The Environment

10/26/06: Dodd, Lieberman Announce $10 Million in Federal Fuel Cell Grants

October 26, 2006

WASHINGTON - Senators Chris Dodd (D-CT) and Joe Lieberman (D-CT) announced that the University of Connecticut’s Global Fuel Cell Center and Connecticut-based United Technologies (UTC) Power received today more than $10 million in research and development grants from the U.S. Department of Energy.  The Global Fuel Cell Center received $1.9 million for research into the effects of impurities on fuel-cell performance and durability.  UTC Power received two awards, of $6.4 million and $2 million, for the development of advanced seals and cathode catalysts for use in fuel cells.  Title VIII of the Energy Policy Act, enacted in August 2005, authorized the Energy Department to award the grants today.

10/20/06: Dodd, Lieberman Celebrate Enactment of Long Island Sound Stewardship Act

October 20, 2006

WASHINGTON Senators Chris Dodd (D-CT) and Joe Lieberman (D-CT) today celebrated the enactment of the Long Island Sound Stewardship Act (LISSA), which they first introduced in 2004.  LISSA will help protect the Long Island Sound (LIS) by providing financial incentives for landowners to preserve environmental quality and improve public access within the LIS area, which is home to 8,000,000 people.  Dodd and Lieberman successfully moved the bill to final Senate passage on September 30 after Congressman Rob Simmons had moved it to passage in the House of Representatives three days earlier.  President Bush signed the bill into law earlier today.   

10/11/06: Dodd, Lieberman Welcome Partial Victory for Islander East Opponents

October 11, 2006

WASHINGTON - Last Thursday, Senators Chris Dodd (D-CT) and Joe Lieberman (D-CT) welcomed a federal court panel’s refusal to order the Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection to issue a water quality certificate for Islander East Company’s plan to run a natural gas pipeline across the floor of Long Island Sound.  All three judges on the panel voted to leave the State denial in place, although two panelists claimed that the department had not adequately explained its decision.  As such, the court has ordered the department to prepare a fuller explanation, which it will subsequently review. All three judges held that the federal court is required to apply a deferential standard in reviewing the state agency’s decision.

9/30/06: Dodd, Lieberman Celebrate Final Passage of the Long Island Sound Stewardship Act

September 30, 2006

WASHINGTON – Capping a multi-year effort, Senators Chris Dodd and Joe Lieberman celebrated today’s final passage of their bipartisan Long Island Sound Stewardship Act (LISSA).  LISSA will help protect the Long Island Sound (LIS) by providing financial incentives for owners of land parcels within the LIS area to preserve the environmental quality of and public access to this endangered habitat, which is home to 8,000,000 people.  Dodd and Lieberman successfully moved the bill to Senate passage today after it had passed the House earlier this week.  The bill will now go to the President to be signed into law.

9/29/06: Dodd, Lieberman Hail Senate Passage of Bill Designating Upper Housatonic Valley As National Heritage Area

September 29, 2006

WASHINGTON - Senators Chris Dodd and Joe Lieberman today lauded passage in the Senate of a bill designating the Upper Housatonic Valley in Connecticut and Massachusetts as a National Heritage Area and authorizing up to $10 million to preserve the historic and cultural assets of the region.  The bill had passed in the House on July 26, 2006.  Dodd and Lieberman then worked to clear the bill through the Senate.  President Bush is now expected to sign the bill into law without delay.

8/01/06: Sen. Dodd, Connecticut Delegation Requests State of Emergency Designation for June 2 Storm in State

August 1, 2006

Washington –The Connecticut congressional delegation yesterday wrote to President George W. Bush in support of Governor M. Jodi Rell’s request that a major disaster declaration be made for the State of Connecticut as a result of a storm on June 2, 2006, that flooded portions of the state, and particularly the City of Waterbury. The letter was initiated by Senator Chris Dodd.

7/26/06: Dodd, Lieberman Introduce Bill Commemorating Historic Journey to Yorktown During Revolutionary War

July 26, 2006

WASHINGTON – Senators Joe Lieberman (D-CT) and Chris Dodd (D-CT) announced today that they introduce the Washington-Rochambeau Revolutionary Route (W3R) Bill, which will trace the 650-mile route that French troops under the command of General Jean-Baptiste de Rochambeau took from Newport, Rhode Island to Yorktown, Virginia in 1781 during the Revolutionary War.  American troops under the command of Commander-in-Chief George Washington joined the French force outside New York City.  On October 17 of that year, the combined armies defeated the British army with the help of a French fleet commanded by Admiral de Grasse.  General Cornwallis’ surrender that day at Yorktown ended major hostilities in the American Revolutionary War.  Original co-sponsors of the W3R Bill include Senators John Warner (R-VA), Joe Biden (D-DE), Lincoln Chafee (R-RI), Robert Menendez (D-NJ), and Jack Reed (D-RI). 

7/25/06: Dodd, Lieberman Seek To Protect Eightmile River

July 25, 2006

Washington, D.C. – Acknowledging the importance of preserving and protecting southeastern Connecticut’s Eightmile River, Senators Chris Dodd (D-CT) and Joe Lieberman (D-CT) today announced that they have proposed legislation which would assign the federal Wild and Scenic status to the river.  The bill asks the Secretary of the Interior to designate Eightmile River as Wild and Scenic, following a comprehensive study highlighting the river’s intrinsic and environmental value.  A similar measure was proposed in the House by Representative Rob Simmons (CT-2). 

6/26/06: Senators Dodd, Lieberman Applaud Committee Passage of Agriculture Appropriations Bill

June 26, 2006

WASHINGTON - The Senate Appropriations Committee approved a measure that, thanks in part to the work of Senators Chris Dodd and Joe Lieberman, would provide funds for agricultural and economic initiatives across Connecticut. Dodd and Lieberman worked with their Appropriations Committee colleagues to ensure that funds for a number of Connecticut projects are included in the fiscal year 2007 Department of Agriculture Appropriations Bill. The legislation will now be considered by the full Senate. “Farming in Connecticut – particularly in the northeastern ‘Quiet Corner’ – is a way of life for many residents in the area,” Dodd said. “These resources will help farmers increase their productivity and efficiency. Additionally, the Senate has recognized that the network of services established by Day Kimball Hospital in Putnam is particularly important for the older residents in the region.” “Connecticut’s small farmers face an uphill battle to stay competitive in a worsening economy,” Lieberman said. “This funding will give Connecticut’s farmers a much needed boost. It will also help rural hospitals in Connecticut provide better care for seniors.” Below is a more detailed breakdown of the funds from which Connecticut stands to benefit: • $495,000 for the Tufts University School of Veterinary Medicine to continue a pilot program that helps small farmers market their produce in niche markets and stay in business. This is especially important in light of the number of Connecticut farms that have closed in recent years. • $573,000 for the University of Connecticut’s Food Marketing Policy Center. The Food Marketing Policy Center at UCONN provides a strong research base from which to address critical public policy questions about food safety and security, market power, efficiency, taxation and subsidies. • $421,000 for the University of Connecticut’s Northeast Center for Invasive Plants. The spread of invasive plants ranks second behind habitat loss as the greatest threat to biological diversity and ecosystem function in the U.S. The Center is focused on developing novel and effective technologies to address the problems caused by the invasive plants. • Recognition of Day Kimball Hospital in Putnam as a candidate for a grant from the Department of Agriculture to develop the Hospital’s Center for Excellence in Rural Geriatric Healthcare Services. When complete, the center will implement a regional home care tele-health network to enable in-home monitoring of home-bound elders in northeastern Connecticut. • The bill also urges the Department of Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Health and Inspection Service to reimburse KofKoff Egg Farms, one of the largest egg producers in Connecticut, for its efforts to combat low pathogenic avian influenza (LPAI) by vaccinating rather than depopulating its flock. KofKoff’s successful approach to combat LPAI saved millions of dollars, but because the farm chose to vaccinate rather than depopulate its flock, which would have been very harmful to its business and had the potential to cost hundreds of jobs, the Department of Agriculture refused to indemnify KofKoff for its efforts.


6/22/06: Sens. Dodd, Lieberman Support Quinebaug-Shetucket Heritage Designation Extension

June 22, 2006

WASHINGTON – The Quinebaug-Shetucket Rivers Valley, spanning more than 695,000 acres in both Connecticut and Massachusetts and including 35 towns in both states, will continue to be designated a Heritage Corridor and receive funding through 2015, under a bill authored by Senators Chris Dodd (D-CT) and Joe Lieberman (D-CT).  Authorization for funding of the Heritage Corridor is set to expire in 2009, and today both Senators submitted testimony supporting the continued designation and funding of this unique region of the state.

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