Curbing EPA abuses

EPA_collusionAction needed now to end EPA deception, fraud, collusion, tyranny and destruction

Guest essay by Paul Driessen

Russian President Vladimir Putin is outraged that the United States has indicted 14 FIFA soccer officials, accusing them of corruption, racketeering, fraud and conspiracy, involving bribes totaling over $150 million in kickbacks for awarding tournament rights. He says the US is meddling in Russian affairs and plotting to steal the 2018 World Cup from his country. What chutzpah.

This is the same Mr. Putin who annexed Crimea and parts of Ukraine, and whose close cronies have been secretly channeling millions of dollars to US and EU environmentalist groups to oppose both American oil drilling in the Arctic and hydraulic fracturing – the game-changing process that is producing so much oil and gas that it’s slashed energy prices … and Russian revenues.

The Justice Department indictments generated global applause. Now the DOJ needs to conduct an equally zealous investigation into corruption, fraud and collusion in the Obama Environmental Protection Agency. Of course, that will never happen – no matter how rampant or flagrant the abuses have been.

As Kimberly Strassel documents in May 14 and May 21 articles, EPA emails and other documents reveal that the agency had already decided in 2010 to veto the proposed Pebble Mine in Alaska on ideological grounds, “well before it did any science” on the project’s potential environmental impacts. Meanwhile, an EPA biologist was working with eco-activists to recruit Native Americans to oppose the mine. “It’s not much of a leap,” Strassel writes, “to suggest that the EPA encouraged [petitions against the mine] so that it would have an excuse to intervene, run its science as cover, and block a project it already opposed.”

At the same time the biologist was aiding the petition drive, he was also helping to write EPA’s “options paper” for the mine – and lobbying his co-authors and report contributors to veto the mine, Strassel notes. Now, contrary to newly discovered agency emails, EPA bosses are pretending they never saw the options paper and trying to put the blame on low-level functionaries, when they were deep in cahoots all the way.

This represents incredible collusion, deception, fraud and abuse of power – to impose agency edicts and appease environmental ideologues in and out of EPA. Moreover, it is just the latest in a long line of abuses and usurpations by this Obama agency, under a culture of corruption and secretive, manipulated science used to justify regulatory overkill that imposes extensive damages for few or no benefits.

On climate, EPA relies on computer models and discredited IPCC reports to predict global catastrophes that it insists can be prevented if the United States slashes its fossil fuel use, carbon dioxide emissions and living standards, even if China, India and other developing countries do nothing. Meanwhile, real-world temperatures, hurricanes, tornadoes, polar ice and sea levels continue to defy the fear-mongering. So now the rhetoric has shifted yet again, to alleged national security and asthma threats from climate change.

Just this week, EPA announced that it will henceforth regulate any ponds, puddles, creeks, ditches and other waters that have a “significant nexus” to navigable waterways, even if that ill-defined connection enjoys six degrees of separation from streams in which you can actually paddle a kayak. EPA itself recognizes that “science” does not support its new regime, so now it says its “experience and expertise” justify regulating virtually all “waters of the United States” (WOTUS) – and thus of all lands, land uses, and family, farm and industrial activities not already covered by its climate and other rules.

Homeowners, farmers and businesses will now have to apply for permits to do almost anything that might theoretically pollute or affect waterways. Even taking a shower is now subject to EPA regulation.

On mercury, EPA is shutting down coal-fired power plants that emit barely 3% of all the mercury in US air and water. It claims this will prevent “0.00209 points” in American IQ losses and protect nonexistent “hypothetical female subsistence consumers” who every day for 70 years eat a pound of fish that they catch themselves in US navigable or “nexus” waterways.

For fine particulates, EPA wasn’t satisfied with regulations that prohibited more than one ounce of soot spread evenly in a volume of air a half-mile square by one story tall. When illegal experiments on humans failed to demonstrate that these levels were not actually “dangerous” or “lethal,” it imposed tougher standards anyway, as part of its war on coal.

Before he landed in jail for fraud, high level EPA bureaucrat John Beale concocted the sue-and-settle tactic, under which agency lawyers meet with environmentalist groups behind closed doors, agree to new regulatory standards, and then settle a friendly lawsuit whereby a court orders EPA to adopt the rules. Parties actually impacted by the new regulations never find out about them until it’s a “done deal.”

As presidential candidate Obama promised, under his policies electricity prices would “necessarily skyrocket.” But this means poor families, small businesses, factories, school districts, hospitals and churches must pay far more to keep their lights, heat, air conditioning and equipment running. That means people get laid off, fewer jobs are created, living standards decline, people’s health and wellbeing suffer, stress, depression, and drug and alcohol abuse increase, more people die during heat waves, and far more die during much deadlier winter cold snaps.

However, EPA ignores all these cold, hard realities – as it cherry-picks research and pseudo-science to support its agenda, ignores contradictory studies, and pays advisory boards and activist groups like the American Lung Association millions of dollars annually to rubberstamp and promote its decisions.

What can be done to curb these abuses and usurpations, and rein in this renegade agency?

Congress should cut EPA’s budget, to eliminate money that it routinely gives to activist and propaganda groups – and prevent the agency from spending any further taxpayer funds to regulate carbon dioxide, impose its new ozone, mercury and WOTUS rules, or participate in new sue-and-settle lawsuits.

Congress should also pass the Secret Science Reform Act, to ensure greater honesty and transparency in EPA rulemakings – and hold hearings on the Pebble Mine and other questionable agency actions, with EPA officials under oath and subject to penalties for perjury, malfeasance and criminality in office.

Presidential candidates must become well versed in these issues, discuss them during interviews and debates, and be prepared to amend, suspend and upend EPA decisions and regulations that were implemented in violation of transparency, integrity, and honest, robust science.

They should also examine how the federal EPA behemoth can be systematically dismantled and replaced with a “committee of the whole” of the 50 state environmental protection agencies – so as to balance and protect our needs for air and water quality, livelihoods, living standards, health and welfare.

State legislators, governors and attorneys general, companies and other aggrieved parties should continue to file lawsuits to block EPA excesses. However, they should stop relying on “abuse of discretion,” as courts almost always bow to government agencies. Instead, they need to demand that every agency decision is grounded in reliable, replicable, testable, peer-reviewed evidence, data and standards – as set forth in the Supreme Court’s Daubert, Joiner and Kumho decisions – and that the agencies demonstrate that they have fully accounted for the negative job, economic, health and welfare impacts of their rulings.

Meanwhile, as Charles Murray (author of By the People: Rebuilding liberty without permission) and others have suggested, states, communities, companies and individuals should engage in a new form of “systemic” civil disobedience: refusing to bow to harmful, nonsensical, tyrannical EPA regulations.

In short, we should take Dylan Thomas’s advice – and rage, rage against the dying of the light – due to regulations that are dimming the lights in our homes and the light of liberty and American exceptionalism.

Paul Driessen is senior policy analyst for the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow (www.CFACT.org), author of Eco-Imperialism: Green power – Black death and coauthor of Cracking Big Green: To save the world from the save-the-earth money machine.

© May 2015

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4TimesAYear
May 31, 2015 1:06 am

“They should also examine how the federal EPA can be systematically dismantled and replaced with a “committee of the whole” of the 50 state environmental protection agencies”
No, no, no, no, no – let the states do it individually. Otherwise you’re going to just create another bureaucratic nightmare. It’s bad enough that every agency, whether state or federal, already has their own little mini-EPA departments. Take a look at the federal and state parks – they have their environmental divisions. And the duplication of services doesn’t stop there. Stop, stop, stop, stop, stop! Dismantle the entire nightmare of federal government and make the states have individual departments with no duplication of services in any department.

John Catley
May 31, 2015 1:34 am

It’s a bit rich for an American to accuse a Russian of attempting to take control of other countries.
It would be better if such dubious politics were kept out of WUWT.
It’s supposed to be about science, not prejudice.
And just to make it clear, as a Brit, I am somewhat ashamed of the track record of my country in respect of world politics too.

clipe
Reply to  John Catley
May 31, 2015 4:22 pm

It would be better if such dubious politics were kept out of WUWT.
It’s supposed to be about science, not prejudice.

And then you go and spoil it all by saying somethin’ stupid =

JJM Gommers
May 31, 2015 2:11 am

The introduction is somewhat controversial to say.
Even our Dutch lawyers agreed that Putin has a point concerning muddling in other countries. Putin din’t talk about bribing because that happens everywhere.
Crimea was Russian federation tertitory until it was annexed by Ykraine as a “gift”, no one understood at the breakup of the Soviet Union that it didn’t return to the Russian Federation. The policy of te West was to reduce the Russian Federation as much as possible. Even people in Ykraine were surprised, except the Bandera fascists of West Ykraine. So it’s understandable Russia saw the opportunity to take it back after the West supported coup in Kiev(Maidan). Maybe not elegant but justifiable.
How dirty the issue is handled by the West is demonstrated by the downing of MH17. 3days before the Kiev administration told the western representatives about the risks of flying over the area, the dutch authorities don’t want to reveal what was disscussed because of political and liable reason.
And what to think about the appointment of the former president of Georgia as governor of Odessa!?The etnic clinsing of the DonBass region!?
I drove by car over 10000 km to see it with my own eyes.

Bill Marsh
Editor
Reply to  JJM Gommers
May 31, 2015 3:56 am

Crimea has always been Russian, but, it wasn’t ‘annexed’ by Ukraine. It was given to it by the Supreme Soviet in 1954. The ‘Presidium of the Supreme Soviet’ ruled all of the various ‘federations’ of the Union of Soviet Federated Socialist Republics, which included the Russian Federated Socialist Republic. While you can debate the ‘legality’ of the Presidium’s action (and that the prime mover was Khrushchev).
The ‘real’ purpose of the move was to ‘bind Ukraine eternally to Russia’ and help erase the ‘national’ identity of the various SSRs into one overall Soviet Socialist Republic. Didn’t turn out to well tho.

JJM Gommers
Reply to  Bill Marsh
May 31, 2015 5:08 am

If that was the intention they should have returned the ‘gift’ when Soviet breakup was taking place in 1991, by the way Krutchev was of Ukrain origin and party leader at that time, he decided and if you didn’t agree a oneway ticket to Magadan was the alternative.

Bill Marsh
Editor
May 31, 2015 3:44 am

Mr Putin needs the US to be his Oceania. He can’t use the other ‘budding’ Superpower, China because they share a very long border and the Chinese, unlike the US, might actually take action over some of the stuff he does to keep his people’s focus on a faux threat outward.

Bill Marsh
Editor
May 31, 2015 4:03 am

I think you left out a few of Mr Putin’s activities, such as heavily funding groups opposed to American fracking, as a way of limiting competition and keeping the price of oil artificially high to support his military buildup. After all oil is the primary monetary resource for Russia, without high ($100bbl+) oil prices the Russian economy goes into the tank.

cedarhill
May 31, 2015 4:22 am

The better solution is an Article V convention to put limits on Federal powers. Today there are no limits except what the Federal system decides. Consider the Federals write the laws an/or Executive Orders, Federal agencies implement and Federal courts decide how much power they (the Federals) want to deploy at a given point in time.
Simple put, the fatal flaw in the Constitution was discovered very early in Marbury and simply expanded over the intervening 200+ years. There should have been, for example, a super-court composed of Chief Justices of each State that could be empanelled at the request of 10 or more State Attorney Generals to review the SCOTUS decisions. Today, all you need are five totalitarian minded people to implement totalitarian rule regardless of “The People”. And they can do it based on PR, propaganda or even the junk science of CO2 as “pollution”.
Otherwise, at best, you’re just delaying the final act in a system driving toward the rise of the American version of Putin.

Bruce Cobb
May 31, 2015 4:51 am

It happens on both sides of the aisle; take an idea which has merit (but only to a point), and hold that idea above all others, and you take one step away from democratic principles towards a police-state. This applies to ideas such as protecting the environment, national security, and even things like handicap accessibility. Government overreach happens gradually, bit by bit, until we wake up someday and ask ourselves, “how did this happen?” Simple. We allowed it to. Once the structures are put in place in the form of laws, it becomes near-impossible to get rid of them.

Alan Robertson
Reply to  Bruce Cobb
May 31, 2015 5:53 am

Well said.

RobRoy
Reply to  Bruce Cobb
May 31, 2015 11:29 am

I’m often misunderstood when I say that Handicap Parking spaces are un-American. We are supposed to be one people with equal protection under the law. Not anymore.
Now we have “Hate Crimes”. As un-American as handicapped parking because this also divides US citizens into special groups.

Crispin in Waterloo
Reply to  RobRoy
May 31, 2015 12:49 pm

Weepy Bill McGibbon of 350.org is given to hate speech all the time – their videos are documentary evidence of it. I think hate speech laws are great. It is just that hate speech is tolerated against groups ‘we don’t like’. As long as hate speech is directed against people we all hate, it is considered OK, right?.
Tom Lehrer said, “There are people who do not love their fellow man, and I hate people like that!”
++++++++
Incidentally, my use of the term ‘Weepy Bill’ is considered under varsity Equity and Diversity Office rules to be a ‘micro-aggression’ and worthy of sanction because it may cause Weepy Bill discomfort or unease. I won’t apologise for this indiscretion because of Weepy Bill’s illegal yet unprosecuted call for the murder of people who he disagrees with and his promotion in a video of the mock execution of students at schools who bothered to investigate the lies he promotes supporting the erroneous notion of anthropogenic CO2-caused climate change catastrophe. His hate-crime calls to murder are ‘terrorism’ when issued by the likes of ISIS.
350.org is now supporting campaigns to extend their intolerant views through varsity campuses focussed on causing as much economic damage as possible.
http://www.queensu.ca/secretariat/divestment/qbacc.pdf
I feel 350.org should be investigated by CSIS as a foreign terrorist organisation and funding of them blocked with no-fly bans imposed on the chief architects and principal supporters of their violent creed.

Crispin in Waterloo
Reply to  RobRoy
May 31, 2015 7:10 pm

My correction and apology for misattribution:
Bill McKibben reports here that the 10:10 video had nothing to do with him and he didn’t like it.
http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2010/10/01/206816/bill-mckibben-days-that-suck/
I read on…tt was painful to read that list. Truly, the warmist community is a hateful breed. All the usual garbage about skeptics plus this extraordinary quote from Jim Hansen:
+++++++++
NASA’s Hansen: Would recent extreme “events have occurred if atmospheric carbon dioxide had remained at its pre-industrial level of 280 ppm?” The “appropriate answer” is “almost certainly not.”
+++++++++
So the world was not plagued by extreme weather before human industrialisation? Let’s check the facts:
http://scienceandpublicpolicy.org/images/stories/papers/reprint/chronological_listing.pdf
1412 A.D. In England beginning on October 12, there were three floods in the River Thames, one upon another and no ebbing between. The likes of this event was never known before.
In 1684, the River Thames at London, England froze 11 inches thick. …On the shores of England, France, Flanders and Holland, the sea was frozen a few miles wide in such a way that for more than 14 days, boot packages could not enter the ports on or off. Most birds were killed; in the next summer we saw none. In the woods, many oak trees burst. The frost destroyed almost all the plants and the hopes of the peasants…
1699 A.D. Charleston, South Carolina in the United States was nearly depopulated by an awful tempest
and inundation.

On 25 August 1775, at eight o’clock in the evening, a hurricane from the west, struck Montpellier,
France. It levelled walls and uprooted trees. The gales lashed for an hour with frightening speeds. But
only 0.1 inches (3 millimeters) of rain fell during this period. The barometer went down to 736
millimeters.

Sandy’s max pressure drop, but over land. Were it not for climate craziness one could say we live in a benign time.

Dodgy Geezer
May 31, 2015 5:14 am

…The Justice Department indictments generated global applause. Now the DOJ needs to conduct an equally zealous investigation into corruption, fraud and collusion in the Obama Environmental Protection Agency. Of course, that will never happen – no matter how rampant or flagrant the abuses have been…
Er…with heavily embedded corruption, a government can investigate foreign affairs reasonably fairly, but cannot investigate itself.
Which suggests that we should be calling for the Russians, the Indians and the Chinese to investigate the EPA…

RobRoy
Reply to  Dodgy Geezer
May 31, 2015 3:10 pm

It’s called mis-direction. Magicians and pickpockets depend on it.

LarryFine
May 31, 2015 6:11 am

Here’s a thought. Replace the EPA with a new organization whose sole task is to facilitate communication among states. Let states and groups of states in the various regions decide how THEY want to proceed with environmental policies that affect them the most.
Nobody could possibly have a greater stake in preserving and managing each local environment properly than the people living in them. Senators and lobbyists in DC certainly don’t have a clue what to do across the nation. Their only interests are self interests.
If we gave the new paper tiger agency a name that sounds like a giant bureaucracy, like the Federal Regional Environmental Exchange (FREE), but we didn’t let anyone know anything about it until the legislation replacing the EPA was passed into law (which is how our Republic now operates), big government types are sure to support it.

May 31, 2015 6:26 am

The first restraint upon government is by a limited budget, and thus by limited funds. But when government gives itself power to create near-infinite money out of thin air, then it has near-infinite funding of near-infinite bureaucracy by which to create and enforce near-infinite regulations each having the weight of law.
The first order of business of an Article V convention of the States must be to restrain government’s ability to create more money than the citizens want to send in the form of taxes upon themselves. We must stop near-infinite money so we stop near-infinite government.

Bill Illis
May 31, 2015 6:53 am

Just imagine how much FIFA-type corruption goes on in the green energy subsidiy and grant game.

nigelf
May 31, 2015 7:31 am

Ideally, the EPA should be disbanded and all their employees sent to the unemployment line to see how things work in the real world, but that’s unlikely. Realistically, the next best thing would be to drastically cut their funding (at least 80%) and mandate that anything they say is only a suggestion with no power to enforce or coerce anyone.
Kick the legs out from underneath them and move on.

emsnews
May 31, 2015 10:15 am

Remember: demonize Russia and China and we can easily get WWIII.
WWIII will be super hot, super bad, super polluting and super deadly. Most humanity will die in WWIII. Japan and much of Europe will be rendered uninhabitable as well as huge hunks of the East and West Coasts of North America and half of China and a small segment of Russia.
The main survivors will be in South America and Africa. If they are lucky.
And all issues come to this: Humans CAN wreck this planet pretty badly and the tools lie near at hand on a hair trigger setting. Some stupid dispute over very little can, like WWI, launch the annihilation of civilization.

Reply to  emsnews
May 31, 2015 10:41 am

Naw, humans can destroy themselves, but won’t have much effect on the planet. There were some 2100-2200 nuclear tests done underground, on the ground, in the air, and underwater, worldwide during the 1950s and 1960s. If targeted, those devices would have eliminate a large part of civilization, yet they had essentially no effect on the earth. As George Carlin was remarked (quote is from memory, may not be exact), “The Earth will be just fine. It’s Man who’s f**ked.”

Reply to  Jtom
May 31, 2015 10:44 am

George Carlin *once* remarked. How does that happen?

emsnews
Reply to  Jtom
May 31, 2015 12:22 pm

Not one of those test bombs fell on nuclear power plants near major cities. Everyone planning WWIII knows very well now that these are now high target hit points since it renders the places uninhabitable for generations. Imagine Indian Point being nuked.

RobRoy
Reply to  Jtom
May 31, 2015 3:15 pm

emsnews, If you remember the Cold War, we quite often imagined being nuked.

TomRude
May 31, 2015 11:21 am

Driessen’s anti Russian garbage has no place on WUWT.

emsnews
Reply to  TomRude
May 31, 2015 12:23 pm

I agree fully. It shows us how propaganda works. Demonize the ‘other’ and aim our ire at it. Russia is very dangerous for this purpose unlike, say, poor little Saddam who was disarmed before we attacked.

RobRoy
Reply to  TomRude
May 31, 2015 3:23 pm

Really though, the article is on the EPA. The Putin stuff is inconsequential. Putin is KGB, Leopards don’t change their spots. Remember the Cold War?. US vs Russia vs US demonization is old hat. Nothing new. When was it not prevalent? (During the fall of the Soviet Union, perhaps)

clipe
Reply to  TomRude
May 31, 2015 4:45 pm

You agree pro Russian garbage has no place on WUWT then?

TomRude
Reply to  clipe
May 31, 2015 5:36 pm

Is it an article about EPA? What’s the anti Russian rant has to do with it? Moreover, Driessen should know that for many years before Putin was supposedly financing anti fracking groups, we all know reading Bishop Hills blog that the worst anti fracking crowd for a long time were the very British and EU politicians, that included France’s Sarkozy’s Minister NKM… So stop reinventing history here. Europeans did all they could to kill shale gas exploration way before the Ukrainian crisis came to the forefront.

Crispin in Waterloo
May 31, 2015 12:32 pm

“…that every agency decision is grounded in reliable, replicable, testable, peer-reviewed evidence, data and standards …”
This does not go far enough. Because of the flagrant abuse of, and the systematic failure of, ‘the peer review process’ it is necessary at least for a while to introduce a public comment period so that objections to the ‘science’ presented by or on behalf of the EPA can be countered with alternative, factual evidence. This is necessary because the one-sided manner in which things have been going for a while.
EPA regulatory enthusiasm is mostly evidence of empire building. Careers are built in government (including the EPA) for the heck of it, not because they are needed. Bringing the entire physical society under the control of a group that is not answerable to Congress is amazing. In a way it is like the military – if you can drum up enough viable enemies you keep your budget. If there are none, create them, If they are weak, strengthen them until you have justification for ‘action’. Action requires a budget.
If the Western countries stopped their devotion to warfare and CO2 spending, they could easily develop the rest of the planet to a high standard of sustainable living. Surely there are personal empires to build in there too? Why not try peace for a while? If it doesn’t work, it will be easy to go back to fighting. On climate, why not try scientific sanity for a while? If it doesn’t work, it will be easy to go back to CAGW on the next ENSO uptick. In the meantime, people are cold and hungry.

Dr. Bogus Pachysandra
May 31, 2015 4:01 pm

Well,,,, I don’t want to rant,,,, but,,,,, I was the head operator of a small public water supply for 30 years. 400 connections. I’ve dealt with the epa for a long time. Now that I’m retired, I don’t miss that contact. Every couple years the epa would come out for an inspection. The guy would always be friendly, and positive about the system,,,,to my face. Later, my bosses would get a scathing report that was total bs. Luckily, my bosses, a very big publicly traded company knew the report was bs. We were always in strict compliance, with some of the best water in the state, and the best service record. But the jerks at the epa had to justify their jobs! Things like “Add 6 inches of dirt around the #4 wellhead.” Total two-faced tree huggers. For some reason, they wanted us to sell out to a big company. No complaints mind you! Happy customers. Just the epa frame of mind. I despise them!

jmorpuss
May 31, 2015 4:29 pm

Out of all these environments http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Environment I would say the knowledge environment has the biggest effect on our everyday lives. You protect and control knowledge or knowing and you control everything the future has to bring . Propaganda Is part of our everyday lives ,definition. Official government communications to the public that are designed to influence opinion. The information may be true or false, but it is always carefully selected for its political effect.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Propaganda

johann wundersamer
June 1, 2015 10:07 am

Henry chance on May 30, 2015 at 4:47 pm
Guarding wetlands.
The wetlands are a strong
source of CH4. (methane for non-science libs)
____
Yes, your gastro enterities wetlands. Your non-science methane.
Vegetarian, I suppose.
Do cope with.