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39 organizations rallied at Niagara Square to take the city to task for not fully implementing a lead inspection law that has been on the books for four years.
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With large sections of Western New York feeling the effects of two winter storms within a week, who better to talk about the storms and what to expect moving forward than Meteorologist Don Paul? WBFO News spoke with him Wednesday.
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The Army Corps of Engineers is slowing down the Niagara River, or at least a tiny section of it, all to help a tiny species of fish.
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The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation said its annual ban prohibiting residential brush burning will be in effect statewide March 16-May 14.
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The South Buffalo Democrat said the bill would secure legal rights for the entire ecosystem, and give people and nature a role in the decision-making process regarding current and future Great Lakes projects.
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The City of Buffalo and Buffalo Olmsted Parks Conservancy have begun a two-month long public survey to determine the future use of the ring roads in Delaware Park and South Park.
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The Build Back Fossil Free Coalition made several specific demands of the Biden administration leading up to Tuesday night’s speech. Those include a ban on fracking, the declaration of a climate emergency, a stop to the approval of new fossil fuel projects on the federal level, and a commitment to phase out fossil fuels entirely.
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March 2 marks the observation of Great Lakes Day, a virtual event that brings together a binational coalition of regional agencies, legislators, local communities, tribes and business, maritime and environmental groups.
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There's a lot less property in the northtowns contaminated by Tonawanda Coke than expected, according to a new study conducted by University at Buffalo and SUNY Fredonia chemists.
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After that long test project in Erie County, a University at Buffalo lab that has been studying local COVID rates by testing sewer wastewater is expanding into Niagara, Chautauqua, Cattaraugus and Allegany counties.
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Teams from more than a dozen U.S. and Canadian universities and government agencies will venture onto the frozen surfaces of all five lakes this month.