INSIDER
The national debate over books has come to West Texas. And librarians are stuck in the middle.
Read full article: The national debate over books has come to West Texas. And librarians are stuck in the middle.West Texas residents are organizing over their love — or concern — for books. Meanwhile, from Lubbock to Midland and Odessa, librarians are trying to reaffirm libraries’ role as community hubs.
NTSB: Texas dad, not 13-year-old son, was driving truck that hit college golfers’ van in New Mexico, killing 9
Read full article: NTSB: Texas dad, not 13-year-old son, was driving truck that hit college golfers’ van in New Mexico, killing 9Investigators say a Texas man, not his 13-year-old son, was driving the pickup truck that crossed into the oncoming lane and struck a van carrying New Mexico college golfers, killing nine people, and that he had methamphetamine in his system.
State lawmakers again try to ban most dangerous nuclear waste as feds consider allowing it at West Texas site
Read full article: State lawmakers again try to ban most dangerous nuclear waste as feds consider allowing it at West Texas siteA failed regular session bill sought to give a financial break to a West Texas nuclear waste disposal company. Now, lawmakers have removed what opponents called a giveaway and are again trying to pass a bill to stop highly radioactive materials from coming to Texas.
Alliance of Texas environmental, oil interests block bill that would have given nuclear waste company a financial break
Read full article: Alliance of Texas environmental, oil interests block bill that would have given nuclear waste company a financial breakTexas House gives early approval to bill that would punish Wall Street for fossil fuel disinvestments
Read full article: Texas House gives early approval to bill that would punish Wall Street for fossil fuel disinvestmentsTexas lawmakers want to ban dangerous radioactive waste. The proposal would give a nuclear waste company a big financial break.
Read full article: Texas lawmakers want to ban dangerous radioactive waste. The proposal would give a nuclear waste company a big financial break.West Texas is on track to get even more nuclear waste — thanks to the federal government
Read full article: West Texas is on track to get even more nuclear waste — thanks to the federal governmentBut while the slow-moving plan is wrapped in political turmoil, lower-profile changes and proposals from federal agencies are giving Waste Control Specialists another avenue to accept more radioactive waste than it does today. The company is already permitted to accept low-level nuclear waste in Andrews County. The plan to build a facility to store spent nuclear fuel, the most dangerous kind, would bring what’s considered high-level nuclear waste. Some nuclear energy industry experts theorized that expensive commercial nuclear waste facilities like WCS overestimated the amount of low-level nuclear waste that would need disposal as power plant operators became more efficient. AdThe WCS facility is permitted to accept Class A, B, and C nuclear waste — categories that fall below high-level material like spent nuclear fuel.