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An Alabama man who spent more than 40 years behind bars speaks out, Florida natural habitats are disappearing, and spring allergies hit hard in Connecticut.

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After another campus shooting, President Trump says people, not guns, are the issue. Alaska Sen. Murkowski says Republicans fear Trump's retaliation, and voting rights groups sound the alarm over an executive order on elections.

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Money meant for schools in timber country is uncertain as Congress fails to reauthorize a rural program, farmers and others will see federal dollars for energy projects unlocked, and DOGE cuts threaten plant species needed for U.S. food security.

Coming: Cross-border cleanup plan for Columbia River headwaters

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Monday, December 30, 2024   

Governing bodies in the U.S. and Canada are taking steps to address mining pollution affecting the headwaters of the Columbia River.

Coal mining pollution in the Kootenai River has flowed from Canada to Montana for more than a century and affected water quality hundreds of miles downstream. Selenium is the biggest concern, which can harm fish and other wildlife at high concentrations. Tribes in the region have been at the forefront of addressing the issue.

Tom McDonald, vice chair of the Salish and Kootenai Tribal Council, is among those leading efforts.

"We've had this terrible issue with coal mining pollution in the Kootenai River drainage, which is the headwaters of the Columbia River that lies within all of our tribes' aboriginal territory," McDonald explained. "Subsistence uses of that watershed is very important for our people."

The International Joint Commission settles boundary waters differences between the U.S. and Canada. It has announced the formation of a governance body to address pollution in the Kootenai River. The body will set up a cleanup plan over the next two years.

The governance body set up to address the issue is composed of 11 governments, including tribal governments, the states of Idaho and Montana, and the Canadian province of British Columbia. McDonald stressed the issue comes down to the regulatory responsibility of British Columbia.

"If they were just enforcing the rules and regulations that they're supposed to be doing, I don't think we would even be here today," McDonald contended. "But they haven't been. So they haven't been doing their job and so it's really laying more eyes on it, putting more pressure on to enforce their rules and regulations and then mitigation packages."

The Canadian company NWP Coal is proposing a new mine in the same watershed as the existing coal mines. The company claims its project will not increase selenium contamination but does not address the current pollution issue.


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