Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Pruitt defends flying 1st-class

EPA director cites “incidents” with uncivil passengers

- MICHAEL BIESECKER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — The head of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency has broken months of silence about his frequent premium-class flights at taxpayer expense, saying he needs to fly first class because of unpleasant interactio­ns with other travelers.

EPA Administra­tor Scott Pruitt spoke about his flight costs Tuesday in a pair of interviews in New Hampshire, after a first-class flight to meet with the state’s Republican governor and tour a toxic waste site.

Pruitt told the New Hampshire Union Leader that he had some “incidents” on flights shortly after his appointmen­t by President Donald Trump last year.

“We live in a very toxic environmen­t politicall­y, particular­ly around issues of the environmen­t,” said Pruitt, who confirmed to the newspaper that he had flown first class from Washington to Boston before continuing on to New Hampshire. “We’ve reached the point where there’s not much civility in the marketplac­e and it’s created, you know, it’s created some issues and the [security] detail, the level of protection is determined by the level of threat.”

Pruitt is the first EPA administra­tor to have a 24-hour security detail that accompanie­s him at all times, even at the agency’s headquarte­rs in Washington. He has also taken other security precaution­s, including the addition of a $25,000 soundproof “privacy booth” to prevent eavesdropp­ing on his phone calls and spending $3,000 to have his office swept for hidden listening devices.

Pruitt said he was not involved in the decision for him to fly first class.

“There have been instances, unfortunat­ely, during my time as administra­tor, as I’ve flown and spent time, of interactio­n that’s not been the best,” Pruitt told WMUR-TV in Manchester, N.H. “And, so, ingress and egress off the plane … that’s all decisions all made by our [security] detail team, by the chief of staff, by the administra­tion. I don’t make any of those decisions. They place me on the plane where they think is best from a safety perspectiv­e.”

Pruitt was asked about the matter after a Washington Post report Sunday that detailed some of his travel expenses, including a $1,641.43 first-class seat for a short flight in June from Washington to New York City. Pruitt’s ticket cost six times what the EPA paid for his aides seated in coach.

The Associated Press reported in July and again in December that spending on commercial airline tickets purchased for Pruitt indicated he was flying in premium-class seats. The EPA’s press office has repeatedly refused to comment on whether Pruitt was flying first class.

Federal regulation­s allow government travelers to fly business class or first class when no cheaper options are “reasonably available” or if there are exceptiona­l security circumstan­ces. However, past federal audits have found that those rules have been routinely violated by high-ranking government officials under both Republican and Democratic administra­tions.

The use of luxury air travel by members of Trump’s Cabinet has been under scrutiny for months, after the resignatio­n of Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price in September after media reports he spent at least $400,000 in taxpayer funds on private jets for himself and his staff.

A report released Wednesday by the inspector general at the Department of Veterans Affairs found that Secretary David Shulkin and his staff made “false representa­tions” to justify his wife accompanyi­ng him at taxpayer expense on an 11-day European trip that mixed business and sightseein­g.

Records show Pruitt has taken at least four flights on noncommerc­ial aircraft, costing more than $58,000. EPA has said all of those flights were necessary and pre-approved by ethics lawyers.

EPA spokesman Jahan Wilcox did not immediatel­y respond Wednesday to questions about whether Pruitt had been granted similar waivers allowing him to fly premium class or about the past security incidents to which Pruitt referred.

Asked Wednesday about Pruitt’s high-dollar tickets, Trump press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said the White House had not preapprove­d the EPA chief’s travel on commercial aircraft. She declined to comment further.

Pruitt’s frequent government-funded travel, which records show has often included weekend layovers in his home state of Oklahoma, is currently under review by EPA’s internal watchdog. The office of EPA Inspector General Arthur Elkins said Wednesday that it expects to release the results of its investigat­ion by summer.

Meanwhile, the White House’s budget proposal for EPA released earlier this week seeks to cut $3.7 million, or 9 percent, in funding for Elkins’ office. His spokesman, Jennifer Kaplan, said that would impair the ability of the inspector general to perform investigat­ions like the one into Pruitt’s spending.

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