Budget and personnel cuts reflect environmental progress and essential regulatory reforms
Guest opinion by Paul Driessen
The Trump White House wants significant reductions at the Environmental Protection Agency: two dozen or more programs, including a dozen dealing with President Obama’s climate initiatives; a 20% downsizing in EPA’s 15,000-person workforce; and a one-fourth reduction in its $8.1 billion budget.
The plan requires congressional approval, and thus is hardly a “done deal.” Not surprisingly, it is generating howls of outrage. Former U.S. EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy says the proposal would be “crippling,” and “devastating for the agency’s ability to protect public health.”
One employee resigned because the cuts would prevent him from serving “environmental justice” and “vulnerable communities.” A congressman claimed EPA is “already operating at 1989 staffing levels,” and the reductions could mean “cutting the meat and muscle with the fat.”
A deep breath and objective assessment are in order.
1) Since EPA was created in December 1970, America’s environmental progress has been amazing. Our cars now emit less than 2% of the pollutants that came out of tailpipes 47 years ago. Coal-fired power plant particulate, mercury, nitrogen oxide and sulfur dioxide emissions are 10-20 % of their 1970 levels. The white plumes above factory and power plant “smoke stacks” are 90% steam (water vapor) and plant-fertilizing carbon dioxide (which Obama EPA officials disingenuously called “carbon pollution”).
Our lakes, rivers, streams and coastal areas are infinitely cleaner and far safer to drink from or swim in. The notorious lead contamination in Flint, Michigan water occurred under Gina McCarthy’s watch, because her agency didn’t do its job. It was her EPA officials who also triggered the infamous Gold King Mine blowout that contaminated hundreds of miles of river water with arsenic and other toxic metals.
So much for “protecting public health,” ensuring “environmental justice,” and safeguarding our most “vulnerable communities.” It’s as if we’ve come full circle, and now need to be protected from EPA. In truth, that goes all the way back to the agency’s first administrator, William Ruckelshaus, who ignored his own scientists, banned DDT, and sentenced tens of millions of Africans and Asians to death from malaria.
2) EPA became bloated, incompetent and derelict in its fundamental duties largely because it became ideological, politicized and determined to control what it was never intended to regulate. Through mission creep, sue-and-settle lawsuits, and an eight-year quest to help “fundamentally transform” America’s energy and economic system, it attempted to regulate every rivulet, puddle and other “Water of the US,” stuck its nose in numerous local affairs – like the road to a nickel mine in Michigan – and colluded with environmentalists to block Alaska’s Pebble Mine before a permit application had even been submitted.
Most egregious was the agency’s use of alleged “dangerous manmade climate change” to justify its “war on coal,” its “Clean Power Plan,” and its determination to slash fossil fuel use and carbon dioxide emissions by regulating nearly every factory, farm, hospital, mall, drilling project and vehicle in America.
EPA’s other chief climate crusade target was methane, which it called “an extremely powerful climate pollutant” and absurdly claimed is responsible for “a fourth of all global warming to date.” Methane is a tiny 0.00017% of Earth’s atmosphere – equivalent to $1.70 out of $1 million (and compared to 0.04% for CO2) – and U.S. energy operations account for less than a tenth of all annual natural and manmade methane emissions. To control that, EPA wanted industry to spend billions of dollars per year.
It also demanded that cars and light trucks get 54.5 mpg by 2025. To meet that standard, automakers would have to downsize and plasticize vehicles, making them less safe and causing thousands of serious injuries and deaths – a reality that EPA ignored in its cost/benefit and environmental justice analysis.
When states, industries or experts raised questions about EPA’s “CO2 endangerment” decision, its biased and dishonest “social cost of carbon” analysis, or its use of “secret science” and highly suspect computer models to justify “climate chaos” claims – the agency railed about “intimidation” and “interference” with its mandate to “protect public health and welfare.” It’s time to take those questions seriously.
3) EPA obviously has too many anti-energy, anti-development staff, programs and dollars looking for more activities to regulate and terminate, to justify their existence. As these programs are properly and necessarily cut back, EPA budgets and personnel should likewise be reduced.
4) Complying with EPA and other government regulations inflicts staggering costs that reverberate throughout our economy, as businesses and families struggle to read, comprehend and comply with them. The Competitive Enterprise Institute calculated that federal regulations alone cost $1.885 trillion per year – prior to the epic regulatory tsunami of 2016 – with the Obama era alone generating $800 billion to $890 billion in annual regulatory burdens, the American Action Forum estimated.
EPA alone is responsible for well over $353 billion of the cumulative annual federal regulatory bill, CEI’s Wayne Crews estimated, based on 2012 data from the first four years of the Obama presidency. Just as disturbing, the total federal regulatory bill is equal to all individual and corporate tax payments combined.
Even more frightening, embedded in those federal regulations are fines and jail terms for some 5,000 federal crimes and 300,000 less serious criminal offenses. An absence of intent to violate the law, even failure to know and understand millions of pages of laws and regulations, even the mistaken assumption that no agency could possibly implement such an absurd rule, is no excuse. You’re still guilty as charged.
These regulatory burdens crush innovation, job creation, economic growth, and business and family wellbeing. They kill jobs, raise the cost of energy, food, products and services, reduce living standards, harm health and shorten lives. They violate any honest concept of “environmental justice.” Poor, minority, working class and other vulnerable families are hardest hit.
5) In fact, environmental justice is little more than a meaningless, malleable, phony concoction whose primary purpose is promoting progressive programs. Whatever EPA seeks to do advances justice and protects the vulnerable. Whatever an industry does or wants is unjust. Whenever anyone criticizes an agency action, it reflects racism or callous disregard for public health.
Only the effects of government regulations, and the actions of government regulators, appear to be exempt from recrimination, intimidation and penalties imposed in the name of environmental justice.
6) Fully 98% of all counties in the United States voted for Donald Trump and his vision for a less regulated, more prosperous nation, with fewer diktats from a Washington, DC that exempts itself from rules it inflicts on others. They did not vote for rolling back real environmental progress – and know full well that President Trump and EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt are doing no such thing.
They also know there is ample room – and abundant need – for the proposed EPA reductions. That’s why a CNN/ORC poll after Mr. Trump’s February 28 speech found that 70% of Americans who watched felt more optimistic about the nation’s future, and his policies and priorities were what the country needs now.
7) If President Trump’s program, budget and personnel proposals for EPA are approved, many highly paid agency employees will lose their jobs. That’s always painful, as thousands of coal miners, power plant operators and other employees in communities impacted by heavy-handed EPA regulations can attest – and as the powerful new documentary film “Collateral Damage” demonstrates.
However, downsizing is often essential to the survival of a company – or a country. As President Obama was fond of saying, elections have consequences. Let’s hope Congress and the Trump Administration move forward on EPA restructuring, stand firmly in the face of the predictable forces of professional outrage, and do a good job explaining why these changes are absolutely essential.
Paul Driessen is senior policy analyst for the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow (www.CFACT.org), and author of Eco-Imperialism: Green power – Black death and other books on the environment.
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The G20 finance ministers meet Mar 17-18 with rumors of reduced governmental funding for global warming. This is the first big test of the new sheriff in town.
EPA needs to work with infrastructure improvements regarding clean lead-free water, sewage handling, and garbage. These areas constitute the underlying foundation of a nation of states that works to stay clean and healthy. Any detriment to these areas and we will not withstand a world that covets our land. They are as important as our roadways, railways, river ways, and ports.
Re: Socialism and Big:
From memory, so probably way wrong but…
When Britain had An Empire, seemingly 4,000 civil servants (bureaucrats) administered it.
Said empire encompassed 25% of the World’s people and land.
They’ve just built a new Ivory Tower in Brussels and some part of the hoo-ha & justification for it was that it would be hosting 6,000 meetings per day.
Is it OK to ask wtf they’re all talking about in there?
Yea.
1) How to run your life
2) How to spend your money
3) What “free” speech you’re allow to exercise
An EPA rep also conducts environmental orientations for new Brussels bureaucrats on how to:
4. Bend a fish,
5. Cross a road in the forest, and
6. Not become a crispy critter during a wildfire.
“Fully 98% of all counties in the United States voted for Donald Trump and his vision for a less regulated, more prosperous nation”
Now I am the first to admit I’m not an expert on the Byzantine mechanisms of US elections, but if Trump had 98% of all counties voting for him, why did he lose the popular vote by millions?
Because large cities are located in the small fraction of counties, and urban populations have a large proportion of minorities and upscale middle class.
That 98% is meaningless, as is the popular vote, because the system awards electoral college votes. Most states award those winner take all.
Nowadays the candidates have polling data and focus groups, they can prepare a message focused on a specific set of voters to secure the electoral college win. For example, Texas votes republican, California democrat. This means trump didn’t have to do much to get the Texas vote. And there was nothing he could do to win California. He focused on issues important to states that would be in play, such as Ohio and Florida.
Trump is a very flexible guy. The record shows he tends to be Republican lite, but he needed votes, so he went for the Tea Party anti inmigrant forgotten deplorables, and they responded. Hillary on the other hand sold herself as a female Obama. But she has no charisma, her political career was designed for her by the Deep State. And it showed.
She was a lousy candidate, this is shown simply because Trump was also a poor candidate, the guy looks like he doesn’t know how to manage a grocery store chain, never mind a country, but won easily.
I think the system is broken, so the USA is likely to suffer an eventual demise similar to what happened to imperial Rome, the Spanish empire, etc. it looks like it’ll be internal infighting coupled to lousy leaders until the end, which may come within decades unless the voters wake up and get a bit more sophisticated.
Unfortunately, enough voters to matter aren’t going to “wake up and get a bit more sophisticated” until the media and education industries are reclaimed from the left and that is likely generations away, if ever. As some comedian likes to say (Ron White, maybe?) “You can’t fix stupid.”
Fox News isn’t a paragon of decent news coverage either. Right now I prefer Al Jazeera and my own digging around.
“…the guy looks like he doesn’t know how to manage a grocery store chain…”
What do his looks have to do with his ability to conduct business?
“” looks like he doesn’t know how to manage a grocery store chain””..
Fernando, you have to put the election in context..
The other choice was Hillary and the democrats…
..who have proven they can not run a grocery store chain
the guy looks like he doesn’t know how to manage a grocery store chain, never mind a country
And yet he somehow managed many orders of magnitude of that – he was building and operating bunch of skyscrapers, casinos, multi-billion dollar businesses, have tens of thousand people employed and earn billions of dollars of income. Among other things.
And almost forgot – he also run a wildly successful TV show for over 10 years.
The looks could be very, very deceiving.
“..who have proven they can not run a grocery store chain”
Like the Left in the UK, it is doubtful they could run the proverbial whelk stall.
Once they run out of “Other Peoples’ Money” to p1ss up the wall to finance their crackpot virtue signalling feelgood schemes like transgender toilets, they’re screwed.
Illegal voters.
Ballot stuffing.
i.e. He didn’t , just some people want to believe that so they can protest and feel righteous about the destruction they cause.
By “Byzantine mechanisms of US elections” I suppose your referring to the electoral college.
The electoral college is not out dated nor complicated. It is an essential element of Federalism. In essence it is the states which elect the president and not the people. A strictly popular vote would allow the people of a few most populous states to dominate. That would be completely unacceptable to the populations in the other states and would inevitably lead to the fracturing of the nation in one way or another.
A side benefit of the electoral college is that it makes it nearly impossible for electoral fraud to be successful in determining who is elected to be POTUS.
Gareth Phillips – March 12, 2017 at 1:24 am
Simple arithmetic, …… as an example, West Virginia has a total of 1,226,745 registered voters …. and a total of 55 counties that Donald Trump won, …………. whereas …… New York City alone has approximately 5,000,000 registered voters and encompasses 5 counties which Hillary Clinton won.
55 counties for Trump, ……… 5 counties for Hillary.
The discussions of Hillary Clinton winning the popular vote vs Donald Trump winning the Electoral College vs counties ignores one fundamental fact. Presidential electoral politics are focused on winning the Electoral College because that is what matters. If the president was elected by popular vote we would have completely different campaigns that would be focused on a few populous states and ignoring the rest of the country. There is a certain wisdom to the electoral college. As RAH noted above, this would lead to the fracturing of our country.
http://i.imgur.com/oAlVHGUr.png
It may be true that Trump is trying to reduce spending on departments and initiatives he disagrees with. But it’s important to remember that when such financial governance is applied to himself and his family, the skies the limit. All Presidents and their families need security, but it appears that Trump sees the issue as a cash cow which he will mik for all it’s worth.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/donald-trump-costs-trips-security-taxpayer-barack-obama-month-year-a7586261.html
Gareth, read up on stage 9) Selective Outrage.
Others might look at a few million spent (if true) on POTUS countered by billions in cuts at the EPA and elsewhere as a good return on investment. Your glass is just half full.
https://wattsupwiththat.com/2017/03/05/a-primer-on-the-hatred-of-climate-skeptics-one-woman-saw-the-light-and-is-no-longer-a-leftist/
Gareth, fact checking your ‘Independant’ (yea right) article which completely omits numbers, it is not true as far as I can find. Trump was estimated to spend 3 million on his Mar-a-Logo trip. Obama spent 12 million per year. Trump has another 9 million to spend just to break even this year. It’s expensive with all that security and dedicated transport. Selective Outrage is blinding.
http://www.judicialwatch.org/press-room/press-releases/85758/
http://www.judicialwatch.org/press-room/press-releases/judicial-watch-new-obama-travel-costs-bring-eight-year-total-96-million/
“Your glass is just half full.”
Gareth is a Left winger.
Left wingers’ glasses are always half empty.
If they were half full, they wouldn’t be Left wingers.
Funny how the socialists never complained when Barack sent Michelle to Hawaii on Air Force one, then a week later had AF1 make a second round trip to pick him up so that he could join the family on vacation.
Nor mention or seem to recognize that he is not collecting a salary from the government.
Yeah, shur nuff, the above is a typical disingenuous comment that one expects from a highly partisan Democrat who has been publicly embarrassed in front of gawd and everyone for the dastardly dishonest deeds, lying commentary and/or extremely wasteful spending of taxpayer monies that only benefits themselves, the Democrat Party and/or the political donor$ to the Democrat Party and its active politicians.
“YUP”, shur nuff, …… “the skies were the limit” ….. when Obama and the Hillary Democrats ordered that new $4 BILLION DOLLAR Air Force One luxury airliner for jet-setting around the country to various Democrat “fund-raisers” and vacations here, there and yonder …….. but President Trump said “HELL NO, …… I’m not flying around in a $4 BILLION dollar airplane”.
Whenever the Democrat chicanery gets “outed” …….. they immediately begin blaming their dastardly deeds on the Republicans.
Excellent article!
Here are my Observations and Conclusions on the subject of Energy and Environment, written in 2015.
We knew most of these conclusions decades ago; even the newer bits are now almost a decade old.
Almost everything the EPA has done in the past eight years had been dysfunctional and counterproductive – harmful to the economy AND the environment.
One wonders how they could get it so completely wrong.
Regards to all, Allan
EVIDENCE SUGGESTING TEMPERATURE DRIVES ATMOSPHERIC CO2 MORE THAN CO2 DRIVES TEMPERATURE
September 4, 2015
By Allan MacRae
https://wattsupwiththat.com/2015/06/13/presentation-of-evidence-suggesting-temperature-drives-atmospheric-co2-more-than-co2-drives-temperature/
Observations and Conclusions:
1. Temperature, among other factors, drives atmospheric CO2 much more than CO2 drives temperature. The rate of change dCO2/dt is closely correlated with temperature and thus atmospheric CO2 LAGS temperature by ~9 months in the modern data record
2. CO2 also lags temperature by ~~800 years in the ice core record, on a longer time scale.
3. Atmospheric CO2 lags temperature at all measured time scales.
4. CO2 is the feedstock for carbon-based life on Earth, and Earth’s atmosphere and oceans are clearly CO2-deficient. CO2 abatement and sequestration schemes are nonsense.
5. Based on the evidence, Earth’s climate is insensitive to increased atmospheric CO2 – there is no global warming crisis.
6. Recent global warming was natural and irregularly cyclical – the next climate phase following the ~20 year pause will probably be global cooling, starting by ~2020 or sooner.
7. Adaptation is clearly the best approach to deal with the moderate global warming and cooling experienced in recent centuries.
8. Cool and cold weather kills many more people than warm or hot weather, even in warm climates. There are about 100,000 Excess Winter Deaths every year in the USA and about 10,000 in Canada.
9. Green energy schemes have needlessly driven up energy costs, reduced electrical grid reliability and contributed to increased winter mortality, which especially targets the elderly and the poor.
10. Cheap, abundant, reliable energy is the lifeblood of modern society. When politicians fool with energy systems, real people suffer and die. That is the tragic legacy of false global warming alarmism.
Allan MacRae, Calgary
Allan M.R. MacRae March 12, 2017 at 1:53 am
CO2 is the feedstock for carbon-based life on Earth
Thanks for using that phrase from My Comment that appeared in Watts Up With That article:
Richard Lindzen Petition to President Trump:
Withdraw from the UN Convention on Climate Change
https://wattsupwiththat.com/2017/02/25/richard-lindzen-petition-to-president-trump-withdraw-from-the-un-convention-on-climate-change/
Hmmm my apology for implying you used my phrase – I didn’t follow your link until after I clicked on “Post Comment”
No worries Steve. I started writing about “CO2 Starvation” circa 2008 – the following post is from January 2009.
I later changed 200ppm to ~150ppm and added comments about C3, C4 and CAM photosynthesis, but the problem remains much the same.
I have corresponded about this subject with several parties, including Patrick Moore, who later wrote an important paper about it.
Here is a question for you:
Since “CO2 lags temperature at all measured time scales”, as I proved in January 2008, how is it that the mainstream global warming debate between warmists and skeptics is STILL about “the magnitude of climate sensitivity to CO2”, in effect “By how much can the future cause the past?”
I know it is a bit more complicated than I stated above, but not much. This seems to be a huge and voluntary “blind spot” for the climate science community. One is reminded of the controversies of “continental drift”, or the “bacterial origin of stomach ulcers”. Why is this subject not openly and rationally debated? It is controversial, but is it really that scary?
Regards, Allan
https://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/01/30/co2-temperatures-and-ice-ages/#comment-79524
(Plant) Food for Thought (apologies – written too late at night)
Background:
http://www.planetnatural.com/site/xdpy/kb/implementing-co2.html
1. “As CO2 is a critical component of growth, plants in environments with inadequate CO2 levels – below 200 ppm – will cease to grow or produce.”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_dioxide_in_the_Earth's_atmosphere
2. “The longest ice core record comes from East Antarctica, where ice has been sampled to an age of 800 kyr BP (Before Present). During this time, the atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration has varied by volume between 180 – 210 ppm during ice ages, increasing to 280 – 300 ppm during warmer interglacials…
… On longer timescales, various proxy measurements have been used to attempt to determine atmospheric carbon dioxide levels millions of years in the past. These include boron and carbon isotope ratios in certain types of marine sediments, and the number of stomata observed on fossil plant leaves. While these measurements give much less precise estimates of carbon dioxide concentration than ice cores, there is evidence for very high CO2 volume concentrations between 200 and 150 myr BP of over 3,000 ppm and between 600 and 400 myr BP of over 6,000 ppm.”
Questions and meanderings:
According to para.1 above:
During Ice ages, does almost all plant life die out as a result of some combination of lower temperatures and CO2 levels that fell below 200ppm (para. 2 above)? If not, why not?
Does this (possible) loss of plant life have anything to do with rebounding of atmospheric CO2 levels as the world exits the Ice Age (in combination with other factors such as ocean exsolution)? Could this contribute to the observed asymmetry?
When all life on Earth comes to an end, will it be because CO2 permanently falls below 200ppm as it is permanently sequestered in carbonate rocks, hydrocarbons, coals, etc.?
Since life on Earth is likely to end due to a lack of CO2, should we be paying energy companies to burn fossil fuels to increase atmospheric CO2, instead of fining them due to the false belief that they cause global warming?
Could T.S. Eliot have been thinking about CO2 starvation when he wrote:
“This is the way the world ends
Not with a bang but a whimper.”
Regards, Allan 🙂
Allan M.R. MacRae March 12, 2017 at 9:41 am
Here is a question for you:
Since “CO2 lags temperature at all measured time scales”, as I proved in January 2008, how is it that the mainstream global warming debate between warmists and skeptics is STILL about “the magnitude of climate sensitivity to CO2”, in effect “By how much can the future cause the past?”
Or how much can predictions oops projections of the future change the present?
Yes CO2 lags by something like 800 years or so.
Well what happened 800 years ago?
Can you say Medieval Warm Period?
Yes Steve, the MWP is one possible cause, among others – this has all been discussed before, but then swept back under the rug.
Murry Salby stated writing about this hypothesis circa 2010 and got fired from Macquarie University for that. Murry takes the concept a bit further than I do, which tends to drag in the Mass Balance Argument, Ferdinand Engelbeen’s favorite story.
I do not need to go that far to make my key point, which is that “Temperature drives atmospheric CO2 much more than CO2 drives temperature” and “There is NO real global warming crisis”.
Humlum et al published a similar paper to mine in 2013, five years after my 2008 icecap.us paper:
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0921818112001658
Highlights of Humlum:
– Changes in global atmospheric CO2 are lagging 11–12 months behind changes in global sea surface temperature.
– Changes in global atmospheric CO2 are lagging 9.5–10 months behind changes in global air surface temperature.
– Changes in global atmospheric CO2 are lagging about 9 months behind changes in global lower troposphere temperature.
– Changes in ocean temperatures explain a substantial part of the observed changes in atmospheric CO2 since January 1980.
– Changes in atmospheric CO2 are not tracking changes in human emissions.
****************
Steve, re the phrase you cited: “CO2 is the feedstock for all carbon-based life on Earth.”
This post of mine dates from 2013 – but I expect someone else said this over 100 years ago – it’s not really news. 🙂
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/11/06/the-oldest-ice-core-finding-a-1-5-million-year-record-of-earths-climate/#comment-1469386
[excerpt]
“Climate science does not support the theory of catastrophic human-made global warming – the alleged warming crisis does not exist.”
Furthermore, CO2 concentrations are dangerously low in Earth’s atmosphere. Atmospheric CO2 is the feedstock for all carbon-based life on Earth. More atmospheric CO2 is better. Within reasonable limits, a lot more atmospheric CO2 is a lot better.
See also my comment here from December 2014:
http://icecap.us/index.php/go/new-and-cool/plant_food_for_thought2/
As we clearly stated in our 2002 APEGA paper:
“Climate science does not support the theory of catastrophic human-made global warming – the alleged warming crisis does not exist.” Baliunas, Patterson and MacRae
Furthermore, increased atmospheric CO2 from whatever cause is clearly beneficial to humanity and the environment. Earth’s atmosphere is clearly CO2 deficient and continues to decline over geological time. In fact, atmospheric CO2 at this time is too low, dangerously low for the longer term survival of carbon-based life on Earth.
More Ice Ages, which are inevitable unless geo-engineering can prevent them, will cause atmospheric CO2 concentrations on Earth to decline to the point where photosynthesis slows and ultimately ceases. This would devastate the descendants of most current life on Earth, which is carbon-based and to which, I suggest, we have a significant moral obligation.
Atmospheric and dissolved oceanic CO2 is the feedstock for all carbon-based life on Earth. More CO2 is better. Within reasonable limits, a lot more CO2 is a lot better.
As a devoted fan of carbon-based life on Earth, I feel it is my duty to advocate on our behalf. To be clear, I am not prejudiced against non-carbon-based life forms, but I really do not know any of them well enough to form an opinion. They could be very nice. 🙂
Best, Allan
Thanks for unearthing those two links (-:
It’s unlikely the media and the Left will change how they report “climate change”. It’s anyones guess if the media (and the Greens) will enter negative believability. That, truly, would be an historic first. Call it the Trump Effect.
The media and greens have been in negative believability territory for some time now and they’re only going deeper into it.
Javert Chip on March 12, 2017 at 12:18 am
If you need a “safe zone”
Yep.
Overreach = EPA
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) recently found itself in hot water. The New York Times revealed the agency colluded with environmentalist groups in a campaign to manufacture public comments in favor of a new rule that expands its own power. The agency’s actions and the shenanigans of its environmentalist supporters shed light on how a bad rule can flow through the regulatory process.
The Waters of the United States (WOTUS) rule extends the reach of EPA to regulate ponds, ditches and even large puddles under the Clean Water Act (CWA). That’s bad news for farmers, ranchers, small businesses or anyone else who wants to use land under CWA jurisdiction: It costs an average of $270,000 to obtain the special permit required to do so, according to the National Federation of Independent Businesses.
http://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/energy-environment/245201-drowning-by-epa-overreach
Gina McCarthy, the agency’s administrator, told a Senate committee in March that the agency had received more than one million comments, and nearly 90 percent favored the agency’s proposal. Ms. McCarthy is expected to cite those comments to justify the final rule, which the agency plans to unveil this week.
But critics say there is a reason for the overwhelming result: The E.P.A. had a hand in manufacturing it.
In a campaign that tests the limits of federal lobbying law, the agency orchestrated a drive to counter political opposition from Republicans and enlist public support in concert with liberal environmental groups and a grass-roots organization aligned with President Obama.
https://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/19/us/critics-hear-epas-voice-in-public-comments.html?_r=0
Voice of the public? Virtually every positive comment that came into the government’s website singing WOTUS’s praise came off pre-written, EPA-approved form letters/scripts/talking points—IMO—that obviously were made available to EPA employees or surrogate plants who, if they weren’t in the hospital or on vacation, were probably told “ . . . to send them in”. Many came from USFWS offices. Little to no variation. Read like something from a mechanical regurgitation machine programmed to vary a word or line. Not possible from 900 different humans. I checked this website throughout the comment period to see what property owners nationwide were saying. To the person they saw through the EPA lies and lobbying.
Which was, like WOTUS, illegal. Here are the Constraints Imposed by 18 U.S.C. § 1913 on Lobbying Efforts that were researched for the U.S. Attorney General’s office in 1989: (brief summary beneath link)
https://www.justice.gov/sites/default/files/olc/opinions/1989/09/31/op-olc-v013-p0300.pdf
THE ANTI-LOBBYING ACT PROHIBITS substantial “grass roots” lobbying campaigns of Telegrams, Letters, and other Private forms of communication DESIGNED TO ENCOURAGE MEMBERS OF THE PUBLIC TO PRESSURE MEMBERS OF CONGRESS TO SUPPORT ADMINISTRATION OR DEPARTMENT LEGISLATIVE OR APPROPRIATIONS PROPOSALS.
This was the EPA’s third attempt to back-door Congress; this time using a lame duck president’s EO and EPA ‘rules and regulations’ as “law”. Neither are. Here’s what’s at stake for America
https://wattsupwiththat.com/2017/01/20/trump-posts-first-order-of-business-kill-the-climate-action-plan-and-waters-of-the-u-s-rule/
These people are socialists/Marxists who’ve been working with other socialist/Marxists at the Council on Foreign Relations, Trilateral Commission, Bildebergers, Club of Rome, et. al., for more than a century to tear America’s pesky Constitution and Bill of Rights down. WOTUS is their third attempt to wrest control private property rights their using ‘their ‘ EPA Division.
The EPA has a major headwind…the law of diminishing returns.
While they have been successful in the clean air and water departments, to get the last 5-10% of an effluent out of the waste stream, the cost curve swings nearly vertical. Does that mean they should be shut down? Scott Pruitt says no. New technologies can change the curve, and particularly in the waste water area, much more needs to be done to address replacement of old infrastructure.
CO2 control represents a new field of growth for the agency, and they and their agents will continue the campaign to keep the great lie alive.
We will miss Gina McCarthy if she actually ever goes away. A perfect manifestation of an ideologically driven bureaucrat run amok. Scott Pruitt is fortunate to follow such a feckless incompetent. btw the Justice Department pulled something similar to the LA Times EPA story in New Orleans. Several police officers were on trial for Katrina related events when the DOJ lawyers were caught using fake identities to generate opinion against them in NO media. Strange but true.
The epa has become an extra-Constitutional, power-mad, quasi-fascist arm of the government and needs to be scrapped.
The epa is just jealous of the irs, doj and doeduication.
+1
Again a great article from mr. Driessen. Thanks a lot!
Climate alarmism = religious madness.
The dishonest and overtly-political biases foisted on the American public by the EPA make it all but impossible for good decisions to be made when it comes to energy supply, industrial activity or utilization of natural resources. They live in a dream world thinking their work is righteous with the ends justifying the means. They are wrong. And dangerous. And irredeemable. Buh-bye.
Anything short of a 100 percent cut in the climate programs at EPA will be a disappointment.The same goes for the mine spill group that pollutes rivers as a public service without informing local communities while pretending to be engineers.
There is a key component missing in these fixes…litigation control. Good, let’s cut back on unnecessary bureaucracy, but let’s also do what is done everywhere else in the US criminal justice system. When a person is charged with a felony then they get Mirandized. They are told they have a right to an attorney and that if they cannot afford an attorney then one will be provided to them at no cost. Let’s pass a law extending these rights to the possible 5000 felony counts that could be leveled against you under environmental law.
If we do this, and the EPA is made to pay for defense, these lawsuits will stop pretty quickly.
The right to an attorney is to protect people from governmental abuse of the legal system…a government with unlimited resources going after a citizen with none.
It’s not the EPA’s money…they would not care
Make it be the EPA’s money. I don’t think people understand how powerful this would be.
A good idea and I’ll add one more thing: Any fines or other monetary punishments go directly to the Treasury and NOT to the EPA.
Perfect
Also, might be a good idea to have legislation which bars the EPA ‘sue and settle” strategy to circumvent Congress and the courts. Another would to prohibit EPA contracts going to non-profits (this would end many conflicts of interest and help keep socialism out of EPA)
The EPA is not the big problem with litigation. It is the likes of GreenPeace, FOE, NRDC, UCS, ect.
The only winners are the lawyers. In one million dollar settlement, $900,000 went for court costs and attorney fees; and $100,000 for an environmental project that the dairy farmer was already doing.
The reason this dairy farm was targeted was money.
In Washington State, US EPA regulations are enforced by the state. Concentrated Animal feeding operations (CAFO) are required to have a water permit and account for all the nutrients in manure. Basically manure is recycled.
Next time you see a free range cow standing in a stream, think about where the manure is going. In the US, even the poor can afford quality protein like milk, cheese, eggs, and meat thanks to CAFOs.
Free range does not equate with better for the environment.
That agency needs to be checked for political bias in selective enforcement along with other investigations of working with activist groups underhandedly (unlawfully).
Close the EPA completely and allow the states EPAs to liaise as necessary in the performance of their duties – state driven…
Very nice summary, Paul. Well done.
I’ll offer these observations:
1. The first priority of every government bureaucracy is to stay in existence, regardless whether its
original purpose still exists or has been satisfied. (Consider the US Tea Tasting Board.)
2. The second priority is to push unrelentingly to expand the scope of its authority and the size of its
budget. The corollary of this priority is that any attempt to shrink either scope or budget is to be
implacably and theatrically resisted. (In pursuing this priority, bureaucracies are very ably and reliably
aided and abetted by members of Congress buying votes.)
Off subject, but I have to start somewhere:
“Mister Gorbachev; tear down this wall.”
–Ronald Reagan.
“President Trump; end clock change.”
–Bob Hoye
I can only hope President Trump reads this post.
The EPA is a welfare program run for the benefit of Environmental Studies majors and lawyers. Even back in the 1990’s only a small percentage of the SuperFund budget was spent on actual site rehab. (clean up) 90% of the budget went to pay lawyers. Just disgusting and some good companies were ruined for zero public benefit.
6) Fully 98% of all counties in…
This number is closer to 85%. Small quibble.
I think it’s more like 84.3% of all counties went for Trump: 489 counties out of 3112. However, some states don’t have by-county results available, so a higher number could be possible.
Still, pretty much a wipeout, except by the popular vote. Of course, if one takes all of California’s votes out of the election, Trump wins the popular vote by about 2M — that’s how skewed that state was.
Have to laugh at how Moonbeam was harping on secession until the dam broke…
….then he was begging Trump for money
In many precincts, CA officials let illegal aliens vote, just as they give them driver licenses. The motor voter law makes it easy for illegal immigrants both to drive and vote.
Trump won the popular vote by live, eligible citizens voting just once. Clinton won when including the dead, ineligible, multiple voters and illegals.
The difference between Clinton’s phony total and Trump’s depressed count in just two of the most crooked counties in the country, ie Los Angeles, CA and Cook, IL (Chicago), adds up to the nearly three million “popular” vote gap.
Several years ago I had a conversation with a California landfill manager about some regulations. He said to me, “You need to understand that 10% of the regulations relate to science and 90% relate to politics.” I believe him to be right.