
http://www.commondreams.org/headlines03/0906-02.htm
Published on Saturday,
September 6, 2003 by Knight-Ridder
Mission Accomplished
Bush Administration Fulfills Wish List for Corporate
America
by Seth Borenstein
QUOTE:
"They're trying to dismantle some of the original clean air
and water legislation that (President) Nixon put through.
They're going full bore."
Lester Brown, the president of the Earth Policy Institute
WASHINGTON - The Bush administration eased a series of important
environmental regulations in a quiet flurry of late-summer activity,
delivering almost every rule change on corporate America's wish
list.
In the past few weeks, the administration diluted federal rules
governing air pollution from old coal-fired power plants; emissions
that cause global warming; ballast water on ships contaminated
with
foreign species of plants and animals; sales of land tainted with
PCBs;
drilling for oil and gas on federal land; and scientific studies
that
underpin federal regulations.
In every case the business
community got what it wanted, and
environmentalists got mad.
Administration supporters
say the rule changes are in part attempts
to eliminate unnecessary government edicts that curtail energy
production, discourage investment, hinder the economy or cost
jobs.
Moreover, they say, not all rule changes have favored industry,
although they acknowledge that most have.
Frank Maisano, an energy
lobbyist at the Bracewell & Patterson
law firm in Washington, pointed to new rules restricting diesel
engines, issued last April. Those strong rules, praised by
environmentalists, were enacted over the objections of the
diesel-engine industry, Maisano said.
Nevertheless, Bill
Kovacs, the vice president for environmental
issues of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, said the business community
won more environmental battles during the final week of August
than it had during the entire eight years of the Clinton administration.
"We certainly
had a number of victories this week; I don't think
anyone can deny that," Kovacs said on the Friday before Labor
Day.
He and two big-industry
lobbyists said the Bush administration had
delivered nearly every environmental regulatory change business
put on its to-do list in January 2001. Their industries got every
change they wanted, the lobbyists said.
"This administration
is dismantling anything that's impairing
industry or the private sector's ability to develop, use land
or produce energy," said Carl Reidel, professor emeritus
of
environmental policy and law at the University of Vermont.
Experts say the timing
of the changes wasn't accidental.
"They need to
get this stuff out of the way before they get
into an election year; they need to get enough below the radar,"
said political science professor Stephen Meyer, the director
of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Project on
Environmental Politics and Policy.
"The Bush administration
always likes to announce unpopular
environmental policies in the dead of political and press night.
And you can't find a week when people are less likely to pay
attention than the end of August," said Phil Clapp, the president
of the National Environmental Trust.
Lisa Harrison, the
Environmental Protection Agency's chief
spokeswoman, denied that the timing was politically motivated.
"It is interesting
sport for people to offer their conjecture,
but it's nothing more than that," she said. "A lot always
comes
out of the agency. I never had a week that was not like last week."
John Byrne, the director
of the Center for Energy and Environmental
Policy at the University of Delaware, said the record spoke for
itself: "If you just looked at what were rule-making efforts
by the administration, you'd see this is a crowded four-month
period, particularly in difficult decisions."
Harrison agreed that
the administration has put most of its
regulatory agenda in place. "That's certainly a testament
. . .
to the president keeping his commitment," she said.
Environmentalists don't
see it that way. While all the changes
involved rewrites of arcane regulatory language, they constituted
major U-turns in policy.
"They're trying
to dismantle some of the original clean air and
water legislation that (President) Nixon put through," charged
environmental economist Lester Brown, the president of the Earth
Policy Institute. "They're going full bore."
The decisions included:
- Two controversial
changes in a rule governing expansion of
old coal-fired power plants, dramatically easing the rules
requiring companies to install new pollution controls when
they make big upgrades.
- Two legal opinions
ruling that carbon dioxide, which most
scientists say is the chief cause of global warming, isn't
a pollutant that the EPA can cite to regulate emissions
from cars and power plants. The rulings reverse a Clinton
administration legal opinion that carbon dioxide is a pollutant.
- An EPA legal opinion
declaring that it won't regulate ships'
ballast water under the Clean Water Act, turning the issue
over to the Coast Guard. The ballast water contains billions
of tiny fish, plants and other foreign invasive species that
scientists say are major threats to native species in American
waters.
- An edict changing
a 25-year-old rule to allow the sale of land
tainted with toxic PCBs.
- An order to Bureau
of Land Management field offices in the West
telling them to speed up the process permitting drilling for oil
and gas on federal lands.
- A new Office of Management
and Budget policy governing scientific
studies used to justify costly federal regulations. The policy
orders more stringent peer review; environmentalists fear it will
slow the enactment of environmental regulations.
"There's a lot
of dramatic change going on. And a good bit of which
would be thought of by many as not very environmentally sound,"
said Dan Esty, who was the EPA's deputy chief of staff in the
first
Bush administration and now heads Yale University's Center for
Environmental Law and Policy.
The rule changes that
affect air pollution from power plants
"are really breath-taking in terms of the scope of regulatory
change," said Chuck Davis, a Colorado State University political
scientist who specializes in environmental policy. "And there's
not a whole lot environmentalists can do about it, except challenge
it in courts."
Unable to get bills
that would weaken environmental laws through
Congress, the administration made all these changes as administrative
rulings.
"They leave the
laws in place, but undermine the regulations below
them, undermine the rules and undermine the agencies," said
MIT's
Meyer. "The details get lost because the average person doesn't
have the details or the time to follow it."
Kovacs of the Chamber
of Commerce said Bush was simply borrowing
a tactic that the Clinton administration routinely used.
"They figured
out what the Clinton administration figured out,"
Kovacs said. "If you control the agencies, you use them.
I wish
they had done it sooner."
© 2003 Knight-Ridder
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