DC Report

Energy commission stacked with Trump appointees is shielding a big political donor

A federal commission stacked with Trump appointees said the organization that runs our nation’s largest wholesale electricity market may keep secret how it spends millions of Americans' utility-bill dollars on lobbying and political contributions.

Keep reading... Show less

Acid rain, that '70s scourge, comes back

Starting in the 1970s acid rain turned hundreds of lakes and streams in Adirondack Park in upstate New York so acidic that fish could not survive. Acid rain can be so toxic that it etches paint off cars.

Keep reading... Show less

Team Trump admits holding back billions for Puerto Rico disaster recovery

Trump administration officials have admitted that last summer they knowingly withheld billions of dollars Congress appropriated to help Puerto Rico recover from Hurricane Maria.  House Democrats say withholding the relief money violates the law.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump tells another massive whopper: Our military has plenty of bullets -- thanks to Obama

We know that Donald Trump lies every single day as he creates his own reality. But Monday he told a ridiculous whopper that also showed he is a mentally unstable moron.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's man at the Bureau of Land Management wants it dismantled

William Perry Pendley, the attorney now running the Bureau of Land Management, oversees federal coal leases despite pushing for a fire sale of coal leases more than three decades ago that led to a federal probe in which he was referred for possible criminal prosecution.

Keep reading... Show less

Exclusive: Trump county so desperate for clean water they turn to GoFundMe

A rural water district in a northern Nebraska county that voted for Trump in the 2016 presidential election had to resort to setting up a GoFundMe account when a flood wiped out running water to half of the county for six months.

Keep reading... Show less

Now Betsy DeVos is telling colleges what to teach

I’m delighted to learn that everything must be fine with America’s public schools, with student loans and debts, with the growth of community colleges, with affirmative action in our school communities, with a healthy diversity, school assaults and shootings, fair pay, teacher satisfaction and childcare issues.

Keep reading... Show less

Longtime Fox News producer: 'I can’t tell you how unpopular Trump is here'

Does Fox News need President Donald Trump? Or does President Trump need Fox News? If former Fox News strongman and Trump supporter, the late Roger Ailes, were still running the network, those questions might never come up.

Keep reading... Show less

Democrats amass a $300 million war chest -- to fight each other

The fund-raising appeals are coming fast and furious, now, particularly toward the end of each month as Democratic Party candidates and organizers use a mix of guilt, pride and begging to press for just another $5 or $50 or $500.

Keep reading... Show less

Unmasked: New planned Alaska pipeline could spew 3.5 billion cubic feet of gas — per day

800-Mile, $43-Billion Project Is Intended to Send Liquified Natural Gas To China

Keep reading... Show less

Hurricane forecasts are about to get a whole lot worse

If You Can't Find Dorian, Blame the New 5G Cellphone Networks

If you've been transfixed by the minute-by-minute tracking of Hurricane Dorian, thank a weather satellite. Data from weather satellites, weather stations and radar makes it possible for forecasters to use computer simulations to predict a hurricane’s path — and those predictions, though imperfect, help save lives. Yet, reports Salon, as forecasting technology continues to improve, it faces a big threat that could impede humanity's ability to predict the path and intensity of category 5 hurricanes like Dorian: specifically, the onset of 5G cellular technology, the blazing-fast fifth-generation wireless cellular network that is currently being rolled out.

Keep reading... Show less

Republicans want to make it easier for corporations to pollute in minority and low-income communities

Republicans are trying to weaken a federal board that helps minority and low-income communities challenge how much pollution can be released in their neighborhoods by power plants and factories.

Keep reading... Show less

North Dakota may be hiding an oil spill larger than the Exxon Valdez

Workers cleaning up an oil spill in North Dakota that is officially listed as 10 gallons recovered 240,000 gallons, but the actual number might be larger than the Exxon Valdez spill in Alaska in 1989 which released about 11 million gallons of crude.

Keep reading... Show less