We are now in the second round of voting and we need you to help make sure that our idea - Look "Upstream" to Protect Water and Health: Prevent Pollution and Health Harm Before Toxics Enter Our Water - gets into the final list of ideas.
Click here to find out more and vote!
Please vote today and tell all of your friends, families and co-workers to vote as well! Voting ends March 11, 2010. Thank you!More Information About this Campaign:
Join EarthShare New Jersey as we celebrate all that is New Jersey and 16 years of serving our environment. Since 1994, EarthShare New Jersey has raised more than $3.8 million for the state's leading environmental organizations.
The day will feature Governor Chris Christie as the keynote speaker, an environmental justice plenary with U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Region II Administrator Judith Enck, environmental workshops and leadership awards, and breakfast, lunch, and a reception with key environmental and political leaders.
Thanks to the collective action of NJEF, coalition partners and our members, in December 2009, the NJ Department of Environmental Protection (NJDEP) issued a draft permit that requires a closed loop cooling system/cooling towers at Oyster Creek Nuclear Power Plant in Lacey Township, NJ.
The draft permit is a crucial step in protecting the health of Barnegat Bay and the Jersey Shore—we appreciate your support on this important issue.
However, the fine print of the permit gives Exelon Corporation, the owners of the plant, more than seven years in which to build the cooling towers. We simply can't wait seven years to require this technology at the plant.
There are tremendous pressures on New Jersey's water supply that has the state teetering on the brink of being unsustainable. In some cases, New Jersey has been a leader in adopting landmark policies. Unfortunately, we have also been slow to implement course-correcting policies and regulations. We can ill afford to delay. Without water, there is no life, ecology, energy, or economy.
In 2008, NJEF and Clean Water Fund launched the Urban Environmental Institute (UEI), a leadership initiative project in Newark, NJ. The institute was established to create the next generation of urban environmental advocates and build a more sustainable, greener, and economically stable Newark, NJ
New Jersey Environmental Federation (NJEF) is urging New Jersey municipalities and counties to become a Healthy School, Healthy Town by adopting several policies that help reduce toxins, clean the air, reduce global warming, and protect public health.
PFZ's are important for places where children and pets play--public parks, school yards, and home lawns. PFZ provides safe, healthy, LIVING lawns and landscapes that protect the health of children, families, pets, wildlife and the environment from unnecessary exposure to toxic pesticides.
Using the least toxic cleaning products in your home, school, and workplace, while also maintaining a healthy level of cleanliness and disinfection is one of the key elements of this campaign.
The Coalition for Healthy Ports is a broad coalition of environmental, labor, faith, community, environmental justice and business organizations that seek to create sustainable ports in New York and New Jersey. Through our "Kids Clean Air Zones" and "Idle Free Zones" pledge we're urging individuals, schools, and municipalities to help improve New Jersey's air quality and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
New Jersey Environmental Federation and Clean Water Action are working to curb global warming and promote clean energy. It is only by mobilizing people to push for change that we can transform our energy economy—and we can do it.
Working to protect New Jersey's open space, important to the environment and a key cog in the state's economic engine.
To our great dismay, Oyster Creek Nuclear Power Plant, the oldest plant in the country (40 years) recently received a license renewal that allows it to operate for another 20 years without cooling towers. This means that every day the plant will be allowed to send 1.4 billion gallons of superheated discharge water into Barnegat Bay, release harmful chemicals, and cause fish kills - a clear violation of the federal Clean Water Act.