned twice by federal courts.
Dicamba drift has damaged millions of acres of soybeans, and caused devastating damage to farms, home gardens, native plants and wildlife refuges throughout the Midwest and South. Experts have found ...
Justin Chen, president of the American Federation of Government Employees Council 238, the union representing 8,000 EPA ...
Experts have warned that if the EPA were to bring back dicamba, the results would be devastating—as they have been in the ...
Companies feared rules and lawsuits based on the Office of Research and Development’s assessments of the dangers of ...
State Sen. Michael Moore pushes for a ban on synthetic fields that contain PFAS, a health hazard? So why are some communities ...
The local water authority is actively seeking advanced solutions to address the challenge of 1,4-dioxane contamination in the ...
Millions of people suffer debilitating reactions in the presence of certain scents and chemicals. One scientist has been ...
EPA plans to reverse endangerment finding, a foundation of the federal government's ability to address climate change.
The rule would have further monitored PFAS and other chemicals from plastics used in chemical recycling. The plastic industry ...
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency plans to repeal all greenhouse gas emission standards for light-duty, medium-duty, ...
Dicamba is associated with some cancers in humans and can drift from its intended target to kill other plants and affect ...