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Why are environmental costs overlooked? The bill always comes due

Why are environmental costs overlooked? The bill always comes due

Yahoo20-04-2025

There have been several news stories recently about modular nuclear reactors powering data and AI centers. These are being treated like a new buzzword to solve all our power problems. Advantages touted include low carbon emissions and the fact that they could be built at a pace similar to auto and plane manufacturing with limited regulatory oversight.
We are stunned that there is NO discussion of the full life cycle of these types of power plants and their uranium fuel. On the front end, uranium is mined, processed and concentrated to produce the fuel for the nuclear reactors. On the back end, the nuclear power plants have to be decommissioned, and the radioactive plant components and uranium fuel shipped and stored.
Even after 80 years of this country generating high level nuclear waste, there is no permanent long-term storage facility for the waste that is dangerously radioactive for thousands of years. Nuclear fuel rods from power plants are commonly stored on site in cooling pools. What could go wrong with that?
David and Pamela Johns, Austin
Re: April 13 article, "Central Texas town divided over gas plant"
Sandow Lakes Energy, the developer of a proposed gas plant east of Austin, touted the benefits the plant would bring. They included 400 construction jobs, dozens of permanent jobs and an increased tax base. Notably absent from the list is the thousands of tons of carbon dioxide the plant would produce. This gas will increase already dangerously high temperatures.
Why choose an energy source adding to global warming when clean energy sources — wind and solar — are quicker to build and non-polluting?
Philip Russell, Austin
In kindergarten I learned about my responsibility after making a mess: 'Clean up, everybody do your share.' I learned that if I made a mess, I must clean it. Otherwise, our beloved teachers would be stuck cleaning after me.
Now as a 10th grader at Austin Achieve High School, I learned about orphaned wells. I could not believe that in Texas, the home that I love, there are people who did not learn as children about cleaning up their mess. Why are they not ensuring that the wells they built and benefited from are properly decommissioned and plugged so they don't affect others?
I live far from places where orphaned wells are a problem. But that does not mean I do not care. I want our legislators — who I assumed went to kindergarten — to do everything possible to ensure that well owners and operators clean up after themselves.
Elisa Rodriguez, Austin
Re: April 13 article, "Abbott launches blitz to stop proposed Islamic community development"
There is no issue of more importance in the founding of this country than the freedom of religion. Many of the colonies were settled in the 1600s by people who faced persecution in Europe. While some settlers came for economic reasons, the great majority left Europe to worship God in the way they believed to be correct.
Now, Gov. Greg Abbott is attempting to suppress the rights of some Texans because he opposes their religion, namely, Islam. Not only do his actions as governor violate the U.S. Constitution, they violate the Texas Constitution, which provides for equality under the law no matter one's "sex, race, color, creed, or national origin." Our laws prohibit the governor through his office to "substantially burden a person's free exercise of religion."
Gov. Abbott is seeking to interfere with the rights of Muslims to practice their religion. His actions should be condemned by every freedom-loving person.
Lamar W. Hankins, San Marcos
I simply can't understand or accept the ridiculous premise of a $1 billion dollar taxpayer-funded private-school voucher program. What a classic rich-stealing-from-the-poor paradigm. You want to send your child to private school? Fine. Pay the tuition. But, don't ask for public money to cover the cost.
Marty Lange, Austin
Re: April 13 column, "Animal Services helps homeless help their pets"
If dogs could talk, they would tell Brendan Gemmell: "Thank you for the food, and thank you for feeding my keeper's soul."
Mr. Gemmell, an outreach worker for Austin Animal Center, is on a unique mission to keep those experiencing homelessness together with their beloved pets. It may seem like a simple act of feeding a dog, but in reality it is a grand gesture of understanding, love and pure goodness. He recognizes that a precious pet brings security, companionship and a reason to get up in the morning for people living in a difficult situation.
You are the leader of the pack, Mr. Gemmell. Thank you for your "one-man operation." Hope others join in: With 3,500 encounters per year, you could use a buddy or two.
Valerie Goranson, Round Rock
On April 15, the Texas House heard several bills that would weaken Texas' already meager gun laws. Rep. Cole Hefner asked one resident giving testimony: 'What is your solution? … How do we protect our kids?' I am more than happy to share some data-proven viable solutions.
Pass mandatory safe storage for all gun owners. One study found 42% of adolescent school shooters obtained the firearm from relatives, mostly through theft.
Hold persons accountable whose weapon was used in a crime because they failed to secure their firearm.
Require background checks for all gun sales and transfers, including at gun shows and online.
Pass Extreme Risk Laws.
Raise the age to purchase a semi-automatic rifle from 18 to 21
Fund research on gun violence and its prevention
Firearm violence is a preventable public health tragedy that is largely dependent on the strength of gun violence prevention policies. Together we can make Texas a safer place for everyone.
Amanda Ammerman, Austin
It's truly disheartening to hear that the Trump Administration has decided to halt all investments in Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance. The decision has significant implications for vulnerable children around the world.
Since its establishment in 2000, Gavi has helped vaccinate more than 1 billion children and has helped prevent more than 18 million deaths. If U.S. funding ceases, an alarming 75 million children could lose access to vaccines in the next five years, with 1.2 million of them potentially losing their lives.
It's difficult to imagine a more compassionate act of U.S. international assistance than ensuring children have access to lifesaving vaccines. I strongly encourage our members of Congress to urge the Trump Administration to reverse this decision regarding Gavi funding. Additionally, the U.S. should restore humanitarian and development aid that addresses pressing issues like tuberculosis, HIV, malaria, nutrition, education and more.
Susan Lamb, Austin
The Trump administration contends it is powerless to effectuate the return of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, whom it illegally deported to El Salvador. If President Trump truly had the will to bring Mr. Abrego Garcia back to the United States, he could be back within 24 hours. President Trump need only announce a 145% tariff on all imports into the U.S. from El Salvador unless El Salvador's president returns Mr. Abrego Garcia by such deadline.
Where there's a will, there's a way.
Roger Ferris, Austin
It is long past time for our senators and representatives to stand up against President Trump's contempt for the Constitution and defiance of the Supreme Court.
His statement that he has no power to retrieve Kilmar Abrego Garcia, and the laughing chorus of his slavish toadies as Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele agreed that he would not return Abrego Garcia as "smuggling a terrorist into your country," are transparently malicious steps in an ominous strategy. It also flies in the face of the literally hundreds of people over hundreds of years who have been returned to the United States from foreign prisons.
If members of Congress still think that due process is important, and obeying orders from a federal court is important, and an actively involved legislature is important, now is the time for them to speak up and take action.
Win Bent, Austin
Back in January, Republican U.S. Rep. Chip Roy, along with Democrat U.S. Rep. Seth Magaziner, introduced the bipartisan 'TRUST in Congress Act,' which would require members of Congress to put certain investments into a blind trust to avoid the possibility of insider trading.
A worthy goal indeed.
Hence, in the true bipartisan spirit of his proposed legislation, and in light of the drastic swings in stock prices due to President Trump's on-and-off tariffs, surely Roy will join Democrats in calling for investigations into possible insider trading by Trump and his billionaire friends.
Then again, don't count on it, as sometimes principles only go so far.
Stephen Shackelford, Austin
Re: April 12 article, "Senate panel undecided on daylight saving time"
It would be laughable that we should all suffer the disruption to our natural Circadian rhythms caused by daylight saving time so that golfers have more evening hours to play if it wasn't so clear that Congress is more interested in what big business wants than what is best for the health of all Americans.
Daylight saving time used to end a month earlier until the candy industry lobbied to extend it past Halloween. Now we face the real possibility of kids walking to school in the dark, commuters driving in the dark early hours, and the proven physiological disruption that daylight saving causes as permanent to make businesses happy. So wrong.
Standard time is standard for a reason.
Rona Distenfeld, Austin
This article originally appeared on Austin American-Statesman: Austin American-Statesman Letters to the Editor for April 20, 2025

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Unpacking claim LAPD officers shot photographer on rooftop during 2025 ICE protests
Unpacking claim LAPD officers shot photographer on rooftop during 2025 ICE protests

Yahoo

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  • Yahoo

Unpacking claim LAPD officers shot photographer on rooftop during 2025 ICE protests

On June 10, 2025, following a weekend of protests against immigration enforcement actions in Los Angeles, a claim (archived) circulated online that Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) officers shot a photographer filming protesters from a rooftop. The footage came from a June 9, 2025, news livestream (archived). That stream showed a person on a rooftop near First Street and Los Angeles Street stumble backwards and fall, dropping a small, dark item as they did so. After about 10 seconds, the fallen person was able to get back up and be escorted off the rooftop. The claim circulated on X (archived) and Instagram (archived). However, Snopes could not independently verify whether the person seen falling down on the rooftop was a photographer shot by an LAPD officer. The LAPD did police (archived) a protest near First Street and Los Angeles Street on June 9, eventually authorizing (archived) the use of "less lethal munitions," according to its X account. These munitions include things like tear gas and rubber bullets. According to the LAPD, "Less lethal munitions may cause pain and discomfort." We found no credible reports of a photographer being shot by police on June 9, though journalists and photographers were injured by rubber or plastic bullets on two previous days of protest. The LAPD media relations division referred us to their X account when asked about the video, which did not mention this particular incident. Organizations including the Committee to Protect Journalists and Reporters Without Borders had tracked between 20 and 27 incidents involving journalists and law enforcement officers in LA since June 6, 2025, at the time of this writing. The Los Angeles Press Club keeps a running tracking document of incidents. This document did not list any recorded incidents of a photographer or journalist being shot on June 9 at the time of this writing. ABC News 4. "Anti-ICE Protesters March through Downtown Los Angeles." YouTube, 9 June 2025, California Press Rights Tracking Doc (Consolidated). Los Angeles Press Club, 12 Apr. 2021, Gregory, James. "British Photographer Injured by 'plastic Bullet' during LA Protests." BBC News, 9 June 2025, @LAPDCentral. "⚠️Traffic Advisory⚠️ Temple Is Closed between Spring St and Alameda. ." X, 9 June 2025, ---. "Protestors in the Crowd Began Throwing Objects at the Officers at Temple and Los Angeles. ." X, 9 June 2025, "Law Enforcement Injure Multiple Journalists, Others Assaulted While Covering Los Angeles Protests." Committee to Protect Journalists, 9 June 2025, Propper, David. Post Photographer Shot with Rubber Bullet in LA Riots. 9 June 2025, Thompson, Sean, and Jorge Branco. 9News US Correspondent Lauren Tomasi "sore, but Okay" after Being Shot by Rubber Bullet in LA Protests. 10 June 2025, USA: RSF Condemns Wave of Violence against Journalists Covering Los Angeles Protests | RSF. 9 June 2025,

Who is David Huerta, the California labor leader who was arrested in Los Angeles?
Who is David Huerta, the California labor leader who was arrested in Los Angeles?

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time6 hours ago

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Who is David Huerta, the California labor leader who was arrested in Los Angeles?

A revered California labor leader arrested for his involvement in protests decrying immigration raids in Los Angeles is out on bond, after demonstrators came out nationwide Monday to demand his release. David Huerta, the president of the Service Employees International Union California, was arrested Friday as he protested an immigration raid in Los Angeles. After three nights of detention, Huerta was released on a $50,000 bond Monday afternoon, though he remains charged with conspiracy to impede an officer, a felony that could result in up to six years in prison, according to the US Attorney's Office. A well-known figure in the California labor movement, Huerta started his career mobilizing immigrant janitors in Los Angeles to demand better working conditions as part of a 1990s campaign called Justice for Janitors, according to a UNI Global Union statement. He was once praised by former President Barack Obama's administration for his efforts to advocate for immigrant workers. 'As a labor leader, David has worked to build an immigrant integration program that includes English classes for union members. Under his leadership, hundreds of SEIU-USWW members have become U.S. citizens. In addition, he has advocated for comprehensive immigration reform by empowering SEIU-USWW members to become their own advocates for change,' an archived White House post from the Obama administration reads. Huerta's union has described him as 'a father, a union leader, and a fighter for immigrant justice.' Supporters in California rallied around Huerta when he was released from custody Monday afternoon, chanting 'Si se puede.' Speaking outside the courthouse after his release, Huerta said authorities are trying to make an example out of him, cautioning that while he was released on bond, other detainees are still locked up, with some allegedly unable to see their lawyers or attend critical court hearings. 'We will have our time for justice, but we must do it in a way that we demonstrate the power of working people across this country and stand united,' Huerta told the crowd. After Huerta was released Monday, his union released a statement: 'We are relieved that David is free and reunited with his family and we are deeply grateful to the hundreds of elected officials, civil rights leaders, labor partners and allies from across the nation who stood in solidarity and demanded David's release,' Service Employees International Union President April Verrett said. 'But this struggle is about much more than just one man,' Verrett continued. 'Thousands of workers remain unjustly detained and separated from their families. At this very moment, immigrant communities are being terrorized by heavily militarized armed forces.' The national union boasts about 2 million members in healthcare, the public sector and property services, with more than 700,000 workers represented throughout California. After Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials began performing targeted raids and arresting community members in the Los Angeles area last week, protestors came out in numbers to voice their objections. Huerta was among the demonstrators gathered in Los Angeles Friday at a business prosecutors say was suspected of unlawful employment and falsifying employment records. Prosecutors have accused Huerta of blocking access to a gate while law enforcement attempted to execute a search warrant and refusing to leave when asked, saying multiple times, 'it's a public sidewalk.' When a law enforcement vehicle approached the scene and Huerta refused to step aside, an officer tried to physically move him, prosecutors said. When Huerta pushed back, the officer pushed him to the ground, handcuffed and arrested him. Video of the incident shows the tense moments around the arrest, Huerta face down on the ground as multiple masked ICE agents surround and try to detain him, with demonstrators loudly objecting. The union has described his treatment at the hands of the masked officials as 'assault.' Huerta was later hospitalized and treated for injuries sustained during the arrest, SEIU said in a statement. As President Donald Trump called in the National Guard to quell the protests in Southern California – against the guidance of the governor – lawmakers around the nation condemned Huerta's arrest. 'David Huerta is a respected leader, a patriot, and an advocate for working people. No one should ever be harmed for witnessing government action,' California Gov. Gavin Newsom said in a statement. US Democratic Sens. Adam Schiff of California, Alex Padilla of California and Chuck Schumer of New York wrote a letter to the Department of Homeland Security, ICE and the Department of Justice Monday demanding a review of Huerta's arrest – including exactly how the labor leader was injured in the process. 'During a workplace enforcement action, Mr. Huerta, a well-known and deeply respected community leader, was exercising his lawful right to observe the conduct of immigration enforcement personnel,' the senators wrote. Schiff attended Huerta's initial appearance Monday, his team told CNN. Beyond Huerta's immediate release on bond, Democratic leaders are demanding the charge against him be dropped. 'House Democrats will stand with David Huerta for as long as it takes until the charges are dropped and the rogue federal actions that have been unleashed will be completely investigated and exposed,' House Minority Leader Rep. Hakeem Jeffries said in a statement. 'Free Huerta now!' massive crowds in Los Angeles chanted Monday. Their demands were echoed around the nation, as demonstrators took to the streets in at least a dozen cities, including San Francisco, Boston, Pittsburgh, Seattle, Washington, DC, Charlotte, North Carolina, and parts of Connecticut and New York. Members of Huerta's union, along with other labor leaders and workers, held up signs reading, 'FREE DAVID' and 'END ICE RAIDS.' Union leaders across other industries voiced their support for Huerta's due process. 'We must fight back. We reject these attacks on our communities and demand the immediate release of our union brother David Huerta,' Manny Pastreich, president of the property service workers labor group 32BJ SEIU, said while speaking at the demonstration in New York. 'The United Farm Workers, along with the entire labor movement, stands in strong solidarity with our comrade, labor leader David Huerta. We demand his immediate release and condemn indiscriminate sweeps targeting working class immigrants,' the United Farm Workers union said on X. The International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees also chimed in: 'The apparent targeting of labor activists by federal authorities is unacceptable and dangerous,' the group said in a statement Monday. 'We stand united with David Huerta, immigrant workers, and all who seek justice.' And upon Huerta's release, the California Federation of Labor Unions said it was relieved to see its 'brother' out of custody and on bond. While many across the labor movement celebrated Huerta's release Monday, the focus has turned to the workers and family members still detained by immigration authorities. Huerta has thrown his support behind them. 'I know when we organize, we win,' he said Monday. CNN's Amanda Musa, Taylor Romine, Hannah Rabinowitz, Holmes Lybrand and Maureen Chowdhury contributed to this report.

Austin Police provides new details into anti-ICE protest
Austin Police provides new details into anti-ICE protest

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time8 hours ago

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Austin Police provides new details into anti-ICE protest

AUSTIN (KXAN) — The Austin Police Department held a press conference at noon Tuesday to discuss Monday night's protest and its response. APD Police Chief Lisa Davis discussed 'results from the large gatherings' at the department's headquarters. David said APD worked collaboratively with the Texas Department of Public Safety to facilitate the peaceful protest. Previous: Anti-ICE march held in solidarity with LA protests; Arrests made, DPS uses tear gas The protest began around 7 p.m. Monday at the Texas Capitol. Anti-capitalist group Party for Socialism and Liberation organized the initial march and shared its route with APD ahead of time. APD said the protest moved through the downtown Austin area, where it escalated quickly. Around 8 p.m. Monday, the marchers returned to the Capitol. They broke off into smaller groups over the next hour. David said in the press conference that, through the use of drones, APD and DPS discovered individuals graffitiing the federal building. Two individuals were arrested for spray painting the building's windows, according to Davis. Davis said tensions climbed when large rocks began being thrown towards officers. 3 officers were injured from the rocks, and another suffered a shoulder injury and was spat on in the eye by a protester, according to Davis. The Texas Department of Public Safety was also involved in the law enforcement response to the protest. APD confirmed that it deployed pepper balls toward the ground, and DPS used tear gas to disperse the crowd. City policy implemented after protests in 2020 prohibits APD officers from using tear gas. DPS released the following statement on Tuesday in response. 'The Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) has a duty to protect the people and property of Texas. On Monday evening, DPS personnel responded to a planned and publicized protest at the Texas State Capitol Complex. While we do not discuss operational specifics, DPS collaborates with local, state and federal law enforcement partners to ensure the safety of our citizens and state property, as well as to protect individuals exercising their constitutional rights to assembly and free speech. As with any incident response, the department adjusts its operations, including personnel and resources, as needed to address potential and emerging threats. During Monday evening's response, DPS personnel deployed tear gas and pepper ball projectiles to ensure officer safety and maintain order. DPS personnel arrested four individuals on various charges, including felony criminal mischief and resisting arrest. Texas is a law-and-order state. DPS will continue monitoring future events and their impact on public safety across the state, and we stand ready to protect the people and property of the great state of Texas,' DPS said. According to Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, 'more than a dozen' protesters were arrested Monday night. APD said it plans to have 100% staffing ready this weekend in anticipation of any protests. KXAN Reporters Brianna Hollis and Grace Reader contributed to this report. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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