These are some of the stories we’ve been following this week.
- Students at a school in Chicago are being moved to a different location. The school is located on an Environmental Protection Agency Superfund site, and housing in the area was found to be built on land with high arsenic levels.
- Home prices in England increased at a slow rate following the “Brexit” vote, but the Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) predicts prices could jump next year.
- The Kansas Corporation Commission (KCC) is hoping to limit earthquakes in the state by cutting down the amount of wastewater that can be injected in hydraulic fracturing operations.
- Utah residents could be paying millions more in taxes soon if the dozens of municipalities considering property tax increases follow through with them.
- Residents living near a contaminated aviation base in Australia are upset they will be paying higher rates because their land value has increased, despite not being able to build on or sell their property.
- A bill before California legislators would require more transparency by the construction industry. The parents of two students who were killed when a balcony collapsed spoke in favor of the bill.
- Duke Energy is seeking regulatory approval for a rate increase in South Carolina that would partially pay for cleaning up the utility’s 34 coal ash ponds.
- The town of Halfmoon in New York recently settled its lawsuit against General Electric stemming from the cost of providing clean water for the town.
- Mining companies are turning to crowdfunding to raise capital. Companies of all sizes are learning to use this alternative fundraising practice.
- Residents in Moulton, Alabama filed a lawsuit over companies dumping contaminants into the Tennessee River that then made it into the local drinking water.
Recent Comments