The health threat of lead in schools’ water deserves immediate attention from state and local policymakers for two reasons. First, lead is highly toxic and especially damaging to children — impairing how they learn, grow, and behave. So, we ought to be particularly vigilant against this health threat at schools and pre-schools, where our children spend their days learning and playing.
View this complete post...Posts Tagged ‘PIRG’
Get the Lead Out: Ensuring Safe Drinking Water for Our Children at School
Monday, February 20th, 2017Millennials in Motion: Changing Travel Habits of Young Americans and the Implications for Public Policy
Friday, October 17th, 2014U.S. PIRG EDUCATION FUND Executive Summary Over the last decade—after 60-plus years of steady increases—the number of miles driven by the average American has been falling. Young Americans have experienced the greatest changes: driving less; taking transit, biking and walking more; and seeking out places to live in cities and walkable communities where driving is […]
View this complete post...Building Boondoggles? Is Governor Walker Spending Billions on Four Roads to Nowhere?
Monday, May 30th, 2011WISPIRG
At a time when the State of Wisconsin is wielding an axe with many public programs and vital transportation services, it appears to be shoveling tax dollars toward four highly questionable highway expansion programs that could cost over $2 billion. The new construction largess is particularly troubling given that these tax dollars will be diverted from improving the state of repair on Wisconsin’s existing roads or transit systems, or from public structures such as schools and public safety in our local communities.
Connecting the Midwest: How a Faster Passenger Rail Network Could Speed Travel and Boost the Economy
Monday, September 20th, 2010ILLINOIS PIRG
In building a 21st century economy, the Midwest is hampered by an outdated transportation system. Congested airports and crammed highways hinder travel around the region. As the main source of our dependence on oil, our transportation system leaves us vulnerable to oil price spikes and pollution…Intercity passenger rail in the Midwest can be part of the solution.
Next Stop: California – The Benefits of High-Speed Rail Around the World and What’s in Store for California
Thursday, July 1st, 2010CALPIRG
As California moves toward construction of a new high-speed rail network, the state has much to learn from experiences abroad. High-speed rail lines have operated for more than 45 years in Japan and for three decades in Europe, providing a wealth of information about what California can expect from highspeed rail … and how the state can receive the greatest possible benefits from its investment.
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