Guest guest Posted October 22, 2004 Report Share Posted October 22, 2004 Fri, 22 Oct 2004 13:08:06 GMT " BushGreenwatch " <info Pentagon Blocking Clean-up of Toxic Waste BushGreenwatch October 22, 2004 | Back Issues Pentagon Blocking Clean-up of Toxic Waste More than 125 military bases around the country are listed for priority cleanup under the federal Superfund program, the result of decades of careless fouling of soil and water with toxic chemicals. Some 29 million Americans live within 10 miles of the contaminated bases. But, the Pentagon has stalled cleanup at scores of bases, used political clout to brush aside new regulations, and challenged the authority of state and federal regulators to force the military to obey existing environmental laws, according to an in-depth investigative story published by USA Today on October 14. " All the numbers are consistent with an overall trend, " said Sylvia Lowrance, a recently retired 20-year EPA veteran who was a top enforcement official there. " In the last two decades, you've had a general buildup of EPA's authority to ... take enforcement action against the Defense Department. That direction has changed in this administration. " At Lowry Air Force Base near Denver, closed in 1994 and sold to developers for $8 million, workers have already hauled away tons of soil contaminated with asbestos. But Air Force officials have refused to pay for the $15 million cleanup, saying the state of Colorado hasn't proved that the risks were high enough to warrant removal of the toxic soil. " You have citizens here who want to preserve property values, who want to preserve the safety of their families and see this community developed as it was promised, " said resident Amy Ford, whose baby daughter was just learning to crawl when men in hazmat suits came to tear out her yard. " The Air Force is refusing to take responsibility. " Four years ago, candidate George Bush stated that the Pentagon must " comply with environmental laws by which all of us must live. " But today, the White House has repeatedly sided with the Pentagon in disputes with EPA over toxic cleanup. For example, the Pentagon is resisting EPA efforts to set new pollution limits on two contaminants, perchlorate, a munitions ingredient, and trichloroethylene (TCE), a solvent. After military officials complained to the White House that EPA studies were exaggerating the dangers of the chemicals, EPA decided to wait for years of additional study before taking action. Within the administration, " it's no secret that the EPA is running into this wall with the Pentagon, " says Linda Fisher, who served two years as EPA second-in- command under Bush before leaving last year. " Is the Department of Defense taking [regulatory disputes] to the White House more often? Absolutely. " State environmental regulators are feeling resistance from the Pentagon too, according to USA Today. In Colorado, California, Ohio and Minnesota, the Pentagon is fighting state efforts to restrict the future use of contaminated military property. And in California, Florida, Hawaii and Alaska, the military has challenged the authority of state officials to fine the Pentagon for pollution problems. Meanwhile, under the current regime at EPA, inspections of military bases are down. The number of fines, cleanup orders and other EPA enforcement actions against military facilities have dropped 25%, and the size of the fines issued has dropped 64 percent. According to the USA Today article, " Health and environmental officials say the military's cleanup proposals at many polluted sites don't do enough to reduce health risks. When that sort of impasse occurs on privately owned land, regulators often use their authority to simply order a cleanup on their terms. But the military is fighting for special treatment -- and getting it. " ### SOURCES: USA Today, Oct. 14, 2004. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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