Transit is important for both local and regional services as a means of providing not only an alternative means of transportation, but in some cases, the only solution to the personal automobile.
Since the early days of the United States of America, the economy of the country has been built upon, and has heavily relied upon, the transportation system.
With input from facilities' special education directors and teachers, as well as school district out-of-district placement coordinators, the Quality Standards have been revised to reflect the most recent changes in the law (IDEA, No Child Left Behind) and highlight best practices. Furthermore, every effort has been made to make each individual quality standard concrete and discrete, as well as to eliminate redundancy.
The "hands off the Internet" era is over. The Federal Communications Commission's recent decision that ruled that Comcast's use of network management techniques violated its Internet Policy Statement confirms that the federal government is not content to allow broadband providers to operate free from any form of regulatory oversight. Broadband providers now need to defend their network management practices as "reasonable." Nevertheless, it remains to be seen what institutional strategy will be effective in answering the no longer hypothetical question of what constitutes "reasonable network management."
The purpose of this document two fold. First, it is to provide a comprehensive background summary of the Eagle Mine Superfund Site, the remedial activities that have taken place to date and to show the commensurate improvement in water quality and load reduction that have occurred as a result of the remedial actions. Secondly, the purpose of this document is to analyze the available metals loading data to determine if newly proposed water quality standards based on EPAs Recalculation Guidance for zinc, copper and cadmium are attainable.