- It's Earth Day so we check in with folx with environmentally forward missions. We learn about light pollution, waterway ecosystems and agricultural transportation and distribution.
- Today on The Rundown, ists continue a news retrospective for 2024 by discussing efforts to clean up toxic waste, how western Mass. institutions begin repatriation processes of Native remains and artifacts, and the ongoing impacts of a deregulated climate.
- General Electric revised its transportation plan to rely less on trucks and more on pumping PCB waste out of the Housatonic River to a disposal facility in Lee, Massachusetts. But town officials are calling for more of the waste to be taken by rail to special out-of-state landfills.
- The City Council in Springfield, Massachusetts, made the first step this week towards ing an ordinance to raise the fine for illegal dumping to $500 for each offense. Currently, the maximum fine is $300, imposed after a series of repeat offenses.
- As lawmakers on Beacon Hill continue their budget planning, we finally get a look at the state Senate's proposal.
- A Springfield scrap metal company has agreed to pay $165,000 to settle allegations it improperly discharged industrial storm water.
- Longtime environmental advocate Thelma Barzottini was ed recently by Housatonic River cleanup activists and government regulators as a sweet person who was ionate about cleaning up PCBs.
- The Materials Innovation and Recycling Authority — a trash-to-energy collaborative in Hartford — will close in the coming months.
- If Hartford exits MIRA, people in surrounding towns could soon be paying more to get rid of their trash.
- Almost the entire class of PFAS chemicals — of which there are thousands — will be added to the state's list of "Toxic or Hazardous Substances."