"Proposed changes to Clark zoning codes now in limbo: They won't be passed this year, if ever," is the headline to this story today in the Louisville Courier Journal.
"Massive sewer project coming: Federal, state mandates, disgruntled residents driving need," is the headline to this story dated Dec. 13 in the South Bend Tribune.
"Stormwater runoff raises new development questions: Regulations are more stringent for water discharged in Great Lakes Basin," is the headline to this story today in the Munster Times.
"Pines residents fight for safe water: Struggle with contamination highlights reliability of Great Lakes" is the headline to a second water story today in the Munster Times, both part of a series on Great Lakes water issues begun Sunday (scroll down for earlier stories). Some quotes:
THE PINES | The water looked like iced tea and smelled like rotten eggs.Posted by Marcia Oddi at December 14, 2004 08:30 AMIn a scene fit for a movie, Gordon Tharp invited four environmental bureaucrats and an industry executive to drink tap water from the well on his property that they said was not contaminated. When they declined, Tharp's trap was sprung.
"I don't understand why my water isn't good enough for you, but it's good enough for me," he said.