4/28: Officials consider setting oil spill on fire
Wall Street Journal: Officials consider setting oil spill off La. coast on fire
Response efforts continued on offshore drilling as an oil spill off Louisiana's coast spread. The oil slick had grown Tuesday to 100 miles by 45 miles—or about the size of Jamaica. The fast-moving slick was about 20 miles off the Louisiana coast Tuesday morning and the state had activated a response plan, the U.S. Coast Guard said Tuesday.
While Coast Guard officials admit a controlled burn of some pockets of the crude sitting on the water's surface isn't an optimal solution, they say it is better than allowing the oil to hit the beaches and marshes that line the Gulf Coast, which will likely happen by this weekend if weather patterns hold.
Also in the South:
ALABAMA: State is second cheapest for home health care
ARKANSAS: Conservative activist group files lawsuit against health care plan
FLORIDA: State's budget deal avoids tax hikes, major cuts
GEORGIA: State roads considered among the best, says U.S. PIRG study
KENTUCKY: State could rekindle debate on illegal immigration following Arizona law passage
MISSISSIPPI: Storm damage in state 'well north of $50 million'
NORTH CAROLINA: Study says state has 15th worst business tax environment
SOUTH CAROLINA: Wetlands to be restored following 2002 oil spill in Charleston Harbor
TENNESSEE: Construction contracts up considerably in March
VIRGINIA: State's universities begin signing off on nearly 10% tuition increases
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Labels: budget, business tax, construction, health care, immigration, oil, tuition, wetlands


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