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4 Ways the Shutdown Is Making Us Less Green

By Liz Schmitt
Rusty fuel and chemical drums on the Arctic coast, Vladimir Melnik / Shutterstoc
Rusty fuel and chemical drums on the Arctic coast, Vladimir Melnik / Shutterstock.com
Oct 10, 2013
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During the government shutdown, some cuts have caught the public’s attention more than others. And some people are rejoicing over the cuts faced by the Environmental Protection Agency and other environmental agencies. But the shutdown of our environmental programs is affecting people’s lives in ways that might surprise you.

1. National Parks closures are more than an inconvenience

In some National Parks across the country, employees are stranded. Employees who live on park grounds, like park rangers and concession workers, have no work or pay, and because the parks are closed, they’re not even allowed to take solace in the trails that surround them. And in at least one case, they don’t have any food. About 2,200 employees – 1,800 of them concession workers – are stranded in Grand Canyon National Park. A local food bank has started making deliveries, because those people are going hungry and without pay.

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Rusty fuel and chemical drums on the Arctic coast, Vladimir Melnik / Shutterstock.com
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