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In Killingworth, environmentalists and public officials are trying to stop the Boy Scouts of America from selling its wooded 252-acre Deer Lake Scout Reservation to a developer.
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A number of factors, including warming ocean temperatures, are contributing to an expected proliferation of sharks along the New York coastline this summer, according to research from Stony Brook University.
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On the hunt for alewives and blueback herring, two small fish in Connecticut that are hugely important.
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Officials say a $23 million commitment from the Biden administration’s bipartisan infrastructure law will help complete the cleanup of Connecticut’s worst hazardous waste superfund site. The EPA’s cleanup of the Raymark Industries site in Stratford began in 1995.
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The town hopes to temporarily pause clamming by the Frank M. Flower and Sons company in Mill Neck Creek on Long Island.
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Connecticut officials joined environmental advocates at the state Capitol in a final push to pass energy conservation and vehicle emission standards bills before the legislative session ends on May 4.
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The funding of local projects by the Environmental Bond Act was disrupted by the pandemic given the financial uncertainty of the state.
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The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency joined New York and Connecticut officials on Wednesday to announce the funds for water infrastructure improvements that protect water quality and coastal wetlands.
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A nearly $224 million sewer project will reduce nitrogen pollution and expand economic development by eliminating about 1,890 cesspools and septic systems in the Mastic-Shirley area of Long Island. Still, environmentalists want more.
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Governor Kathy Hochul proposed billions of dollars in her executive budget to fight climate change, but now some environmental groups want $15 billion more.