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Andrea McGimsey, Senior Director, Global Warming Solutions, Environment America, 703-477-4722, amcgimsey@environmentamerica.org
Matt Casale, U.S. PIRG Environment Campaigns Director, 609-610-8002, mcasale@pirg.org
Josh Chetwynd, Communications Manager, 303-573-5558, josh.chetwynd@publicinterestnetwork.org
President Joe Biden has wasted no time in following through on several campaign promises related to protecting the environment and addressing climate change.
Among the actions he will take either Wednesday or within the week: require the United States to rejoin the Paris Agreement; cancel the Keystone XL pipeline permit; ban new oil and gas permitting on public lands, including the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge; reimpose methane pollution limits for new and existing oil and gas operations; review Trump administration decisions to strip away national monument protections for such iconic locations as Grand Staircase-Escalante, Bears Ears and Northeast Canyons and Seamounts Marine national monuments; use the federal government procurement system to make facilities more reliant on clean energy and to purchase zero-emission electric vehicles; reestablish a working group on the societal cost of carbon; and begin the process of rescinding rollbacks on vehicle tailpipe emissions standards.
The president will also order the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to review several actions taken over the last four years that weakened clean water protections. These notably include the Dirty Water Rule, which put streams and wetlands at risk; weaker standards for coal ash and toxic pollution from power plants; and the recent update to the Lead and Copper Rule.
U.S. PIRG and Environment America have been at the forefront of campaigns for stronger environmental policies for decades, leading the charge for the adoption of renewable energy, clean transportation and the conservation of our public lands and oceans. In addition, late last year, the groups released "First Things to Fix," a list of environmental actions that the Biden administration should prioritize. With these actions, many of those "first things" are being fixed.
Environment America Acting President Wendy Wendlandt issued the following statement:
"After four years of environmental setbacks, a new day has dawned. Today, President Biden showed us just how serious he is about his campaign promises to protect the environment and take bold climate action. There remains a lot of work to do, but the president has set us on a course toward a greener, healthier future."
U.S. PIRG President Faye Park issued the following statement:
"When we put the environment at risk, we put the health of Americans at risk. Today's actions by President Biden will lead to a healthier environment and healthier Americans. We hope that this marks an inflection point where our federal policies match the nation's desire to build a healthier and safer future for ourselves, our children and our grandchildren."
Additional experts from Environment America and U.S. PIRG issued the following statements on specific climate and conservation provisions:
Climate Change:
Paris Agreement
"By rejoining the Paris Agreement on day one, President Biden is sending a crystal clear signal to all Americans and to the world that the United States will once again lead when it comes to solving the climate crisis," said Andrea McGimsey, Environment America's senior director for Global Warming Solutions. "The days of dirty, fossil fuel-burning, 19th-century technology must be numbered in order to reach a cleaner tomorrow."
Vehicle Emissions Standards
"With this action, there is hope again for cleaner cars and clean air in our communities," said Environment America Destination: Zero Carbon Campaign Director Morgan Folger. "While we transition to zero-emission vehicles, any cars that run on gasoline should have the strongest fuel economy and emissions standards possible to clean up our air and save consumers money. We applaud President Biden for beginning to undo the rollback of our nation's best climate program to date."
Keystone XL Pipeline
"Cancelling the permit for the Keystone XL pipeline is a huge win for public health and the climate," said Matt Casale, U.S. PIRG Environment Campaigns director. "Building new infrastructure such as the pipeline, which would result in millions of tons of new carbon emissions, just adds fuel to a fire that's already burning down our house. We should invest in infrastructure that helps us build a cleaner and healthier America, not infrastructure that ties us to the dirty energy sources of the past."
Clean Renewable Energy
"When the government leads the way on clean energy procurement, it smooths the road for everyone else to follow," said Johanna Neumann, Environment America's senior director for Environment America's Campaign for 100% Renewable Energy. "Directing the federal government procurement system - which spends $500 billion every year - to transition government facilities to clean energy and to purchase zero-emissions vehicles for government fleets will reduce harmful pollution and help speed up the adoption of clean energy technologies."
Methane Regulation
"From the giant methane cloud released last year across to Florida to the ongoing release of this dangerous gas from the massive Permian Basin of Texas, it's clear that we must get polluters under control," said Andrea McGimsey, Environment America's senior director for Global Warming Solutions. "With this new direction, the Environmental Protection Agency is sending a clear message to oil and gas executives: You no longer get a free pass to damage the environment and health of your fellow Americans at your production sites. It's time to clean up your business and act on climate."
Social Cost of Carbon
"From the heartbreaking flooding we've endured in our homes and businesses to the tragedy of entire towns burning down, the damage done by carbon pollution-inflamed climate change to the fabric of our everyday lives is inumerable," said Andrea McGimsey, Environment America's senior director for Global Warming Solutions. "We applaud President Biden for squarely putting the focus back on the social cost of carbon to every American because if we don't consider that part of fossil fuels' impact, we are turning a blind eye to an important facet of the problem."
Conservation:
Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
"Our wild spaces are part of the fabric of who we are as Americans and this decision to rethink fossil fuel excavation in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and elsewhere on public lands, represents a keen understanding by the new administration that these priceless places are too special to destroy for any amount of oil," said Ellen Montgomery, Environment America Public Lands Campaign director. "With renewable energy on the rise, we really do not need to drill for oil and gas in special areas such as the refuge. Instead, we can and should focus on protecting our public lands for the good of the species that live on them and for future generations."
National monuments
"Protecting our most spectacular and special natural areas is an important part of our national identity as Americans," said Protect Our Oceans Campaign Director Kelsey Lamp. "From New England's deep sea coral gardens to the soaring spires of the Utah desert, we understand and appreciate the overwhelming value in conserving our natural heritage and safeguarding it for future generations. Recognizing what's at stake, we applaud the president's important first step toward restoring protections for some of our most special places, but know we still have a long way to go to ensure the health of our land and oceans."
Clean Water:
Dirty Water Rule
"By ordering a repeal of the Dirty Water Rule, President Biden has taken a vital step for America's mighty rivers, majestic lakes and vibrant bays -- and for the drinking water of millions of Americans," Environment America Clean Water Field Director Kristine Oblock said. "Wetlands filter out pollutants, provide wildlife habitats and protect communities from flooding. The Dirty Water Rule left half of our nation's remaining wetlands -- as well as streams that feed our greater waterways and help provide drinking water to millions of Americans -- without federal protection. In short, the Dirty Water Rule was the worst rollback in the five decades since the Clean Water Act. We now look forward to working with the Biden-Harris administration to permanently restore federal protections to all of America's waterways."
Lead and Copper Rule
"Lead is a potent neurotoxin that harms the way our children learn, grow and behave, and it has no place in our drinking water," said Environment America Clean Water Program Director John Rumpler. "Yet millions of homes with lead pipes -- and schools with lead-bearing faucets and fountains- - put our children's drinking water at risk. By ordering the EPA to take stronger action to stop widespread lead contamination, President Biden is taking a bold step to safeguard our drinking water. We urge the EPA to order the full replacement of all lead service lines within ten years. Our children's health depends on it."
Coal Ash
"Arsenic, mercury, and lead have no place in the lakes where we swim, the rivers where we fish or the water we drink," Environment America Clean Water Advocate Laura Miller said. "Yet these toxins are contained in the ash from burning coal and put our water at risk. As highlighted in our Accidents Waiting to Happen report, several of these coal ash pits are located in flood zones, creating an additional risk of toxic overflows into our rivers during severe storms. Today, President Biden took action to protect our water from this toxic hazard. Yet more work remains to be done. Our rivers and streams will be much safer once we sweep coal ash into the dustbin of history."
Toxic Water Rule
"Power plants account for 30 percent of toxic discharges to waterways, including arsenic, lead, mercury and selenium -- a cancer-causing substance," Environment America Clean Water Program Director John Rumpler said. "By ordering the EPA to revisit the Trump administration's Toxic Water Rule (Steam-Electric ELGs), President Biden is taking a critical step to protect our rivers, lakes and streams. Hopefully, we can put an end to the absurdity of polluting water to create energy."
With Environment America, you protect the places that all of us love and promote core environmental values, such as clean air to breathe, clean water to drink, and clean energy to power our lives. We're a national network of 29 state environmental groups with members and supporters in every state. Together, we focus on timely, targeted action that wins tangible improvements in the quality of our environment and our lives.
(303) 801-0581A leader at the human rights group called the proposal "a dangerous and dramatic step backwards and a product of ongoing impunity for Israel’s system of apartheid and its genocide in Gaza."
As Israel continues its "silent genocide" in the Gaza Strip one month into a supposed ceasefire with Hamas and Israeli settler attacks on Palestinians in the illegally occupied West Bank hit a record high, Amnesty International on Tuesday ripped the advancement of a death penalty bill championed by far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir.
Israel's 120-member Knesset "on Monday evening voted 39-16 in favor of the first reading of a controversial government-backed bill sponsored by Otzma Yehudit MK Limor Son Har-Melech," the Times of Israel reported. "Two other death penalty bills, sponsored by Likud MK Nissim Vaturi and Yisrael Beytenu MK Oded Forer, also passed their first readings 36-15 and 37-14."
Son Har-Melech's bill—which must pass two more readings to become law—would require courts to impose the death penalty on "a person who caused the death of an Israeli citizen deliberately or through indifference, from a motive of racism or hostility against a population, and with the aim of harming the state of Israel and the national revival of the Jewish people in its land."
Both Hamas—which Israel considers a terrorist organization—and the Palestine Liberation Organization slammed the bill, with Palestinian National Council Speaker Rawhi Fattouh calling it "a political, legal, and humanitarian crime," according to Reuters.
Amnesty International's senior director for research, advocacy, policy, and campaigns, Erika Guevara Rosas, said in a statement that "there is no sugarcoating this; a majority of 39 Israeli Knesset members approved in a first reading a bill that effectively mandates courts to impose the death penalty exclusively against Palestinians."
Amnesty opposes the death penalty under all circumstances and tracks such killings annually. The international human rights group has also forcefully spoken out against Israeli abuse of Palestinians, including the genocide in Gaza that has killed over 69,182 people as of Tuesday—the official tally from local health officials that experts warn is likely a significant undercount.
"The international community must exert maximum pressure on the Israeli government to immediately scrap this bill and dismantle all laws and practices that contribute to the system of apartheid against Palestinians."
“Knesset members should be working to abolish the death penalty, not broadening its application," Guevara Rosas argued. "The death penalty is the ultimate cruel, inhuman, and degrading punishment, and an irreversible denial of the right to life. It should not be imposed in any circumstances, let alone weaponized as a blatantly discriminatory tool of state-sanctioned killing, domination, and oppression. Its mandatory imposition and retroactive application would violate clear prohibitions set out under international human rights law and standards on the use of this punishment."
"The shift towards requiring courts to impose the death penalty against Palestinians is a dangerous and dramatic step backwards and a product of ongoing impunity for Israel's system of apartheid and its genocide in Gaza," she continued. "It did not occur in a vacuum. It comes in the context of a drastic increase in the number of unlawful killings of Palestinians, including acts that amount to extrajudicial executions, over the last decade, and a horrific rise of deaths in custody of Palestinians since October 2023."
Guevara Rosas noted that "not only have such acts been greeted with near-total impunity but with legitimacy and support and, at times, glorification. It also comes amidst a climate of incitement to violence against Palestinians as evidenced by the surge in state-backed settler attacks in the occupied West Bank."
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu launched the devastating assault on Gaza in response to the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on October 7, 2023. Since then, Israeli soldiers and settlers have also killed more than 1,000 Palestinians in the West Bank, according to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.
Netanyahu is now wanted by the International Criminal Court for war crimes and crimes against humanity, and Israel faces an ongoing genocide case at the International Court of Justice. The ICJ separately said last year that Israel's occupation of Gaza and the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, is unlawful and must end; the Israeli government has shown no sign of accepting that.
The Amnesty campaigner said Tuesday that "it is additionally concerning that the law authorizes military courts to impose death sentences on civilians, that cannot be commuted, particularly given the unfair nature of the trials held by these courts, which have a conviction rate of over 99% for Palestinian defendants."
As CNN reported Monday:
The UN has previously condemned Israel's military courts in the occupied West Bank, saying that "Palestinians' right to due process guarantees have been violated" for decades, and denounced "the lack of fair trial in the occupied West Bank."
UN experts said last year that, "in the occupied West Bank, the functions of police, investigator, prosecutor, and judge are vested in the same hierarchical institution—the Israeli military."
Pointing to the hanging of Nazi official and Holocaust architect Adolf Eichmann, Guevara Rosas highlighted that "on paper, Israeli law has traditionally restricted the use of the death penalty for exceptional crimes, like genocide and crimes against humanity, and the last court-ordered execution was carried out in 1962."
"The bill's stipulation that courts should impose the death penalty on individuals convicted of nationally motivated murder with the intent of 'harming the state of Israel or the rebirth of the Jewish people' is yet another blatant manifestation of Israel's institutionalized discrimination against Palestinians, a key pillar of Israel’s apartheid system, in law and in practice," she asserted.
"The international community must exert maximum pressure on the Israeli government to immediately scrap this bill and dismantle all laws and practices that contribute to the system of apartheid against Palestinians," she added. "Israeli authorities must ensure Palestinian prisoners and detainees are treated in line with international law, including the prohibition against torture and other ill-treatment, and are provided with fair trial guarantees. They must also take concrete steps towards abolishing the death penalty for all crimes and all people."
"In our democracy, the press is a watchdog against abuse," said Marion County Record publisher Eric Meyer. "If the watchdog itself is the target of abuse, and all it does is roll over, democracy suffers.”
A Kansas county has agreed to pay $3 million over 2023 police raids of a local newspaper and multiple homes—one of which belonged to its elderly publisher, whose death shortly followed—sparking nationwide alarm over increasing attacks on the free press.
Marion County agreed to pay the seven-figure settlement and issue a formal apology to the publishers of the Marion County Record admitting that wrongdoing had occurred during the August 11, 2023 raids on the paper's newsroom and two homes.
The apology states that the Marion County Sheriff's Office "wishes to express its sincere regrets to Eric and Joan Meyer and Ruth and Ronald Herbel for its participation in the drafting and execution of the Marion Police Department’s search warrants on their homes and the Marion County Record. This likely would not have happened if established law had been reviewed and applied prior to the execution of the warrant."
Bernie Rhodes, an attorney for the Record, told the paper, "This is a first step—but a big step—in making sure that Joan Meyer’s death served a purpose, in making sure that the next crazed cop who thinks they can raid a newsroom understands the consequences are measured in millions of dollars."
Rhodes was referring to the 98-year-old Record co-owner, who was reportedly in good health for her age, but collapsed and died at her home in the immediate aftermath of the raid by Marion police and country sheriff's deputies.
"This is a first step—but a big step—in making sure that Joan Meyer’s death served a purpose."
Eric Meyer, Joan Meyer's son and the current publisher of the Record, said: “The admission of wrongdoing is the most important part. In our democracy, the press is a watchdog against abuse. If the watchdog itself is the target of abuse, and all it does is roll over, democracy suffers.”
According to the Record, awards include:
Record business manager Cheri Bentz—who suffered aggravation of health conditions following one of the raids—previously settled with the county for $50,000.
Katherine Jacobsen, the US, Canada, and Caribbean program coordinator at the Committee to Protect Journalists, hailed the settlement as "an important win for press freedom amid a growing trend of hostility toward those who hold power to account."
"Journalists must be able to work freely and without fear of having their homes raided and equipment seized due to the overreach of authorities," she added.
The raids—during which police seized the Record‘s electronic equipment, work product, and documentary materials—were conducted with search warrants related to an alleged identity theft investigation.
However, critics—who have called the warrants falsified and invalid—noted that the raids came as the Record investigated sexual misconduct allegations against then-Marion Police Chief Police Gideon Cody. The raids, they say, were motivated by Cody's desire to silence the paper's unfavorable reporting about him.
State District Judge Ryan Rosauer ruled last month that Cody likely committed a felony crime when he instructed a witness with whom he allegedly had an improper romantic relationship to delete text messages they exchanged before, during, and after the raids.
While Cody will not be tried in connection with Meyer's death or the 2023 raids, Rosauer ordered him to stand trial over the deleted texts.
Meyer at the time expressed dismay that Cody wasn't being tried for his mother's death or the raids. He also worried that Cody was being made a scapegoat, as other people and law enforcement agencies were involved in the incident.
Following the announcement of the settlement, Meyer said that "this never has been about money, the key issue always has been that no one is above the law."
"No one can trample on the First and Fourth Amendments for personal or political purposes and get away with it," he continued. "When my mother warned officers that the stress they were putting her under might lead to her death, she called what they were doing Hitler tactics."
"What keeps our democracy from descending as Germany did before World War II is the courage she demonstrated—and we’ve tried to continue—in fighting back," Meyer added.
"This never has been about money, the key issue always has been that no one is above the law."
Five consolidated federal civil rights lawsuits have been filed in the US District Court for the District of Kansas, alleging wrongful death, unlawful searches, retaliation for protected speech, and other claims tied to the raids.
“It’s a shame additional criminal charges aren’t possible,” Meyer said, “but the federal civil cases will do everything they can to discourage future abuses of power.”
Although unable to savor the Record's victory, Joan Meyer presciently told the officers raiding her home, "Boy, are you going to be in trouble."
“She was so right," said Rhodes.
Despite Mamdani's campaign pledge, legal experts have consistently cast doubt on a New York City mayor's authority to order the arrest of a foreign leader.
New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani may have a chance to fulfill one of his campaign promises on his first day of office, although legal experts have repeatedly cast doubt on his power to make it happen.
Republican New York City Councilwoman Inna Vernikov on Tuesday sent a formal invitation to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to speak in New York City on January 1, 2026, while at the same time daring Mamdani to keep his pledge to have him arrested on war crimes charges.
"On January 1, Mamdani will take office," Vernikov wrote in a post on X. "And also on January 1, I look forward to welcoming Bibi to New York City. NY will always stand with Israel, and no radical Marxists with a title can change that."
The International Criminal Court (ICC) last year issued an arrest warrant for Netanyahu and former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant for war crimes and crimes against humanity committed during Israel's war in Gaza that has killed at least 69,000 Palestinians.
During his successful mayoral campaign, Mamdani repeatedly said that he would enforce the warrant against Netanyahu should the Israeli leader set foot in his city.
Although Mamdani backed off some of his most strident past statements during the campaign, particularly when it comes to the New York Police Department (NYPD), he doubled down on arresting Netanyahu during a September interview with The New York Times.
"This is a moment where we cannot look to the federal government for leadership," Mamdani told the paper. "This is a moment when cities and states will have to demonstrate what it actually looks like to stand up for our own values, our own people."
However, legal experts who spoke with the Times cast doubt on Mamdani's authority as the mayor of a major American city to arrest a foreign head of government, even if the person in question has been indicted by the ICC.
Among other things, experts said that the NYPD does not have jurisdiction to arrest Netanyahu on international war crimes charges, and the Israeli leader would have to commit some crime in violation of local state or city laws to justify such an action.
Additionally, the US has never been party to the ICC and does not recognize its legal authority.
Matthew Waxman, a professor at Columbia Law School, told the Times that Mamdani's stated determination to arrest Netanyahu was "more a political stunt than a serious law-enforcement policy."