In the coal-rich Keystone State, voters support 67 – 28 percent federal requirements that owners of coal-burning power plants reduce pollution, according to a new Quinnipiac University poll released Monday.
Republicans oppose the proposed limits 51 – 45 percent, but every other party, gender or age group supports them by wide margins.
Voters say 72 – 24 percent these efforts are needed to clean the air, but they are divided 44 – 44 percent on whether these efforts will be too expensive.
“The coal industry has put food on the table for many generations in Pennsylvania, but nostalgia only goes so far. Voters want cleaner air and they want the feds to police the pollution,” said Tim Malloy, assistant director of the Quinnipiac University Poll.
NewsClips:
PA Climate Report Warns Of Hotter Summers, Destructive Storms
PA Warming To Bring Profound Changes Penn State Report Says
Penn State: Effects Of Climate Change To Accelerate In PA
Climate Report: Hotter Summers, Worse Storms More Pollen
Climate Report: Hotter Temps In PA’s Future
PA Voters Support More Emission Limits On Coal Power Plants
Mayors Call For City Climate Action Amid Gridlock
Op-Ed: Clean Power Plan’s Trade-Offs, PEC’s Davitt Woodwell
Editorial: President Carbon: Hypocrisy’s Trip
Editorial: Climate Resilience? More Eco-Pablum
Editorial: PA Waterways Will Change With Climate
Related Stories:
DEP Accepting Comments On 2015 PA Climate Impacts Assessment Report
400 PA Academic Leaders Urge Gov. Wolf, Sen. Casey To Tackle Climate Change
Special PA Environment Digest Coverage Of EPA Clean Power Plan Announcement
|