ThinkSouth -- a weblog of the Center for a Better South

2.10.2010

2/10: Michelle Obama launches fight against childhood obesity

Washington Post: Michelle Obama launches fight against childhood obesity

First Lady Michelle Obama has released a national program to fight childhood obesity called "Let's Move!" The program will be backed by as much as $1 billion a year in federal funds for the next ten years.

At its core, the initiative has four pillars: more nutrition information, increased physical activity, easier access to healthy foods and, ultimately, personal responsibility. And, it has garnered bipartisan support.

Obama's initiative challenges the Food and Drug Administration to work with food and beverage producers, who have announced their support of Obama's proposals, to improve package labeling. And there will be a push to reauthorize the Child Nutrition Act as a way of improving school meals.

It's something all states should get behind, especially those in traditionall overweight Southern states.

Also in the South:

ALABAMA: State to help laid-off casino workers even though casinos are illegal

ARKANSAS: House approves no-raise expenses bill

FLORIDA: Citrus growers lost 7.4 million boxes of fruit from freeze, agency says

GEORGIA: State has $1 billion in unclaimed funds

KENTUCKY: State to be the first to endorse new national education standards

LOUISIANA: Gov. Jindal says he won't raise state taxes

MISSISSIPPI: State Senate approves charter school plan

NORTH CAROLINA: Probe into private flights extended to all 2008 and 2004 gubernatorial candidates

SOUTH CAROLINA: Senate approves property tax break

TENNESSEE: Lottery sales surge with two new games available

VIRGINIA:
Del. Cole wants to criminalize involuntary implantation of human microchips

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2.02.2010

2/2: SELC ranks South's top threatened natural places

Daily Progress: SELC ranks South's top threatened natural places

The Southern Environmental Law Center released its top ten places in the South it believes are facing immediate peril. The sites noted are in Virginia, Tennessee, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia and Alabama.

"The major environmental threats we face in this country are playing out in the Southeast," said Jeff Gleason, SELC’s deputy director. "Our region is contributing disproportionately to global warming, and, in fact, our six southeastern states, if viewed as a single country, would be the world’s seventh largest source of heat-trapping carbon dioxide emissions."

In the Carolinas, the Catawba-Wateree waterway (NC & SC), Cape Fear River (NC), and freshwater wetlands near Charleston were named. Georgia's Ogeechee River and right whale calving grounds made the list. Alabama's Black Water River, the Ocoee Region in Tennessee, the Chesapeake Bay and Roanoke River Basin in Virginia, and Southern Appalachian Mountains in Virginia and Tennessee also made the list.

Also in the South:

ALABAMA: Opinion: Alabama's gambling situation is a mess, and this must not be allowed to continue

ARKANSAS: Juvenile detention facilities overcrowded in state

FLORIDA: Lawmakers asked by environmental group to ban plastic shopping bags

GEORGIA: Legislators again push to drop annual property tax on autos

KENTUCKY: New initiative covers birth-to-graduate learning

LOUISIANA: Analysis shows that casinos are not recession-proof

MISSISSIPPI: Lawmakers vote on pseudoephedrine prescriptions law

NORTH CAROLINA: Civil Rights museum opens in Greensboro in famous Woolworth's building

SOUTH CAROLINA: Court ruling to protect state's wetlands

TENNESSEE: Gov. Bredesen delivers final state of the state address

VIRGINIA:
State Senate bills say 'no' to requiring health insurance

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