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Clean Water And Resource Conservation Rank As Top Concerns For Local Government
Clean water is the number one concern among critical national issues for city managers across the country, according to a study released today by the U.S. Department of Commerce's National Ocean and Atmospheric Administration.
"This study illustrates the importance of healthy coastal resources to our nation at the grassroots level," said Jeffrey R. Benoit, director of NOAA's Office of Ocean and Coastal Resource Management.
The study surveyed coastal county and city managers nationwide, and found that safe, clean water ranked number one among critical national issues. The conservation of natural resources ranked second, over energy supplies, infrastructure development and waste disposal.
The study compared the importance of coastal resources, such as clean water, to other local issues. Fifty-eight percent of city managers in the study ranked clean water as important as health care and 25 percent ranked clean water more important than healthcare.
Sixty-eight percent of city managers rated keeping ocean and other water bodies protected from pollution more important than reforming product liability laws. Ecosystem conservation rated more important than increasing the minimum wage for 54 percent of study participants and as important for 28 percent.
Population growth appeared to be the primary factor adversely affecting the health of the nation's coasts in the eyes of city managers. Seventy-nine percent reported that their local population has increased over the past 10 years.
Fifty-seven percent of managers in the study indicated that population growth had some adverse effect on coastal water quality. A full 50 percent of city managers reported that population growth had some adverse effect on coastal wildlife, and 58 percent indicated that population growth had adversely affected the entire ecosystem.
The survey also gauged local awareness levels of a state's coastal program, a national government partnership program under the Coastal Zone Management Act. The program helps states and U.S. territories resolve coastal resource problems and balance human uses of the coast with the needs of the resources themselves.
Sixty-three percent of city managers said their state had been very or somewhat effective in managing coastal resources, and the majority of managers indicated that coastal management policies had been effective in helping them manage coastal resources. Another fifty-eight percent of the managers in the study said their state had been very or somewhat effective in facilitating partnerships between levels of government.
"Over the past 25 years, the National Coastal Program has been about creating strong partnerships between levels of government," said Benoit. "We were delighted to learn that especially at the grassroots level, the Coastal Zone Management Act's partnerships are working and helping people resolve problems, like accommodating rapid population growth without losing clean water."
Congress passed the Coastal Zone Management Act in 1972. Currently 34 coastal states and U.S. territories participate in the voluntary partnership program, which uses national guidelines and state laws to balance use with conservation of coastal resources.
In 2002, there were an estimated 212,400 toy-related injuries
The individual body parts having the most injuries overall were faces (45,400), heads (27,100) and mouths (16,200). Lacerations, contusions, and abrasions were involved in over half of the total injuries (53%). CPSC has reports of 13 children who died in toy-related deaths in 2002.
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Definition:
Not stated outright by the manufacturer or the seller. For example, you might have an Implied Warranty of Merchantability, which promises that your product is good for its ordinary purpose.
Inadequate Warning
Definition:
Sometimes, a manufacturer doesn’t warn the user of a product’s hazards. Simply putting a warning in a little instruction book or label might not be enough. The warning must adequately inform the user of the hazards.
Failure to Warn
Definition:
not provide adequate warnings or instructions to advise users of the product that they would have to do certain things to avoid being injured by using the product. Failure to provide adequate warnings or instructions, where they are necessary
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