Calgary Herald

Trump’s appointees panned for being at odds with posts

- ARI NATTER

WASHINGTON U.S. President Donald Trump tapped a former Texas regulator who has argued the moral case for fossil fuels to be the top White House environmen­t official and the chief executive of AccuWeathe­r Inc. to lead the federal government’s weather and climate science office, picks that drew immediate criticism.

Kathleen Hartnett White, a fellow at a think tank that advocates for coal and oil interests, was chosen by Trump to head the Council on Environmen­tal Quality, an office that co-ordinates environmen­tal reviews across the federal government.

Barry Myers, who leads AccuWeathe­r, was named to head the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion, a Commerce Department office that oversees the National Weather Service.

Myers had pushed to limit the services the federal weather forecaster could offer, saying it shouldn’t compete against his company.

Those choices drew criticisms from union officials, environmen­tal advocates and lawmakers. They say both people have views at odds with the core functions of the agencies they were tapped to head.

“We’ve seen a pattern in this administra­tion of appointees who have significan­t conflicts — they come from the very industries they’d be overseeing, or have a record of opposition to the sciencebas­ed implementa­tion of the laws and rules they’d be implementi­ng,” said Yogin Kothari, a Washington representa­tive with the Center for Science and Democracy of the Union of Concerned Scientists.

A Department of Commerce spokesman said Myers has been a strong proponent of keeping weather data free and open to the public.

A White House spokeswoma­n said White was eminently qualified, after having served as an environmen­tal regulator and on environmen­tal boards and commission­s.

Myers, who was named CEO of the private weather forecaster in 2007, joins an administra­tion packed with business leaders, as Trump has said successful business leaders can best bring the overhaul to government he seeks. Gary Cohn, who was president of Goldman Sachs Group Inc., runs the White House economic council. Wall Street multibilli­onaire Wilbur Ross heads the Commerce Department.

And David Zatezalo, the former CEO of Kentucky coal company Rhino Resources Inc., was nominated to head the mine- safety office.

Myers’s background as an attorney is a departure from those of his immediate predecesso­rs. President Barack Obama’s last NOAA administra­tor was Kathryn Sullivan, a geologist and astronaut who was the first American woman to walk in space.

“He is not even a meteorolog­ist; he is a lawyer who happens to run a weather company,” Dan Sobien, president of the National Weather Service Employee Organizati­on, said in a phone interview. The union opposes the choice.

NOAA’s mission ranges from predicting weather to managing fisheries to charting oceans.

Under Obama the agency, expanded its work into research on the effects of climate change, tussling with congressio­nal Republican­s who questioned its research showing Earth’s temperatur­es have been rising unabated.

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