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Action Alerts

Ask for these Budget Priorities

As national budget negotiations continue, ask Congress to protect the business of public lands, support clean energy investments, and end big oil handouts! 

Take Action Now!

Protect the Drinking Water in Southern Nevada

Despite widespread support for a moratorium on uranium mining near the Grand Canyon, some in Arizona’s Congressional delegation support opening the Arizona Strip.  

Take Action Now!

Rebuild Nevada

Breathe Easy Nevada is an expansion of the Nevada Conservation League Education Fund's "Rebuild Nevada" campaign.  We're focused on defending the rights of every Nevadan to live a healthy life by protecting our air and water while promoting clean energy to replace older, dirtier forms of energy.

Breathe Easy Nevada educates and engages the public based on two principles:   

  • Protecting the air we breathe and the water we drink is crucial to sustaining a healthy population in Nevada.

Arsenic, Mercury, Dioxin, Carbon Monoxide, Lead, and other toxins and carcinogens threaten the health and safety of Americans every day, especially for seniors, young children, and those with asthma, diabetes, or cardiovascular disease.

The Clean Air Act authorizes the Environmental Protection Agency to limit toxins in the air we breathe.  It saved an estimated 160,000 Americans from a premature death and another 1.7 million cases of asthma exacerbation in 2010.   

Despite the scientific proof of pollution’s impact on public health, members of Congress propose cutting the EPA’s budget by a third and blocking the EPA from enforcing commonsense safeguards to curb pollution and protect public health.

  • Rebuilding a vibrant economy will require continued investments in our clean energy industries in Nevada.

The Silver State will become the renewable energy hub of the Southwest and play a critical role in meeting our nation’s energy needs.  Our non-partisan, broad-based coalition supports measures in Congress and at the state and local levels that will stimulate and support a clean energy economy.

We are working to create jobs in Nevada that cannot be exported overseas through our support of federal and local measures that fund job training and career development for Nevadans.  These efforts range from research and engineering, to maintenance and construction, all jobs related to the creation and transportation of renewable energy, as well as making our buildings and transportation options more energy efficient.

We support responsible renewable energy development throughout Nevada, as well as the supporting transmission lines needed to carry this abundant clean energy throughout our state and beyond.  We support the new "smart grid" and energy retrofit technologies that will give consumers more control over their energy use, leading to lower utility bills and safer, healthier environments.

Breathe Easy Nevada continues to raise awareness on these issues as well as provide opportunities to YOU to get involved in our efforts.  We are quick to thank our elected officials who defend our right to a healthy life and a renewable energy economy in Nevada.  At the same time, we will continue to point out those elected officials who vote against the public health and economic opportunities of Nevadans.

Visit Rebuild Nevada here.

Latest Blog

  1. We "heart" Clean Air

    Wednesday, 15 February 2012
  2. Community rallies to save Red Rock!

    Monday, 16 January 2012

Latest News

NCL News Release - Interior decision protects tourism, water quality in Southern Nevada

Conservationists and business owners from Southern Nevada joined their counterparts in the West today (Monday, Jan. 9) to applaud the Obama administration’s decision to place a 20-year moratorium on new uranium...

Upcoming Events

Action Alert

Ask for these Budget Priorities

As national budget negotiations continue, ask Congress to protect the business of public lands, support clean energy investments, and end big oil handouts! 

Take Action Now!

Nature provides a free lunch, but only if we control our appetites.

~William Ruckelshaus, Business Week, 18 June 1990