Read the latest news from Moms Clean Air Force staff and members in Iowa, Nevada, North Carolina, Ohio, and Vermont.
Most Recent
The Temperature Is Rising, and So Is Climate Anxiety: Moms Make News
EcoMadres Hosts Latina Maternal and Children’s Health Summit: Moms Make News
Read the latest news from Moms Clean Air Force staff and members in Arizona, Colorado, Ohio, Tennessee, and Washington, DC.
EcoMadres Use Music to Advocate for Clean Air: Moms Make News
Read the latest news from Moms Clean Air Force staff and members in Iowa, Nevada, New York, Ohio, Virginia, and Wisconsin.
Heat Takes on a New Meaning This Summer: Moms Make News
Read the latest news from Moms Clean Air Force staff and members in Arizona, New York, Ohio, Virginia, and West Virginia.
From Heat to Hope: EcoMadres Announces Second Annual Health Summit
Join EcoMadres live as we gather with experts to discuss the impacts of climate change—especially extreme heat—on Latino communities.
Moms Tell EPA to Keep Protecting Families From Climate Pollution: Moms Make News
Read the latest news from Moms Clean Air Force staff and members in Arizona, Connecticut, Michigan, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, and Washington, DC.
“From White House to Fun”: Moms Make News
Read the latest news from Moms Clean Air Force staff and members in Arizona, Connecticut, Ohio, Tennessee, Vermont, West Virginia, and Washington, DC.
New Map Shines Light on Communities Most At-Risk From Toxic Air Pollution
Clean air advocates have a new weapon in the fight against toxic air pollution from the plastics and petrochemical industry: the Environmental Defense Fund’s innovative Petrochemical Air Pollution Map.
Where There’s Smoke, There’s “Advanced Recycling”: Moms Make News
Read the latest news from Moms Clean Air Force staff and members in Arizona, Georgia, New Mexico, New York, Ohio, and Wisconsin.
Two Years After the East Palestine Derailment, EPA Chemical Assessment Is Veering Off Track
EPA is about to assess the risks of vinyl chloride to decide whether this potent carcinogen presents an “unreasonable risk of injury to health or the environment.” But its plans for this evaluation are woefully inadequate. The people of East Palestine deserve better.
East Palestine One Year Later
One year ago, a 150-car train carrying hazardous materials derailed in East Palestine, Ohio. Large quantities of toxic chemicals were released into the community, including carcinogenic vinyl chloride. This disaster was not an isolated incident, and EPA has the authority to protect all of us from future harm.
Toxic Chemical Under Fresh Scrutiny a Year After East Palestine Train Crash
One year after the catastrophic train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio, EPA is considering phasing out vinyl chloride, a toxic petrochemical used to make PVC plastic.


















