🏔Léa Bello
@leabello.bsky.social
5.6K followers 140 following 41 posts
Videomaker & science journalist @lemonde.fr + @stup.media 🌍❄️ ecology, climate, polar science, sociology Signal : leabello.01 ▶️ https://www.youtube.com/@Lea_Bello she/her
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audreygarric.bsky.social
Ouvertures de terres fédérales, modernisation des centrales, baisse des taxes... L'administration Trump a présenté un plan coordonné visant à relancer l'exploitation et la combustion du charbon, principal facteur contribuant au changement climatique www.nytimes.com/2025/09/29/c...
‘Mine, Baby, Mine’: Trump Officials Offer $625 Million to Rescue Coal
www.nytimes.com
leabello.bsky.social
Ouais c trop fou... on va pouvoir payer les auteurs hahahahah
leabello.bsky.social
Vous voulez continuer à voir un contenu qui décrypte l'actualité économique ?
C'est à nous de jouer :
Reposted by 🏔Léa Bello
stup.media
Liste des membres du collectif stup.media :
go.bsky.app/2UG12kX
leabello.bsky.social
Merci à toi pour l'article !
leabello.bsky.social
Nouvel article dans @stup.media En 2022 je vous parlais en vidéo de la place des femmes dans le e-sport, cette fpis c'est de la place des LGBTQIA+ dont @nathanlautier.bsky.social nous parle.
Spoiler : c'est pas mieux...
nathanlautier.bsky.social
Très fier de cette première collab avec @stup.media, où on va causer place des personnes queers dans l'esport.

Merci à eux de leur confiance, et à tout·es mes interlocuteur·ices, parce que ce n'était pas simple de prendre la parole. Bravo à vous 🔥
stup.media/lgbtqia-dans...
LGBTQIA+ dans l'esport : luttes et discriminations révélées
Explorez la lutte pour l'inclusivité LGBTQIA+ dans l'esport français face à la vague de harcèlement et la nécessité d'un changement sociétal.
stup.media
Reposted by 🏔Léa Bello
valmasdel.bsky.social
Le 21 juin, c'est la fête de la musique, mais aussi la journée #showyourstripes

Voici le code barre du réchauffement à Paris,
1/...

showyourstripes.info
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tdiliberto.bsky.social
Trump's Budget is out. For NOAA, it's exactly what the previous passback document showed.
Trump administration eliminations NOAA's Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research in its ongoing fight against science and reality.

www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/...
Table showing FY26 budget numbers for NOAA from the Trump Administration.
Reposted by 🏔Léa Bello
valmasdel.bsky.social
The Starfish Barometer, launched on World Ocean Day 2025, offers an accessible, science-based annual snapshot of the Ocean’s state and its vital connection with humanity

www.starfishbarometer.org/content/over...
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leabello.bsky.social
👀
desmog.com
DeSmog @desmog.com · Jun 3
🚨 NEW INVESTIGATION: We mapped the Trump administration's ties to Project 2025 and found something stunning—70% of his Cabinet is connected to the groups behind the Heritage Foundation plan.

This despite Trump's repeated denials during the campaign. 🧵
Reposted by 🏔Léa Bello
science.org
Exclusive: National Science Foundation staff were told today that the agency’s 37 divisions—across all eight directorates—are being abolished and the number of programs within those divisions will be drastically reduced.
Exclusive: NSF faces radical shake-up as officials abolish its 37 divisions
Changes seen as a response to presidential directives on what research to fund
scim.ag
leabello.bsky.social
Dear young american scientists, if you want to get loud about it, in a well known French newspaper, I'm here :)
federalnewsnetwork.com
In reversal, OSC now says agencies can fire probationary feds for almost any reason
In reversal, OSC now says agencies can fire probationary feds for almost any reason
The Office of Special Counsel, operating under new leadership, now says it believes agencies do have the authority to fire their probationary federal employees — for virtually any reason and at any time. In a reversal of its own legal position from earlier this year, OSC argued in an amicus brief filed Wednesday afternoon that current federal regulations give agencies broad discretion to terminate probationers “with very limited restrictions on the reasons for termination.” OSC’s brief, filed with the Merit Systems Protection Board, argued that agencies’ terminations of probationary employees, in response to the Office of Personnel Management’s guidance, were in compliance with statutory and regulatory requirements, and therefore do not constitute a prohibited personnel practice. Current federal regulations state that agencies should terminate employees who fail to fully demonstrate their qualifications for continued employment, on the basis of either performance or conduct. In its amicus brief, OSC said it believes those regulations mean agencies should screen out probationary employees for any reason the agency believes the employee is unsuitable for the competitive service. “The agency may even be at fault for the probationer’s lack of demonstration of qualification or for the agency’s inability to assess work performance or conduct — perhaps because the agency lacks adequate recordkeeping or examination procedures — but this does not create any rights for the probationer and places the agency under no obligations to the probationer,” OSC wrote. OSC, the federal agency in charge of policing prohibited personnel practices, has received more than 2,000 complaints on the mass terminations of probationary employees that took place earlier this year at the direction of the Trump administration. The probationary employees alleged that the mass terminations, made on the basis of “performance,” were unlawful. In April, the Washington Post reported that OSC had informed the thousands of fired probationary workers who had filed complaints that it would not investigate their cases. OSC declined to comment on the open cases, citing internal policies forbidding the agency from doing so. OSC said in its amicus brief, however, that agencies may be in violation of federal regulations — but rather than the violation stemming from too many employees being fired, it believed agencies were not firing enough probationary employees. “Agencies appear to have failed to abide by the regulatory mandate to use the probationary period as a tool to screen out inadequate or unsuitable probationers,” OSC wrote. “Indeed, these violations have been ongoing and systemic for a very long time, and petitioners’ request for relief would likely compel agencies to continue these violations.” Wednesday’s amicus brief marks a complete reversal of OSC’s earlier position on probationary employees before the MSPB. Former Special Counsel Hampton Dellinger, the then-leader of the OSC, said at the time that he believed agencies’ firings of probationary employees violated the law. In February, President Donald Trump fired Dellinger, leading to a short-lived legal battle that resulted in Dellinger resigning from his position at OSC in March and withdrawing from his lawsuit against the Trump administration. OSC, which is normally considered an independent federal agency and is usually headed by a senior official with no other government duties, is now led in an acting capacity by U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer. Charles Baldis, former senior counsel for the Senate Judiciary Committee, is currently managing the investigative body on Greer’s behalf. No OSC attorneys’ signatures, other than Baldis’, appear on the amicus brief sent to MSPB Wednesday afternoon. “OSC had previously taken a position that we now believe to be wrong,” Baldis said in an interview. “We have switched that position, and we thought it was important to clarify that we believe this is the correct legal interpretation.” In late February, under Dellinger’s leadership, OSC began challenging the mass firings of federal employees who had either been newly hired into government, or who had recently changed positions. OSC took on a number of cases from terminated probationary employees and turned to MSPB to request various stays while investigations continued. MSPB issued multiple stays, which have since expired. “The legal arguments that were made as part of those MSPB stays are something that we looked into quite deeply,” Baldis said. “They seem plausible at first blush, but once you start digging, it’s not consistent with Congress’ intent when they passed the Civil Service Reform Act in 1978 … We didn’t think that was going to be a viable position anymore, so we have reversed that position.” It’s unclear how MSPB will respond to OSC’s brief this afternoon. MSPB has a lack of quorum, with only MSPB Acting Chairman Henry Kerner currently serving. MSPB Member Cathy Harris is not currently working in her position as a lawsuit over Trump’s attempted firing of Harris continues. OSC’s brief this week also comes after Trump signed an executive order in April to create more stringent requirements for federal employees before they can clear their probationary periods. Trump’s order called for regulatory changes that, once implemented, would give agencies broader authority to terminate probationary employees, without the need to provide a written explanation when doing so. In the amicus brief, OSC also said it believes agencies have failed to remove enough probationary employees over the course of many years — and that OPM’s efforts encouraging agencies to make “greater use” of the federal probationary period were a “welcome development.” “We believe that was correct guidance — that agencies need to be more proactive,” Baldis said. “We want them to be judicious and careful in all of the decisions that they make, and we want to make sure that they don’t engage in any violations of prohibited personnel practices. But in general, we agree with the proposition that agencies have treated probationary status as something more like tenure as opposed to something like probationary status … That’s more or less the status of most employees in every company in America — at-will employment is the default mode of employment.” This is a breaking story and will be updated.The post In reversal, OSC now says agencies can fire probationary feds for almost any reason first appeared on Federal News Network.
federalnewsnetwork.com
leabello.bsky.social
C'est le moment de s'abonner à notre newsletter mensuelle !
valentin.stup.media
📧Depuis 8 mois @stup.media édite une Newsletter gratuite coécrite par @arnaud.stup.media, @leabello.bsky.social, @splinelnd.bsky.social et @vincentdinternet.bsky.social.
C'est une veille mensuelle pour vous remercier de votre soutien 🤍

La prochaine sort demain matin : stup.news
Reposted by 🏔Léa Bello
audreygarric.bsky.social
C’est l’un des nombreux bouleversements entraînés par la disparition de la banquise : elle change la couleur des océans Arctique et Antarctique. De quoi entraîner des conséquences « considérables » pour certains organismes marins comme les algues et le phytoplancton www.lemonde.fr/planete/arti...
La fonte de la banquise change la couleur des océans Arctique et Antarctique
En l’absence d’une couche de glace à la surface de l’océan, la lumière qui pénètre les eaux n’est plus la même, ce qui influence le type d’algue et de plancton s’y développant. Une étude publiée dans ...
www.lemonde.fr
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cassouman40.bsky.social
L'Atlantique en 2025 (gauche) est bien +frais qu'en 2023 ou il a explosé les records chauds. Ces variations sont en grande partie dues aux fluctuations spontanées du climat (variabilite interne) qui temporairement viennent soit amplifier le réchauffement d'origine humaine soit l’atténuer.
P'tit fil🧵
Reposted by 🏔Léa Bello
desmog.com
DeSmog @desmog.com · Nov 14
Trump is opening his administration to fracking billionaires, oil lobbyists and far-right climate deniers. Our global team of investigative reporters is tracking the damage.

Here's a starter pack of DeSmog investigators and some of the climate disinfo journalists we follow.

go.bsky.app/MrJdbio