Tags

Journalists: Please sign up for PEERmedia to receive all our recent releases, documents and other information that affect not only public employees, but the public at large.


U.S. AGREES TO CRAFT CONSERVATION PLAN FOR MONTANA BISON RANGE

From: Great Falls Tribune

“The settlement filed last week in U.S. District Court resolves a 2016 complaint from Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility, or PEER, an advocacy…

NATIONAL BISON RANGE SETTLES TIMELINE FOR PLAN

From: Missoulian

““During the litigation, (Interior Secretary Ryan) Zinke decided against the transfer,” said Paula Dinerstein, attorney for Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility…

CLIVEN BUNDY IS A FREE MAN. HIS COWS ARE STILL A NUISANCE

From: Mother Jones

““There’s sort of a metaphor between Bundy and his cows: They’ve both gone rogue,” says Jeff Ruch, executive director of Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility,…

YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK GETS NEW SUPERINTENDENT IN TRUMP SHUFFLE

From: SFGate

“The acting director of the National Park Service was shuffled out of his job Wednesday, reassigned to head Yosemite National Park while being replaced with a retired parks…

NATIONAL PARK SERVICE DIRECTOR APPOINTED DESPITE SCANDAL

From: Courthouse News

“Secretary of the Interior Ryan Zinke on Wednesday appointed as new National Park Service director the man who allowed the billionaire owner of the Washington…


News Releases

MORE SAFE DRINKING WATER VIOLATIONS AT MISSOURI STATE PARKS

Cuivre River State Park Multiple Failures May Point to Uninspected Water Towers

MOUNTAINS OF NATIVE AMERICAN REMAINS MISLAID AND MISLABELED

Federal Office Stopped Cataloguing Discoveries, Tracking Loans or Notifying Tribes

U.S. INDUSTRIAL SAFETY LAGS ALARMINGLY BEHIND DEVELOPED WORLD

U.S. Industrial Loss Burden 3 Times European Union and Gap Is Growing

FISH & WILDLIFE SERVICE SUED OVER SCIENTIFIC FRAUD DOCUMENTS

Records Show Why Director Did Not Act After Investigations Proved Misconduct

OBAMA RETREATS FROM HIS OWN CHEMICAL SAFETY MEASURES

Despite Recurring Disasters, Industrial Plants No Safer Now Than Under Bush