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AWG E-MAIL NEWS 2004-12
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CONTENTS
1)  AGI GOVERNMENT AFFAIRS MONTHLY REVIEW: MAY 2004
2)  THE REVEL PROJECT
3)  CONTACT INFORMATION

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Thanks to everyone who contributed to this issue of E-mail News

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1)  AGI GOVERNMENT AFFAIRS MONTHLY REVIEW: MAY 2004

* Budget Battle
* Energy Bill
* Yucca Funding
* Another Yuccy Problem
* Visa Policies
* New Oceans Legislation and Ocean Policy Hearings
* Law of the Sea Hearing
* Renewable Energy and Efficiency Hearing
* DOE Metals Program Reauthorization Hearing
* Great Lakes Hearings
* USGS Presents Research and Programs in Washington
* Climate Change Update
* Ensuring the Integrity of the Scientific Advisory System
* Science and Tech Presidential and Federal Advisory Committee 
Appointments
* NSB Prioritizes NSF Major Research Equipment Projects
* Evolution in the Classroom Updates 
	Alabama
	Minnesota
	Georgia
	Evolution in the Classroom Reports Released
* Intern Comings and Goings
* Key Federal Register Notices
* New Updates to website

*** Budget Battle ***
On May 19th the House passed a compromised $2.4 trillion budget for 
2005 on a near party-line vote of 216-213.  Unfortunately, there is no 
sign that the Senate will be able to do the same.  

The budget serves as a guide for future tax and spending bills.  This 
measure is less ambitious than either the budget that President Bush 
proposed earlier this year or previous versions of House and Senate 
spending plans for FY05.  According to the Washington Post, to minimize 
disputes, Republicans limited its proposed tax and spending proposals to one 
year instead of the usual five or 10, leaving it without long-range 
plans for tasks such as tackling deficits, creating jobs or strengthening 
the military.

The House-passed budget would pave the way for tax cuts that are far 
more modest than what Bush proposed.  Next year's deficit would be $367 
billion - just below last year's $375 bill record high, and $4 billion 
more than what forecasters expect without the policies proposed within 
the legislation.  

The budget does; however, bestow big boosts on defense and 
anti-terrorism programs, providing $421 billion for defense and another $50 billion 
for wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.  It increases domestic security by 15 
percent to $31 billion while holding remaining domestic programs to 
$369, just $2 billion more than in FY04.  

Now the budget resolution waits for Senate approval.  After a month of 
negotiations, four Senate GOP moderates - Olympia Snowe (Maine), Susan 
Collins (Maine), Lincoln Chafee (Rhode Island) and John McCain 
(Arizona) - are still threatening to vote against their party and against the 
bill.  In March, these four Senators voted along with most Democrats to 
require offsets for all new tax cuts and entitlement spending.  The 
House removed this procedural hurdle from the bill they passed but 
Senators Snowe, Collins, Chafee and McCain have shown no signs of backing down 
in order to pass the bill.  

The House has already begun to allocate the budget and set maximum 
spending allowances for each of the 13 appropriations bills.  According to 
the Budget Act of 1974, without a budget resolution in place the Senate 
must obtain a simple majority vote to overcome any procedural 
objections before bringing up any of the 13 spending bills if they cannot come 
to an agreement and pass a final budget resolution. Indeed, this would 
add another 13 hurdles to an already laborious budget process made more 
difficult because this is an election year.

AGI's website is constantly updated with budget and appropriations 
information.  To access Congress' most recent actions on the FY05 budget, 
go to http://www.agiweb.org/gap/legis108/appropsfy2005.html.  

*** Energy Bill Update ***
On Tuesday, May 11th, the Senate approved the corporate tax bill, S. 
1637, by a vote of 92-5.  A $14 billion energy tax incentive package was 
also included in the bill in an attempt to pass at least some portion 
of the comprehensive energy bill that has been stalled in the Senate. 
Within two days of Senate passage, cost estimates for the energy tax 
package rose to $18 billion largely due to a renewable energy tax credit.  
Proponents say that the cost of the bill is completely offset by plans 
for fraud reduction, ethanol excise tax provisions, and repeal of 
export subsidies.  The official Joint Tax Committee score of the bill has 
been pegged at $19.4 billion. 

Since its passage, the bill has remained in flux.  The House is 
crafting its own version of the $167 bill corporate tax bill and it may (or 
may not) have the energy tax package in tow.  House Ways and Means 
Committee Chairman Bill Thomas (R-CA) is expected to finalize his committee's 
version of the bill in mid-June.  Greenwire has speculated that the 
House could vote on the tax package before the July 4th recess.  

More information about Senate deliberations on S. 1637 is available at 
http://www.agiweb.org/gap/legis108/energy.html.  

***Yucca Mountain Funding***
House Energy and Water Appropriations Subcommittee Chairman David 
Hobson (R-OH) and Ranking Member Pete Visclosky (D-IN) announced their 
intention to fund the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste project at only $131 
million next year.  This amount would be a $749 million reduction from the 
budget requested by the Department of Energy.  The Bush administration 
formulated its budget under the assumption that the $749 million needed 
by the Nuclear Waste Trust Fund for Yucca Mountain would be 
reclassified under new legislation allowing it to circumvent the appropriations 
process.  The administration's reclassification scheme, however, failed 
with House and Senate appropriators and has left a major hole in the 
Yucca Mountain budget.

In an analysis of the effects this reduced budget would have on the 
program, Secretary of Energy Spenser Abraham told the subcommittee that 
Yucca Mountain staff layoffs would start in July and affect 70 percent of 
the Yucca Mountain workforce, which totals 2,400 people.  The ability 
of the remaining workers to complete and submit the necessary license 
application due to Nuclear Regulatory Commission at the end of the year 
would be jeopardized, he said.  He also stated that the cutbacks would 
cause an "indefinite delay" in the planned 2010 opening of the site.  

This scenario would delay the removal of the nuclear waste from 
temporary storage facilities in several states and complicate the future 
disposal of waste generated by nuclear power plants in 33 states.  Abraham 
predicts that the federal government could be required to pay some 
states enormous sums of money if waste is not removed by dates specified in 
contracts.  Over 65 breach of contract claims have already been filed 
in Federal Claims Court by utilities as a result of delays.

In related news, scientists demonstrated at the National Press Club in 
Washington, D.C. this month that casks designed to hold radioactive 
nuclear waste in Yucca Mountain may not be sufficient.  Rocks surrounding 
the metal casks may release small amounts of mineral-rich water that 
will eventually corrode the cask within 1,000 years, according to Nevada 
officials who sponsored the demonstration.  Scientists showed that the 
minerals in the water could corrode Alloy-22, the metal used to make 
the casks, in as little as twenty minutes after contact.  They also 
showed that the water in the rocks above the casks can move through the 
rocks and boil from the heat produced by the spent fuel, leading to 
increased chance of corrosion.  Other groups such as the Nuclear Energy 
institute claim that the casks will last 2 million years.

You can visit 
http://www.nrc.gov/waste/spent-fuel-storage/locations.html for a map of 
current storage facilities and a discussion of nuclear waste storage.  
AGI continues to monitor and chronicle Yucca Mountain at 
http://www.agiweb.org/gap/legis108/yucca.html.  

*** Visa Policies ***
On May 12th, twenty-five national organizations concerned with science 
and engineering education released a statement calling for a change in 
U.S. visa policy that is currently impeding foreign scientists who wish 
to attend foreign professional meetings and is seen as limiting 
international cooperation.  The statement says that the current visa system is 
inefficient and creates the "misperception that the United States does 
not welcome international students, scholars, and scientists."  The 
organizations made six recommendations:  extension of visa security 
clearances, increased efficiency of the renewal and fee payment processes, 
creation of an enquiry mechanism for visa status, and improved 
consistency of visa application reviews.  The statement contends that improving 
relationships with international scholars is beneficial to the U.S. 
economy and to national security efforts.

The statement is available online at
http://www.aaas.org/news/releases/2004/0512visa.pdf.  

*** New Oceans Legislation and Ocean Policy Hearings *** 
The U.S. National Commission on Ocean Policy (NCOP) released its 
preliminary recommendation last month that included expanding the role of the 
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) to become the 
lead agency in ocean management for the nation.  In response to NCOP's 
recommendations, Rep. Jim Saxton (R-NJ) introduced H.R. 4368, the Weather 
and Oceans Resources Realignment Act, on May 13th. This bill would 
shift NOAA from the Commerce Department to the Department of the Interior. 

In making its recommendations, NCOP acknowledged the "political 
complexity associated with any reorganization of the executive branch 
agencies."  The House Resources Subcommittee on Fisheries Conservation, 
Wildlife, and Oceans is likely to hold a hearing on the bill in June despite 
doubts that any final decisions regarding H.R. 4368 or the NCOP report 
will be made by the end of the legislative session this year.

More information on the NCOP report is available on AGI's website at 
http://www.agiweb.org/gap/legis108/oceans.html.  

In related news, The House Resources Committee convened on May 20th to 
discuss the draft report of the U.S. NCOP.  Ret. Admiral Watkins, 
Chairman of the commission, presented an overview of the report and 
addressed the concerns of committee members.  The report claims that the oceans 
are in declining health that will likely have a damaging effect on 
national and coastal economies.  Watkins stated that ocean-related problems 
are systematic, and that the federal government must agree to the 
entire policy and administrative overhaul outlined in the report if positive 
change is to be made.  

A thorough hearing summary is available on AGI's website at 
http://www.agiweb.org/gap/legis108/ocean_hearings.html.  

*** Law of the Sea Hearing ***
The House of Representatives continued to debate the potential impact 
of the United Nation Convention on the Law of the Sea (LOS) on national 
interests.  

The Senate Foreign Relations Committee unanimously approved the LOS 
treaty on February 25th; however, discussion in the House International 
Relations Committee featured both strong proponents and opponents of LOS 
treaty ratification.  William H. Taft IV, Legal Adviser to the U.S. 
Department of State, and Admiral Michael G. Mullen, Vice Chief of Naval 
Operations for the U.S. Navy, both testified in support of ratification.  
They maintained that ratification would promote stability of the 
oceans, U.S. mobility, and national security.  Opponents to ratification 
included Baker Spring, an F.M. Kirby Research Fellow in National Security 
Policy with the Heritage Foundation.  He cites lack of sovereignty, 
unnecessary limitations on the exploitation of resources, international 
taxation potential, and risks to national security as reasons not to agree 
to LOS provisions.

More information about the Law of the Sea treaty is available at 
http://www.agiweb.org/gap/legis108/lawofthesea.html and 
http://www.agiweb.org/gap/legis108/lawofthesea_hearings.html.  

*** Renewable Energy and Efficiency Hearing *** 
On May 19th, the House Science Subcommittee on Energy met to examine 
the potential contribution of energy efficiency and renewable energy to 
the nation's energy needs.  Subcommittee Chair Judy Biggert (R-IL) and 
several of the witnesses, all experts in a field of efficiency or 
renewable technology, emphasized that these technologies are likely to 
improve quality of life at sustained or lowered energy consumption levels.  
Testimony of the witnesses provided a description of the current state 
of efficiency and renewable technologies and their impacts on the 
economy.  Witnesses unanimously recommended increased federal investment in 
the research and development of these technologies.  They cited 
environmental and health benefits, lower predicted operating costs of industry, 
lower natural gas prices, and increased competitiveness in global 
technology markets as benefits of efficiency investments. 

Documents related to the hearings are still available on the House 
Science Committee website at 
http://www.house.gov/science/hearings/energy04/index.htm.  A wrap-up of 
the hearing can be found on AGI's website at 
http://www.agiweb.org/gap/legis108/energy_hearings.html#may19.  

*** DOE Metals Program Reauthorization Hearing ***
The House Science Committee Subcommittee on Energy met on May 20th to 
discuss H.R. 3890, a bill to reauthorize the Metals Program at the 
Department of Energy (DOE).  The bill was introduced by Melissa Hart (R-PA) 
in March in an effort to ensure continued funding of the DOE program 
that works with the metals industry in the research and development of 
efficiency technologies.  The newest version of the bill includes 
provisions to help industries reduce greenhouse gas emissions.  In her opening 
statements, Subcommittee Chair Judy Biggert (R-IL) said that the Metals 
Program has economic, environmental, and national security benefits.  
The subcommittee and the witnesses agreed that energy efficiency should 
not be the only goal of the program.  They all said that new 
technologies should provide direct and indirect benefits to taxpayers and 
increase industry success.

A thorough recap of the hearing is available on AGI's website at 
http://www.agiweb.org/gap/legis108/energy_hearings.html.  

*** Great Lakes Hearings ***
The House Transportation and Infrastructure Subcommittee on Water 
Resources and Environment held two hearings to discuss Great Lakes water 
quality and restoration.  Subcommittee Chairman John Duncan (R-TN) said 
that he hopes agencies who work on the Great Lakes projects make 
significant progress in ensuring restoration and do not simply revisit past 
issues.  This month, the Bush administration issued an executive order to 
create an EPA-led task force to coordinate Great Lakes restoration and 
water quality improvement.
More information is available at http://www.house.gov/transportation/.  

*** USGS Presents Research and Programs in Washington *** The United 
States Geological Survey (USGS) held a briefing sponsored by several 
Members of Congress on May 21st to illustrate the effectiveness of the 
Cooperative Water Programs in groundwater management. Jess Weaver, USGS 
Regional Executive for Water in the Southeast Region, outlined some of the 
major water issues in the nation, emphasizing that groundwater 
availability is becoming a more serious concern for eastern states. He said 
that cooperative programs between the USGS and local and regional 
authorities have increasing reliance on non-USGS cooperators because of 
stagnation in the USGS budget. Other speakers included Randy Young, Executive 
Director of the Arkansas Soil and Water Conservation Commission, and 
David Word, Assistant Director of the Environmental Protection Division 
of the Georgia Department of Natural Resources.  

A wrap-up of the briefing is available at 
http://www.agiweb.org/gap/legis108/water_resources.html.  

In a May 14th briefing sponsored by the Water Environment Federation, 
USGS, and Rep. Ralph Regula (R-OH), national and regional coordinators 
of the National Water Quality Assessment Program presented findings of 
several regional water quality assessments carried out between 1991 and 
2001, and emphasized the contribution of the findings to state 
Environmental Protection Agency offices and other local operations. NAWQA 
recently released the final 15 of its 51 comprehensive reports, which 
together indicate that "the nation's waters generally are suitable for 
irrigation, drinking-water supply, and other home and recreational uses . . . 
[although] in areas of significant agricultural and urban development 
the quality of our nation's water resources has been degraded by 
contaminants." The assessments found that contaminants and their effects are 
controlled by a complex set of both human and naturally induced factors 
such as land use, chemical use, urbanization, geology, and hydrolo
gy.  Both urban and agricultural areas have widespread contamination at 
overall low levels, and each area is unique.  The topics of nutrient 
enrichment, agricultural chemicals, well water contamination, 
relationship of water quality to urbanization, and bioaccumulation of mercury are 
the focus of the 11 million records compiled in the reports.  Only 42 
of the 51 areas studied will be revisited for continuing assessments due 
to budget constraints, according to Tim Miller, Chief of the USGS 
Office of Water Quality.

*** Climate Change Update ***
Disagreement between internal agencies in Russia has delayed the 
country's decision on whether to ratify the Kyoto Protocol.  The Energy and 
Industry Agency supports the treaty, while the Academy of Sciences 
contends that the treaty lacks scientific evidence and will be harmful to 
the Russian economy.

European Union leaders and Russian president Vladimir Putin struck a 
deal May 21st to allow Russia into the World Trade Organization, which 
European leaders will most likely use as leverage to pressure Russia to 
sign the Kyoto Protocol.  Russia is the only country besides the United 
States that has the potential to fulfill the threshold for signatories 
to account for 55 percent of global carbon dioxide emissions.

In other climate change news on the domestic front, debates on climate 
change and emissions control may be sparked in Congress next month by 
the sensationalized film "The Day After Tomorrow," which was released on 
May 28th.  Senators John McCain (R-AZ) and Joe Leiberman (D-CT) 
introduced a bill addressing greenhouse gas emissions, S. 139, in October, but 
it was rejected in a surprisingly close vote of 43-55.  McCain says he 
will attempt to propose the bill again by the end of the current 
session in the form of an amendment to anther bill, and says of the film: 
"We'll use any publicity we can get."  Several groups, such as Move On 
PAC, who support the McCain-Leiberman bill will use the blockbuster 
popularity of "The Day After Tomorrow" to aid their lobbying efforts by 
handing out flyers in theaters.

Some opponents of the bill, such as National Petrochemical and Refiners 
Association president Bob Slaughter, want to make sure that the public 
understands the fictional elements of the film and doubt that it will 
carry much weight.  Senator Landrieu (D-LA), one of the ten key 
Democratic senators who voted no on the bill in October, has definitively said 
she will change her vote to yes when it is reintroduced this summer.  
Experts disagree about how much impact the film will have on the 
public's interest in the McCain-Leiberman bill.

Updates on climate change legislation currently pending in Congress can 
be found at http://www.agiweb.org/gap/legis108/climate.html.  

*** Ensuring the Integrity of the Scientific Advisory System***
 Reps. Eddie Bernice Johnson (TX) and Ranking Minority Member of the 
House Science Subcommittee on Basic Research Brian Baird (WA) held a 
briefing and released a General Accounting Office (GAO) report on May 19th 
shining a light on the federal government's staffing of scientific 
advisory committees.  The report was issued due to recent allegations from 
Rep. Harry Waxman (D-CA) and groups such as the Union of Concerned 
Scientists who have accused the Bush administration of manipulating 
scientific information and abusing the appointment process of federal science 
positions.  The GAO report does not evaluate these claims but rather 
outlines recommendations to improve and ensure the balance of federal 
science advisory committees and the transparency of the appointment 
process.  It suggests clarifying the distinction between employees who are 
selected to committees for their expertise and those who are known to 
have a bias.  The report also outlines what types of information shoul
d be gathered systematically and suggests additional processes to 
evaluate candidates for the positions.  Johnson and Baird also sent a letter 
to President Bush that can be found at 
www.house.gov/science_democrats/member/johnson_baird_letter.pdf.  

The report is available online at www.gao.gov/new.items/d04328.pdf. 

*** Union of Concerned Scientists ***
The Union of Concerned Scientists has released a point-by-point 
document standing by the report and letter issued to the Bush Administration 
in February.  The report, Restoring Scientific Integrity in Policy 
Making, accused the administration of misusing scientific information to 
promote its agenda.  Dr. John Marburger, director of the White House 
Office of Science and Technology Policy, issued a rebuttal in April.  The 
new UCS document states that Dr. Marburger's rebuttal "often offers 
irrelevant information and fails to address the central point of many of the 
charges in the UCS report."  Dr. Marburger's statement can be viewed at 
www.ostp.gov.  The UCS rebuttal can be viewed at 
http://www.ucsusa.org/global_environment/rsi/page.cfm?pageID=1393.  

*** Solicitation for Input in NAS Report *** 
A National Academies of Science committee is developing a report called 
Science and Technology in the National Interest:  Ensuring the Best 
Presidential and Federal Advisory Committee Appointments (3rd Edition).  
The committee is seeking input from those in the science and engineering 
communities regarding the presidential appointment of scientists, 
engineers, and health professionals to positions on federal advisory 
committees and in the federal government.  A list of topics that the committee 
will be exploring and additional information can be found at 
http://www7.nationalacademies.org/presidentialappointments/Statement_Task.html.  
Responses should be limited to three pages and are due July 1, 2004.
The report will be issued in November.

*** NSB Prioritizes NSF Major Research Equipment Projects *** 
The National Science Board (NSB), responding to Congressional requests, 
released a list ranking proposed NSF Major Research Equipment projects 
in order of funding priority.  The National Ecological Observatory 
Network is second on the list, after the Scientific Ocean Drilling Vessel. 
The NSB white paper defining the priority-setting process for competing 
research facility projects is online at 
http://www.nsf.gov/nsb/documents/2004/priorstnglrgefcltyproj.doc. 


*** Evolution in the Classroom Updates *** 
Alabama Senate Bill 336, the Academic Freedom Act, did not make its way 
to the floor for a vote before the final day of the Alabama State 
legislative session on May 17th.  As such, the bill is no longer; however, 
many people think this topic will continue to be an issue in Alabama 
either during a special session of the legislature (if one is called) or 
during next year's session.

Minnesota
The Minnesota State Senate voted 35-31 to fire former Education 
Commissioner Cheri Pierson Yecke.  The vote was cast at 3:40 a.m. on the last 
day of the state's legislative session, and was followed by the passage 
of new education standards for the state.  Yecke was a public advocate 
of the teaching of creationism and was controversial throughout her 
stint in the position, which lasted 15 months.  Minnesota governor Tim 
Pawlenty says he will appoint a conservative to the open office of 
Education Commissioner.

Non-evolutionary language originally included in the House education 
standards was not included in the language of the new standards.

Georgia
In mid-May, Georgia education officials released this year's revised 
education standards.  The Standards for Excellence in Education by the 
Council for Basic Education (CBE) was used as a model for standards and 
benchmarks.  The CBE are a distilled version of the American Association 
for the Advancement of Science's publication, Benchmarks for Scientific 
Literacy. Georgia's goal is for students to "Do Science, not View 
Science." 

Like the other curriculum areas, the most noticeable difference in the 
new Science Quality Core Curriculum is the presence of new performance 
standards.  The curriculum is trimmed down with the expectation that 
students will be given the opportunity to achieve scientific literacy, 
while also giving students the necessary tools to be successful at the 
next level of their educational career.  The most radical change in the 
curriculum is moving Earth Science to sixth grade and Physical Science 
to eighth grade

Georgians felt that Physical Science is very abstract and includes 
rigorous mathematics. Therefore, eighth graders who have experienced more 
mathematics courses and have two more years of cognitive development, 
have a better chance for success and mastery in Physical Science than 
sixth graders do. 

In regard to the teaching of evolution, the Earth Science education 
standards state: "During middle school, several lines of evidence are 
further developed.  The fossil evidence can be expanded beyond extinctions 
and survivals to the notion of evolutionary history.  Sedimentation of 
rock can be brought in to show relative age.  However, actual age, 
which requires an understanding of isotopic dating techniques, should wait 
until high school, when students learn about the structure of atoms.  
Breeding experiments can illustrate the heritability of traits and the 
effects of selection.  It was familiarity with selective breeding that 
stimulated Darwin's thinking that differences between successive 
generations can naturally accumulate.  " There is no mention of Intelligent 
Design or "alternative theories" in the revised standards. 

Evolution in the Classroom Reports Released The National Academy of 
Sciences and the National Academic Press have released three reports on 
evolution in the classroom which are now available online at no cost to 
science teachers.  To receive these reports, visit http://nap.edu/hawaii 
and fill out the online questionnaire.  Once you have completed the 
questionnaire, you will be given the option to download the reports or to 
receive them on a CD-ROM in the mail.  A limited number of copies are 
available.

* Evolution in Hawaii: A Supplement to Teaching About Evolution and the 
Nature of Science (2004)
* Teaching About Evolution and the Nature of Science (1998)
* Science and Creationism: A View from the National Academy of 
Sciences, 2nd ed. (1999) 

*** Intern Comings and Goings ***
Bridget Martin, an AGI/AIPG Summer 2004 intern arrived at AGI on May 
10th.  She is currently a senior at Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, NY.  
She is majoring in geology with a comparative politics minor.  Bridget 
has worked as an intern for the Dutchess County Soil and Water 
Conservation District, at an organic farm in Montana and as a page in the 
Montana State Senate. She has also participated in the Presidential 
Classroom program and we are pleased to welcome her for the summer.

The AGI/AAPG Spring Semester intern, Gayle Levy, departed AGI on May 
6th.  She has taken a position as the Outreach Specialist at the 
Incorporated Research Institutions for Seismology (IRIS) and will begin in late 
May.  We wish her all the best in this endeavor and are forever in her 
debt for her patience, reliability and superior work this spring.  
Thanks, Gayle.  

*** Key Federal Register Notices ***
USGS requests public comments on guidelines for providing appropriate 
access to geospatial data in response to security concerns.  Comments 
must be submitted by June 2, 2004.  Send comments to: guidelines@fgdc.gov 
or by postal mail to FGDC HSWG Guidelines Review, 511 National Center, 
12201 Sunrise Valley Drive, Reston, Virginia 20192. Volume 69, Number 
85 (3 May 2004):  p. 24182.

Environmental Protection Agency (EPA); National Oceanic and Atmospheric 
Administration (NOAA), Commerce; U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE), 
Defense; U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS), Interior; Natural 
Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), Agriculture; Department of 
Transportation request comments on "Draft Physical Stream Assessment: A Review 
of Selected Protocols for Use in the Clean Water Act Section 404 
Program".  Comments must be postmarked or e-mailed on or before June 28, 2004.  
Send comments to:  mitigation@epa.gov (E-mail) or Palmer Hough, U.S. 
Environmental Protection Agency, Wetlands Division (4502T), 1200 
Pennsylvania Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20460. Volume 69, Number 94 (14 May, 
2004):  pp. 26823-26824.

DOE, Office of Fossil Energy gives notice that during March 2004, it 
issued orders granting authority to import and export natural gas, 
including liquefied natural gas. These orders may be found on the FE Web site 
at http://www.fe.doe.gov. Volume 69, Number 95 (17 May, 2004):  pp.
27906-27907.

USGS, Scientific Earthquake Studies Advisory Committee meeting, June 
3-4, 2004. FedEx Institute of Technology, campus of the University of 
Memphis, 365 Innovation Drive, Memphis, Tennessee 38152-3115. Volume 69, 
Number 96 (18 May, 2004):  p. 28143.

Executive Order of the President for the establishment of Great Lakes 
Interagency Task Force and promotion of a regional collaboration of 
national significance for the Great Lakes.  Volume 69, Number 98 (20 May, 
2004): pp. 29043-29045.

DOI, Minerals Management Service gives notice of extension of a 
currently approved information collection (1010-0114).  Submit written 
comments by July 20, 2004. Volume 69, Number 99 (21 May, 2004):  pp. 
29324-29327.

*** New Updates to website ***
The following updates and reports were added to the Government Affairs 
portion of AGI's web site http://www.agiweb.org/gap since the last 
monthly update:

* Energy Hearings (5-28-04)
* Law of the Sea Hearings (5-28-04)
* Ocean Policy Hearings (5-28-04)
* Political Challenges to the Teaching of Evolution (5-28-04)
* Ocean Policy (5-26-04)
* Natural Gas Policy (5-26-04)
* Science at the EPA (5-26-04)
* Action Alert: Appropriate Access to Geospatial Data (5-28-04)
* Water Resources Legislation (5-24-04)
* Climate Change Policy Overview (5-24-04)
* High-Level Nuclear Waste Legislation (5-19-04)
* Mercury Policy (5-19-04)
* Energy Policy Overview (5-13-04)
* Wetlands Policy (5-13-04)
* Climate Change Hearings (5-6-04)

Monthly review prepared by Emily Lehr Wallace, AGI Government Affairs 
Program and Bridget Martin, AGI/AIPG 2004 Summer Intern.

Sources:  American Association for the Advancement of Science, American 
Institute of Biological Sciences, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, 
Chronicle of Higher Education, Environment and Energy Daily, Greenwire, House 
of Representatives hearing testimony, Las Vegas Sun, NASULGC Washington 
Update, National Academy of Sciences, National Oceanic and Atmospheric 
Administration, Nuclear Regulatory Commission website, THOMAS 
legislative database, U.S. Geological Survey publications, United States Senate 
hearing testimony, Washington Post. 

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2)  THE REVEL PROJECT

This summer, join the Research and Education: Volcanoes, Exploration 
and Life (REVEL) expedition as researchers and teachers explore the deep 
ocean off the Pacific Northwest coast on the research vessel Atlantis. 
During this expedition to the Juan de Fuca Ridge, 200 miles west of 
Washington and British Columbia, scientists, engineers and educators will 
use an Automated Underwater Vehicle to study the transfer of heat from 
hydrothermal vents plumes into the ocean.

The REVEL Project
Research and Education: Volcanoes, Exploration and Life
http://www.ocean,.washington.edu/outreach/revel
June 14 - July 13, 2004

We hope you will join the teachers on board the Atlantis!  And send 
them questions at revel@ocean.washington.edu

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3)  CONTACT INFORMATION


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