Tag Archives: Interior Department

Mexican gov't tries to soften drug war language

The Mexican government is trying to put a new linguistic spin on the country’s drug war, in part by discouraging the use of terms such as “drug war.”

Government spokespeople have been told they should now avoid using terms used by criminals to describe kidnappings and killings.

They have also been told to change the way criminal suspects are presented to the media.

The move drew mixed reactions Monday, a day after top Interior Department officials announced the changes at a conference of state and federal security public relations specialists.

The administration of President Enrique Pena Nieto has pledged to reduce violence in Mexico, but critics say so far that has implied simply talking about it less.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/AilxuO6tGiY/

Amid federal investigation, coal exports at record levels

From the time coal is scooped from the depths of the Spring Creek strip mine in Montana’s wide-open Powder River Basin until it travels more than 6,000 miles across the Pacific Ocean to power plants in South Korea, the price can increase more than fivefold.

Mining companies, however, are only paying government royalties on the price of the coal when it is mined from federal lands, not when it is sold for more overseas, saving them millions of dollars in the process.

As the Interior Department investigates the industry’s export practices and considers a new royalty system, several exporters in the Montana-Wyoming coal region — the nation’s most productive — are planning to increase shipments abroad to energy-hungry Asia.

Whatever the department decides on royalties, a matter currently under internal review, the results have the potential to cut into profits at a time when the industry is looking to foreign markets to offset some of the daunting challenges it faces at home.

Proposed ports on the West Coast have the potential to increase U.S. coal exports by 60 to 100 million tons a year, said Jim Rollyson, an energy analyst with the advisory firm Raymond James.

“The international export market is where long-term growth for the industry might come from,” Rollyson said. “If you’re the government, that’s real money you’re trying to get there.”

Federal officials forecast that 175 coal-burning power plant units will be shuttered in the next five years, equal to 8.5 percent of the total electricity produced by coal, largely because of competition from cheap natural gas and costs of complying with new environmental regulations.

Overseas markets, by contrast, have been booming.

While analysts expect demand to slip temporarily this year, 2012 saw a record 125 million tons of coal exported from the U.S. Some in the industry project that figure could double in just the next five years if new ports and port expansions are built in Washington state, Oregon and the Gulf Coast.

Federal officials declined to say what they’ve uncovered since the royalties investigation was announced in February. But they’ve said the probe will continue under the leadership of recently confirmed Interior Secretary Sally Jewell.

“We take this issue very seriously and remain fully committed to collecting every dollar due,” said Patrick Etchart with Interior’s Office of Natural Resource Revenue.

Among the major coal producers from federal lands in the West, Peabody Energy and Spring Creek owner Cloud Peak Energy have denied any wrongdoing, while Arch Coal, Inc., has declined to comment.

The investigation into the industry follows concerns raised by two prominent U.S. senators — Energy and Natural Resources Committee Chairman Ron Wyden, D-Ore., and the committee’s ranking minority member, Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska.

They’ve warned taxpayers could lose many millions of dollars annually if royalties are unfairly calculated. “Taxpayers deserve to know if Interior’s oversight and regulations have kept up” with the rise in exports, said Wyden spokesman Keith Chu.

Royalties currently are paid based on the mine price of coal — about $10.55 a ton in the Powder River Basin, kept low by the volume

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/national/~3/XPevvQXZnLg/

Mexico says 26,121 missing during drug war

Mexico‘s new administration says an official count shows at least 26,121 people reported missing during the term of President Felipe Calderon, who launched the country’s offensive against drug cartels.

Lia Limon, the Interior Department‘s subsecretary for human rights, says the list was built using data from local prosecutors across Mexico, and includes people reported missing for any reason during the previous administration. It doesn’t include information collected after November 2012.

The list has been a subject of controversy in Mexico for weeks. After Limon said last week that some 27,000 were missing, a member of Calderon’s administration disputed the figure, saying the only registry on disappeared people contains 5,319 names. Limon said the government would work to compare the official list with others assembled by government agencies and rights groups.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Ex-Mexico official: List of missing doesn't exist

A member of former Mexican President Felipe Calderon‘s administration disputed on Friday that there is a list of 27,000 missing people as announced by the current government of President Enrique Pena Nieto.

Jose Vega, who was Calderon’s coordinator of the National Security System, an entity responsible for collecting and analyzing security data, said that the only registry on disappeared people contains 5,319 names.

Some of the missing people are those whose disappearances are blamed on organized crime, but others include those who may have voluntarily stopped contacting their families, Vega wrote in a letter sent to Mexican and international media.

Vega said that it’s up to state authorities to investigate missing person reports and to keep records on those people. He said the list that includes 5,319 people who went missing in the last decade is not complete because local authorities didn’t send the federal government the requested information when Calderon’s administration tried to compile a list.

This leads him, Vega wrote, to “categorically reject the existence of a list alluded to by national and international media and based on alleged leaks by the federal Attorney General’s Office.”

Lia Limon, deputy secretary for human rights at the Interior Department, told reporters this week that the government plans to unveil a database containing more than 27,000 records of missing people that were gathered by the federal Attorney General’s Office. She said she had not seen it and did not have details of specific cases.

Limon made the comments the same day Human Rights Watch criticized Calderon in a report on disappearances in Mexico, saying he ignored the problem that the group called “the most severe crisis of enforced disappearances in Latin America in decades.”

A Mexican civic organization released a database late last year that it said contained official information on more than 20,000 people who had gone missing in Mexico over the previous six years — the term of Calderon, who stepped up the government‘s campaign against drug cartels.

In posting the database on its website, Propuesta Civica, or Civic Proposal, said the information was collected by the federal Attorney General’s Office during Calderon’s administration.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Guatemala probes if drug lord killed in shootout

Guatemalan authorities say they are investigating whether a man killed in a shootout near the border with Mexico is most-wanted drug lord Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman.

Government spokesman Francisco Cuevas says two drug gangs clashed Thursday in Peten, an area that has seen an increase in drug violence. Cuevas tells Guatevision Television that at least two men died in the shootout.

Cuevas didn’t say what led officials to think that one of the dead men might be Guzman, but Interior Department spokeswoman Carla Herrera tells The Associated Press that one of the victims physically resembles the drug lord.

She says officials have asked the Mexican government to send Guzman’s fingerprints to compare them to the man found inside a vehicle.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Mexico pledges hunt for disappeared

Mexico says it will work with the International Red Cross on the search for thousands of people who have disappeared during the country’s six-year war on drug cartels.

Officials provided few details of the arrangement signed Thursday and did not release a copy, but one Interior Department official said the search would include the creation of a database with genetic information from relatives of the disappeared.

Human Rights Watch released a report Wednesday that describes 249 cases of disappearances, most of which appeared to have been carried out by the military or law enforcement. The same day, Mexican officials said they had a preliminary count of more than 27,000 people reported missing over the last six years. The majority of those are blamed on drug cartels or smaller gangs.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Valentine’s Day: Our Beautiful, and Romantic, National Parks

By Jesse Lee

Happy Valentine's Day to everybody, but most especially my wife Nita! We got engaged a little over three years ago in one of our country's great National Parks, in our case the home of the world’s most famous Portuguese Water Dog (read our story here). That made me a natural candidate to promote this great new video from the good folks at the Interior Department highlighting some of America's epic National Park engagements. For those mulling locations for that most special and anxiety-filled popping of questions, I can't recommend them highly enough, and they hold up very well in subtle “who's engagement was better” contests.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at The White House

Outdoor Retail Exec Picked For Interior

By Breaking News

Barack Obama 5 SC Outdoor retail exec picked for Interior

WASHINGTON (OfficialWire) — President Barack Obama on Wednesday will nominate business executive and former engineer Sally Jewell to lead the Interior Department, an administration official said.

Jewell is the president and chief executive officer at the outdoors company Recreational Equipment, Inc., known as REI, which sells clothing and gear for outdoor adventures with more than 100 stores across the country. Prior to joining REI in 2000, Jewell worked in commercial banking and as an engineer for Mobil Oil Corporation.

If confirmed, Jewell would replace current Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, who held the post throughout Obama’s first term. Salazar announced last month that he would step down in March.

Jewell is the first woman in Obama’s crop of second-term Cabinet nominees. The White House faced criticism that the new Cabinet lacked diversity after Obama tapped a string of white men for top posts, but Obama promised more diverse nominees were in the queue for other jobs.

Jewell’s confirmation would also put a prominent representative from the business community in the president’s Cabinet. REI is a $2 billion-a-year company and has been named by Fortune Magazine as one of the top 100 companies to work for.

Read More at OfficialWire . By Julie Pace.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Another Obama Lackey Resigning

By Breaking News

Ken Salazar SC Another Obama Lackey Resigning

WASHINGTON (OfficialWire) — Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, who oversaw a moratorium on offshore drilling after the BP oil spill, will step down in March, Obama administration officials said Wednesday.

Salazar has run the Interior Department throughout President Barack Obama’s first term.

A former senator from Colorado, Salazar pushed renewable power such as solar and wind, but gained the most attention for his role in the drilling moratorium, a key part of the administration’s response to the April 2010 explosion of the Deepwater Horizon rig in the Gulf of Mexico. It was one of the largest environmental disasters in U.S. history and led to the unprecedented shutdown of offshore drilling.

Business groups and Gulf Coast political leaders said the shutdown crippled the oil and gas industry and cost thousands of jobs, even aboard rigs not operated by BP PLC.

But Salazar said the industry-wide moratorium was the correct call.

Read More at OfficialWire . By Julie Pace.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

The Interior Secretary’s $222,000 Bathroom

By Breaking News

Interior Secretary Bathroom The Interior Secretary’s $222,000 Bathroom

Maybe the Pentagon’s legendary $600 toilet seat was a bargain.

The personal bathroom used by the secretary of the Interior is so swanky that its renovation cost $222,000. No detail was overlooked: It has a $3,500 sub-zero refrigerator (hey, if you’re going to have a fridge in the bathroom, it might as well be a good one) and a $689 faucet. At least the “vintage tissue holder” was cheap: just $65 bucks.

The renovation was done in 2007 under President George W. Bush’s Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne, but is only now coming to light, thanks to the dogged reporting by ABC News Atlanta affiliate WSB-TV, which first filed a Freedom of Information Act request on the renovation four years ago.

Read More at ABC News . By Jonathan Karl.

Image Credit: General Services Administration

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism