The Future of Coal: A Debate In Every State Due To This Coalition
Inside the war on coal: How Mike Bloomberg, red-state businesses, and a lot of Midwestern lawyers are changing American energy faster than you think," by Mike Grunwald: "The war on coal is not just political rhetoric, or a paranoid fantasy concocted by rapacious polluters. It's real and it's relentless. Over the past five years, it has killed a coal-fired power plant every 10 days. ... Beyond Coal is the most extensive, expensive and effective campaign in the [Sierra] Club's 123-year history, and maybe the history of the environmental movement. ...
"[I]t's helped retire more than one third of America's coal plants since its launch in 2010, one dull hearing at a time. With a vast war chest donated by Michael Bloomberg, unlikely allies from the business world, and a strategy that relies more on economics than ecology, its team of nearly 200 litigators and organizers has won battles in the Midwestern and Appalachian coal belts, in the reddest of red states, in almost every state that burns coal." http://politi.co/1At0lRj
Survey of US Mayors Show Little Confidence In US Congress
US Mayors are demanding that Congress do something for our cities-big and small. The survey by Politico Magazine is really well done. The list is getting larger and lager of those who think Washington is failing us and not doing enough to solve real problems-underline "real". Worth a read.
Blogging Burn Out-When you post every 20 minutes every day. Duh.
Intereating read about one of the earliest and most successful bloggers.
America's Hinge Moment:
This an excellent read for leaders in the public square. He writes that the 2016 elections will show a huge and historical shifting in the reality of America. Says we will see a change in state voting patterns that have not changed in 25 years. Will impact who are our public square leaders at the federal, state and local levels.
Worth a read.
Leadership or Panderimg?
Chicago Mayor Emanuel floats naming Chicago airport after Barack Obama," by Adam B. Lerner: "When asked at a candidate forum at Chicago State University why he was no longer supporting his own proposal to name two high schools after Obama and influential religious and community leader Arthur Brazier, Emanuel said that he was still looking for ways to 'acknowledge people who have done significant things.' 'We have an airport, two of them, you know, Midway Airport, O'Hare Airport,' Emanuel said. '[Obama and Brazier] are people who have been transformative in the city of Chicago." By Politico Magazine. 3.26.15