Bird Walk at Lehigh Gap Nature Center

Bird walk at Lehigh Gap Nature Center

There will be a bird walk led by Corey Husic on Sunday, May 23 beginning at 7:00 a.m. at the Osprey House. This is a joint program of LGNC and Lehigh Valley Audubon. Families are welcome. Last year on this walk we saw lots of warblers and a pair of River Otters in the ponds.

Dan Kunkle
Lehigh Gap Nature Center
P.O. Box 198
Slatington, PA 18080
ph/fax 610-760-8889
http://lgnc.org

Tough New Standards to Protect PA Waterways

http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/tough-new-standards-to-protect-pa-waterways-from-drilling-wastewater-take-major-step-forward-93952789.html

Tough New Standards to Protect PA Waterways from Drilling Wastewater Take Major Step Forward

EQB Approves New TDS Regulations, Strengthens Erosion and Sediment Rules; Proposes New Well Construction Standards

HARRISBURG, Pa., May 17 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — The Environmental Quality Board today approved first-of-its-kind regulations that will protect waterways from the effects of natural gas drilling wastewater, better enabling the state’s Marcellus Shale reserves to be developed without sacrificing the health and quality of Pennsylvania’s vital water resources.

Environmental Protection Secretary John Hanger said the new regulations are an appropriate and necessary measure to ensure that drilling wastewater containing high concentrations of Total Dissolved Solids, or TDS, do not pollute drinking water supplies, damage industrial equipment, or endanger delicate aquatic life.

“Drilling wastewater contains TDS levels that are thousands of times more harmful to aquatic life than discharges from other industries. Without imposing limits on this pollution, treatment costs for this wastewater are passed along to downstream industries and municipal ratepayers,” said Hanger. “All other industries in Pennsylvania are responsible for the waste they generate and the drilling industry should be no exception.” Read more

Scientists Warn Oil Spill Could Threaten Florida

Scientists Warn Oil Spill Could Threaten Florida

Published: May 17, 2010
Oil from the spill in the Gulf of Mexico is moving toward a current that could carry it into the Florida Keys and the Atlantic Ocean, scientists said on Monday.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/18/us/18spill.html

Webinar to discuss shale-gas drilling in urban areas

Friday, May 14, 2010
The acronym NIMBY — “Not in My Back Yard” — is a battle cry commonly hurled by neighbors at any nearby controversy. But when the controversy murmurs simultaneously across multiple neighborhoods in the same city, the expanding chorus of affected neighbors can create an industrial-strength din.

Such was the case in Fort Worth, Texas, where prior to 2000, there were no gas wells in town. Ten years later, there are 1,675 shale-gas wells within city limits, according to Sarah Fullenwider, senior assistant city attorney for the City of Fort Worth.

She said some Fort Worth citizens who have signed gas leases are frustrated with the local process and controls.

“Many have signed leases and want the financial benefits of extracting the minerals, so they want drilling to take place,” she said. “But they don’t want the impacts of a well near their homes. They are frustrated with the ability of cities to implement local controls considering Texas laws regarding the dominant mineral estate.”

Fullenwider will be the featured speaker during a free Web-based seminar titled, “Lessons from Gas Drilling in an Urban Environment,” which will air Thursday, May 20, at 1 p.m. Sponsored by Penn State Cooperative Extension, the “webinar” will provide an overview of Fort Worth’s experience as shale-gas companies in Texas began setting up drilling operations within city limits. Read more

Research links pesticides with ADHD in children

May 17, 12:02 AM EDT
Research links pesticides with ADHD in children

By CARLA K. JOHNSON
AP Medical Writer

CHICAGO (AP) — A new analysis of U.S. health data links children’s attention-deficit disorder with exposure to common pesticides used on fruits and vegetables.

While the study couldn’t prove that pesticides used in agriculture contribute to childhood learning problems, experts said the research is persuasive.

“I would take it quite seriously,” said Virginia Rauh of Columbia University, who has studied prenatal exposure to pesticides and wasn’t involved in the new study.

More research will be needed to confirm the tie, she said.

Children may be especially prone to the health risks of pesticides because they’re still growing and they may consume more pesticide residue than adults relative to their body weight.

In the body, pesticides break down into compounds that can be measured in urine. Almost universally, the study found detectable levels: The compounds turned up in the urine of 94 percent of the children.

The kids with higher levels had increased chances of having ADHD, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, a common problem that causes students to have trouble in school. The findings were published Monday in Pediatrics.

The children may have eaten food treated with pesticides, breathed it in the air or swallowed it in their drinking water. The study didn’t determine how they were exposed. Experts said it’s likely children who don’t live near farms are exposed through what they eat.

“Exposure is practically ubiquitous. We’re all exposed,” said lead author Maryse Bouchard of the University of Montreal.

She said people can limit their exposure by eating organic produce. Frozen blueberries, strawberries and celery had more pesticide residue than other foods in one government report.

A 2008 Emory University study found that in children who switched to organically grown fruits and vegetables, urine levels of pesticide compounds dropped to undetectable or close to undetectable levels.

Because of known dangers of pesticides in humans, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency limits how much residue can stay on food. But the new study shows it’s possible even tiny, allowable amounts of pesticide may affect brain chemistry, Rauh said.

The exact causes behind the children’s reported ADHD though are unclear. Any number of factors could have caused the symptoms and the link with pesticides could be by chance.

The new findings are based on one-time urine samples in 1,139 children and interviews with their parents to determine which children had ADHD. The children, ages 8 to 15, took part in a government health survey in 2000-2004.

As reported by their parents, about 150 children in the study either showed the severe inattention, hyperactivity and impulsivity characteristic of ADHD, or were taking drugs to treat it.

The study dealt with one common type of pesticide called organophosphates. Levels of six pesticide compounds were measured. For the most frequent compound detected, 20 percent of the children with above-average levels had ADHD. In children with no detectable amount in their urine, 10 percent had ADHD.

“This is a well conducted study,” said Dr. Lynn Goldman of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and a former EPA administrator.

Relying on one urine sample for each child, instead of multiple samples over time, wasn’t ideal, Goldman said.

The study provides more evidence that the government should encourage farmers to switch to organic methods, said Margaret Reeves, senior scientist with the Pesticide Action Network, an advocacy group that’s been working to end the use of many pesticides.

“It’s unpardonable to allow this exposure to continue,” Reeves said.

On the Net:
Pediatrics: http://www.aap.org/
EPA: http://www.epa.gov/pesticides/food

Public meeting on Marcellus Shale reveals pluses, minuses

http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/dailycourier/news/s_681358.html#

By Mark Hofmann
DAILY COURIER
Saturday, May 15, 2010

The benefits as well as the negative effects of obtaining natural gas from the Marcellus Shale reserve were discussed Friday during a public meeting held at Penn State Fayette, The Eberly Campus, hosted by state Rep. Deberah Kula.

“The Marcellus Shale has raised a lot of opportunities, but has also raised a lot of questions,” said Kula, who was joined by state Rep. P. Michael Sturla, chairman of the House of Representatives majority policy committee.

The natural gas reserve that stretches under Pennsylvania and holds enough gas to fully supply the nation for 10 years or more, has attracted the gas industry to Western Pennsylvania.

Read more

Thousands of nonprofits may lose tax-exempt status

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/05/17/thousands-of-nonprofits-m_0_n_578670.html?view=print

Thousands Of Nonprofits May Lose Tax-Exempt Status

MOLLY HOTTLE | 05/15/10 02:13 PM |

DES MOINES, Iowa — More than 200,000 small nonprofits across the nation are days away from losing their tax-exempt status because they haven’t filed a new form with the Internal Revenue Service.

Many of these groups already operate on razor-thin budgets and some worry an unexpected tax bill could force organizations to close.

“The nonprofits in your backyards, some of them are going to be gone,” said Suzanne Coffman, a spokeswoman for GuideStar, which tracks data on nonprofits.

It’s most likely the nonprofits aren’t aware of the Monday deadline that only applies to groups that report $25,000 or less in income, excluding churches. Those organizations may not find out until Jan. 1, 2011, when they’re notified they have to pay taxes on donations they thought were exempt. And it could be months before their nonprofit status is restored.

Congress required the form, called a 990-N, when it amended the tax code three years ago and groups with a fiscal year ending Dec. 31 had until Monday to meet the deadline.

The Urban Institute’s National Center for Charitable Statistics, which conducts economic and social policy research, estimated Friday that 214,000 nonprofit organizations haven’t filed the form as required.

Tom Pollak, program director for the center, said organizations that lose their tax-exempt status are no longer eligible to receive tax-deductible donations and are not likely to be awarded grants.

Donors who give to the organizations that lose their status will be able to receive tax-deductions on gifts until January because the revocations won’t be public until then.

In Iowa, the Warren County Historical Society was among more than 2,700 small nonprofits that hadn’t submitted the form. The group’s president, Linda Beatty, said she’d never heard of a 990-N until contacted by The Associated Press.

Beatty said she would scramble to get their application in, but if the society lost its nonprofit status, donations likely would drop and members would struggle to pay taxes until they could get the situation resolved. The group maintains a small museum and historical library in Indianola, south of Des Moines.

Stephen Baldassare, president of the Catwalk Theatre Guild in Arvada, Colo., said loss of its tax exemption would have endangered the college scholarships his group awards annually to two high school students and limited other programs.

“It’s huge giving those scholarships,” he said. “We’d also have to figure out how to do the rest of the functions we do. We would have to change how we bring in money.”

In West Chester, Pa., the A Cappella Pops performing group also hadn’t heard about the deadline.

Money already is a problem for the 40-member singing group, marketing director Bruce Koepcke said, and would have been far worse if donations dropped or the group faced a big tax bill. He said tax-exempt donations make up 25 percent of the group’s revenue.

“We break even in good years,” Koepcke said. “We can’t afford to lose one iota of funding.”

Bobby Zarin, an Internal Revenue Service director who works with non-profits, said the agency sent out press releases and letters to more than 500,000 nonprofit organizations to get the word out about the 990-N forms. She didn’t know why the change was catching so many groups by surprise.

“I can honestly say this is the most extensive outreach we have done,” Zarin said.

Ultimately, Zarin said the requirement would be helpful because it would eliminate defunct organizations from IRS records and provide more transparency for the public.

“It will give us a much cleaner list of organizations that actually do exist,” Zarin said. “More organizations will be filing, so more information will be available.”

Study: Drillers spending millions to influence state government – News – Citizens Voice

Study: Drillers spending millions to influence state government – News – Citizens Voice.

Agency for toxic substances issues results of screenings

Reported on Wednesday, May 12, 2010
The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry has released its final report regarding the Community Health Screening for the JAK2 genetic marker.

The community health screening was done in response to recent studies that found an increased number of cases of PV in Schuylkill, Luzerne, and Carbon counties.

It was the first time large-scale screening for this JAK2 genetic mutation has been done in the United States. The frequency of the mutation in the general population is not known. The federal Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) conducted the screenings in partnership with the Pennsylvania Department of Health and Mt. Sinai School of Medicine.

Following two rounds of community health screening in northeastern Pennsylvania for the JAK2 genetic marker, 19 (1.6 percent) of the 1,170 persons tested were found to have this mutation. Five persons were previously diagnosed with polycythemia vera (PV) or a similar blood disease.

Since the JAK2 genetic marker was identified in 2004, studies have shown that this mutation is present in approximately 95 percent of patients with PV.

Patients with related conditions, essential thromboycytosis (ET) and primary myelofibrosis, also can carry the mutation. Scientists do not yet know whether the mutation occurs in otherwise healthy people.

Scientists also do not know how prevalent the mutation is in the general population, or whether everyone who has the mutation will develop PV or a related blood disease.

To help answer these questions, ATSDR is supporting work to determine how commonly the JAK2 mutation occurs in the general population inside and outside of the tri-county area.

For more information about the PV investigation, visit the PV website at: http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/sites/polycythemia_vera/.

ATSDR, a federal public health agency of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, evaluates the human health effects of exposure to hazardous substances.

Lehigh Gap Nature Center offers natural history hike

Dear members and friends of LGNC,

You are invited to join us for a natural history hike from Lehigh Furnace Gap to the Osprey Houseon Satruday, May 15. We will meet at the Osprey House at 8:45, car pool to Lehigh Furnace Gap, hand hike back to the Osprey House, stopping to enjoy the views and observe plants, birds, and whatever else we see along the way. Pink Lady Slippers should be blooming for example. We will stop for lunch along the way.

Bring lunch and water. We should arrive at the Osprey House by around 2:00, then go back for the cars.

Hope to see you Saturday.

Dan
www.lgnc.org

Gas drilling information session set for Thursday

http://citizensvoice.com/news/gas-drilling-information-session-set-for-thursday-1.776328

Gas drilling information session set for Thursday
Published: May 10, 2010

An informational meeting on natural gas drilling in the Marcellus Shale will be offered Thursday in Lehman Township.

The meeting will be held from 6 to 8:30 p.m. at Lake-Lehman High School on Old Route 115.

Representatives from DEP, the Susquehanna River Basin Commission and natural gas experts from Penn State will give presentations.