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Articles in regional publications that pertain to a wide range of North Carolina-related topics.

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19 results for "Environmental policy"
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Record #:
330
Abstract:
North Carolina is tangled in a bureaucratic nightmare regarding environmental agencies. The sheer number of such agencies and the occurrence of interagency overlap are leading legislators to call for consolidation or realignment.
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Record #:
34029
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Abstract:
Responding to criticism of the way North Carolina’s environmental regulation programs are organized, Governor James G. Martin proposed in February that environmental regulatory, environmental health, and natural resource programs be consolidated into a new department to be called the North Carolina Department of Health and Environment. This article discusses the proposed reorganization and issues that have emerged between environmentalists and business leaders.
Record #:
26844
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Abstract:
After making every effort to cooperate with the Secretary of the Interior, James G. Watt, during his first six months in office, and after thoroughly documenting his environmentally destructive activities, the National Wildlife Federation asked President Reagan to remove Watt from office. A poll of the Federation’s associate and affiliate members showed that they overwhelmingly rejected Watt’s policies.
Source:
Friend O’ Wildlife (NoCar Oversize SK 431 F74x), Vol. 28 Issue 9, Sept 1981, p3, por
Record #:
15818
Abstract:
Environmental policy in the 1970s focused on three major areas: pollution control, environmental impacts of major public actions, and resource conflict.
Source:
Carolina Planning (NoCar HT 393 N8 C29x), Vol. 5 Issue 1, Spring 1979, p16-21, f
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