Tag Archives: esco

The Columbia Crossing: A Bridge to More Air Pollution

A nine part series from Cascadia Times. These articles were made possible by the generous support of our readers. Click to use Paypal to make a donation to our 501c3 nonprofit research fund to support Cascadia Times’ investigative journalism today! To reserve your copy of the print edition, please email Cascadia Times: paul@times.org Part 1:

The Media’s Role. Did The Oregonian use misinformation to sell an expensive, unneeded bridge to an unwary public?

This is part 9 of Cascadia Times’ continuing series on the Columbia River Crossing and air pollution. Read the series introduction, and articles on induced traffic, lagging traffic counts, the cancer in Portland’s air, an environmental injustice, ESCO and industrial air pollution, global warming and the CRC, a look to the future, and the media’s

Global Warming and the CRC

This is part 7 of Cascadia Times’ continuing series on the Columbia River Crossing and air pollution. Read the series introduction, and articles on induced traffic, lagging traffic counts, the cancer in Portland’s air, an environmental injustice, ESCO and industrial air pollution, global warming and the CRC, a look to the future, and the media’s

Air Pollution, Inc. Northwest Portland gets a daily reminder that ESCO, their local polluter, is fouling their air with carcinogens

Click here to download a map of Portland neighborhoods and how their air pollution ranks nationally. This is part 6 of Cascadia Times’ continuing series on the Columbia River Crossing and air pollution. Read the series introduction, and articles on induced traffic, lagging traffic counts, the cancer in Portland’s air, an environmental injustice, ESCO and

An Environmental Injustice. The Columbia River Crossing would increase pollution in Portland’s most highly polluted and most ethnically diverse neighborhood

This is part 5 of Cascadia Times’ continuing series on the Columbia River Crossing and air pollution. Read the series introduction, and articles on induced traffic, lagging traffic counts, the cancer in Portland’s air, an environmental injustice, ESCO and industrial air pollution, global warming and the CRC, a look to the future, and the media’s

How will the Columbia River Crossing project affect the health risk of breathing Portland’s air?

The people who are planning the proposed I-5 replacement bridge over the Columbia River assume that air pollution will decrease on a regional scale in the future. They also assume that these reductions will come as a result of tighter new EPA regulations, a cleaner reformulation of gasoline, and cleaner vehicles, such as hybrids and