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Approximately 100 activists from across the Country gathered to shut down the offices of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC). This was the first day of a week of actions to close FERC down and demonstrate that their actions are incompatible with all that sustains life on Earth, including our climate system and clean water, air, and land.
Today's action was led by some activists from the Great March for Climate Action, a 3,000-mile cross-country trek from Los Angeles that arrived in Washington D.C. on November 1. The goal of the Great March for Climate Action is to change the heart and mind of the American people, our elected leaders and people across the world to act now to address the climate crisis.
"We walked 3,000 miles across the country and heard firsthand from families and communities the hardships they are facing due to extreme energy extraction," said Faith Meckley, Climate Marcher from New York.
Meckley herself has been affected by a FERC rubber-stamp approval. Her original intentions were to walk 2,000 miles from New Mexico to D.C., but she left the March early on Oct. 10 to return home and be a part of the fight to save Seneca Lake and the Finger Lakes region from dangerous methane storage in unstable salt caverns.
Communities across the nation have risen up to fight pipelines crossing the land, gas stored under lakes, and compressor stations and fracked-gas export plants in our backyards, but FERC has remained unmoved, unresponsive, and unaccountable. FERC has answered only to the fossil fuel industry, rubber-stamping every project.
Today at FERC, that image of FERC destroying communities was reversed, as organizers used a massive portrait of families from Maryland and New York whose homes and communities are threatened by fracking infrastructure FERC has already approved. Organizers also brought a model town, which they erected outside their blockade to prevent employees from entering the building.
"The object of the blockade art is to give FERC no other option but to destroy the town and families in order to get to work, said Kim Fraczek, Sane Energy Project of New York. "The destruction of the art serves a metaphor of reality."
The blockade of FERC is planned to continue all week. More information about future days activities and the mission of theBeyond Extreme Energy week of actions is available here.
Live updates are posted on the Facebook pages of Environmental Action andCCAN, and using the twitter hashtag #FERCdoesntwork
Founded at the first Earth Day with a mission to protect the planet and all of us who live on it, we are Environmental Action. We stand up to big polluters, take on the corrupt politicians and give everyone in America a chance to be an environmentalist with simple, powerful actions. Ready to take action for the planet? You're in the right place.
Pope Leo XIV said the Israeli military's deadly attack on Gaza's sole Catholic Church was "just one of the continuous military attacks against the civilian population and places of worship" in the Palestinian enclave.
Pope Leo XIV on Sunday called for "immediate halt to the barbarity of the war" on the Gaza Strip as Israel's military carried out fresh massacres of Palestinians seeking food aid.
The pontiff decried the Israeli military's recent deadly bombing of Gaza's sole Catholic Church and read aloud the names of the three victims—Saad Issa Kostandi Salameh, Foumia Issa Latif Ayyad, and Najwa Ibrahim Latif Abu Daoud.
The Writers Guild of America voiced concern that Paramount is "sacrificing free speech to curry favor with the Trump administration as the company looks for merger approval."
The Writers Guild of America is calling on New York's attorney general to launch a bribery investigation into Paramount Global following the cancellation of "The Late Show With Stephen Colbert."
WGA, some of whose members worked on the CBS show, said in a statement that while "cancellations are part of the business," a "corporation terminating a show in bad faith due to explicit or implicit political pressure is dangerous and unacceptable in a democratic society."
"Many of our participants are living on the edge of poverty," said the head of one organization impacted by the termination of the Senior Community Service Employment Program.
The Trump administration has reportedly terminated the Department of Labor's only job training program for low-income seniors, a decision that came as older Americans braced for new work reporting requirements under the Republican budget law enacted earlier this month.
Bloomberg Law reported Friday that the Labor Department "quietly ended" its Senior Community Service Employment Program (SCSEP), which helped low-income Americans aged 55 or older find part-time employment or job training at nonprofits and government agencies. The program, described as a bridge to full-time employment, served tens of thousands of people across the country.