order non hybrid seeds LandRightsNFarming: Re: Federal Insider: Business groups want to delay new smog rules

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Re: Federal Insider: Business groups want to delay new smog rules

Please view article concerning USPS and subsidy money   make since to you!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

On Wed, Jul 20, 2011 at 7:49 AM, The Washington Post <newsletters@email.washingtonpost.com> wrote:
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The Washington Post Wednesday, July 20, 2011
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News from the Fed Page

FILE - This Jan. 12, 2010 file photo shows smog and haze hovering over Salt Lake City. The thick layer of smog stubbornly lingering over Utah has fouled the state's mountain air so badly this week that health officials are warning people not to exercise outside and schools are keeping children inside for recess and sports. The smog is blamed on a weather phenomenon that pins pollution to the valley floors. (AP Photo/ Deseret News, Brian Nicholson, File)  **SALT LAKE TRIBUNE OUT, PROVO DAILY HERALD OUT, MAGS OUT, NO SALES**

Business groups: Delay new smog rules

Juliet Eilperin

Business leaders argue that manufacturers cannot afford to install new pollution controls given the sluggish economy.

On Leadership

Elizabeth Warren, the Obama administration adviser on the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, testifies during a hearing of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Thursday, July 14, 2011. Warren said that the new agency would monitor possible violations of rules designed to protect the finances of soldiers and sailors after it starts work on July 21. Photographer: Joshua Roberts/Bloomberg *** Local Caption  *** Elizabeth Warren

'Wicked smart' and on her way out

Theresa Amato

President Obama is sending the wrong message about change agents in Washington by not fighting for Elizabeth Warren.

Federal Diary

Federal workers will take a hit

Joe Davidson

No matter how the debt crisis ends, federal employees will take a double dose of a bitter pill.

Behind the showdown

Behind the showdown

Newsletter | Click here to sign up for the Behind the government showdown newsletter.

Federal Player of the Week

Fed Faces: Cost-effective security

Michael B. Smith of the Department of Homeland Security found a way to reduce costs by more than $750 million over three years.

The voting database

Browse every vote in the U.S. Congress since 1991.

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