Guest guest Posted October 19, 2004 Report Share Posted October 19, 2004 Tue, 19 Oct 2004 13:12:55 GMT " BushGreenwatch " <info Polluters Getting a Pass from EPA Bush Greenwatch October 19, 2004 | Back Issues Polluters Getting a Pass from EPA Polluters are breathing easier under the current regime at the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), which has registered a 75 percent reduction in civil lawsuits filed against polluters, according to a new study from the nonpartisan Environmental Integrity Project (EIP). Using data obtained in part under the Freedom of Information Act, the Project found that EPA filed only 36 civil lawsuits for violations of the Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act, Safe Drinking Water Act, and other environmental laws in the first three years of the Bush administration. By contrast, in the last three years of the Clinton administration EPA filed 152 suits. The report was compiled by EIP's Eric Schaeffer, the former head of EPA's Office of Regulatory Enforcement. Schaeffer resigned in 2002 in protest over the administration's reluctance to enforce the Clean Air Act and the Clean Water Act. " EPA's recent record suggests that the 'full weight of the law' has gotten a lot lighter over the past three years, " said Schaeffer. " Teddy Roosevelt must be turning over in his grave. " According to the EIP report, the nation's largest energy companies (and biggest polluters) are on an " extended vacation " from EPA enforcement actions. While the Justice Department has continued to litigate cases it inherited from the Clinton administration, it filed new lawsuits against only three energy companies from 2001 to January 2004. " While refineries and coal-fired power plants appear virtually immune from prosecution, the Justice Department did find time to take a dry cleaner to federal court for failure to pay an administrative penalty, " the report notes. In fact, last November EPA's enforcement staff was told to " set aside " investigations against more than 70 power companies, including some of the biggest polluters of the nation's air. The EPA had earlier referred 14 cases against power companies to the Justice Department for prosecution, but the Department has filed only one new case since January of 2001. EPA staff have also been ordered to halt investigations of industrial scale " factory farms " that house thousands of animals and often make the air in surrounding communities unfit to breathe. According to the report, EPA has been able to mask the decline in its enforcement program by cashing in settlements set in motion by the Clinton administration. In fact, many of the most important settlements EPA has celebrated either in press releases or in its annual enforcement reports resulted from Clinton-era lawsuits, the EIP report says. In addition to drastically scaling back on enforcement, the Bush administration has shackled EPA staff with debilitating cutbacks. Only two months after coming to power, the White House proposed eliminating more than 13 percent of the Agency's civil enforcement staff. Former EPA top enforcement official J.P. Suarez, appointed by President Bush, said of enforcement cutbacks, " We did not have enough money for travel, for technical support, for investigations, for depositions [and] for experts...I can tell you that there is going to be a major collapse if that is not rectified... " ### SOURCES: " Polluters Breathe Easier, " EIP report. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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