National IPL President Susan Hendershot Joins Intefaith Coalition Seeking to Keep Government Funded

WASHINGTON, DC – On September 26, 53 organizations representing people of faith across religious traditions and denominations delivered a letter to the U.S. Congress urging bipartisan action to keep the government operational or risk severe consequences on the most vulnerable members of society. Congress has until September 30, 2023 to pass a continuing resolution to avert a shutdown of the government’s most basic operations.

The signatories, which include NETWORK, the Friends Committee on National Legislation, Interfaith Power & Light and the Franciscan Action Network, called on lawmakers to fund the government and work in a bipartisan manner to pass a stop-gap funding measure without harmful provisions. The complete letter and list of signatories is available below.

Here is a statement from Rev. Susan Hendershot, President of Interfaith Power & Light

 “As our beloved communities face growing threats from climate change through rising temperatures, wildfires, smoke hazards and rising sea levels, a government shutdown would further place our neighbors in harm’s way. People of faith fought to pass the historic clean energy investments in the Inflation Reduction Act because we know acting on climate will create a more just world for all. It is a moral imperative that Congress protect these important programs to ensure a safe, equitable and clean future for generations to come.”

Read Full Piece from NETWORK  Lobby for Catholic Social Justice

Video: Tom Elmhorst Urges EPA to Finalize Methane Rule by End of Summer

From leaking tanks to flaring, hear Tom Elmhorst’s #MyMethaneStory on why the Permian Basin needs swift action on methane emissions. The Environmental Protection Agency (@EPA) can protect communities by finalizing its rule to #CutMethane pollution by the end of the summer.

Kayley Shoup: Moratorium on future oil, gas leasing near schools a “good first step”

Kayley Shoup, community organizer for IPL NM-El Paso affiliate Citizens Caring for the Future in the Permian Basin, spoke to Hannah Glover of The New Mexico Political Report about the impact of  a moratorium on future oil and gas leasing on state lands within a mile of schools.

State Land Commissioner Stephanie Garcia Richard issued the moratorium in May. She said various studies about the impacts of oil and gas emissions on children’s health prompted her to take action.

But, at the same time, Shoup acknowledged that oil and gas development will continue close to schools because much of the state trust land is already leased and new leases can also occur on other lands, including private and federally managed lands.

This is why Shoup and others are advocating for state-wide setbacks.

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