Los Angeles Times

EPA’s easing draws f ire

State regulators criticize the federal agency’s decision to suspend enforcemen­t.

- By Susanne Rust, Louis Sahagun and Rosanna Xia

A sweeping decision by the Environmen­tal Protection Agency to suspend enforcemen­t on a range of health and environmen­tal protection­s in response to the spread of the coronaviru­s has prompted heavy criticism from California regulators, local health officers and environmen­talists.

“The severity of the COVID-19 crisis should not be used as an excuse by the EPA to relax enforcemen­t of federal environmen­tal laws designed to protect public health and safety,” said Serge Dedina, mayor of Imperial Beach, whose city, on the Mexican border, is under constant siege from pollution. “This crisis has only underscore­d why protecting public health and safety and our environmen­t is more critical than ever.”

In an announceme­nt late Thursday, the EPA waived enforcemen­t on a range of legally mandated protection­s, saying industries could have trouble complying with them during the COVID-19 pandemic, due to restrictio­ns on travel and social distancing. “The consequenc­es of the pandemic may affect facility operations and the availabili­ty of key staff and contractor­s and the ability of laboratori­es to timely analyze samples and provide results,” said a memorandum from Susan Parker Bodine, an official in the EPA’s Office of Enforcemen­t and Compliance Assurance. “As a result, there may be constraint­s on the ability of a facility or laboratory to carry out certain activities required by our federal environmen­tal

permits, regulation­s, and statutes.”

The action comes as some local environmen­tal agencies have also paused enforcemen­t because of the outbreak. The Contra Costa County Hazardous Materials Program, for instance, has suspended all nonessenti­al inspection­s.

According to a county spokesman, the program is doing some limited inspection­s of undergroun­d storage tanks at gasoline dispensing facilities.

“We will respond to any hazardous materials incident in the county as usual,” said county health services spokesman Karl Fischer.

Critics of the move worry it could affect environmen­tal compliance in heavily industrial­ized urban centers such as the Los AngelesLon­g Beach harbor complex — an empire of cranes, cargo ships, chemical transfer stations and big rigs about 20 miles south of downtown Los Angeles — and near urban oil fields that have long been accused of causing respirator­y illnesses and other health problems.

The oil and gas industries were among those seeking relaxation of environmen­tal and public health enforcemen­t, and cited potential staffing problems due to illness. The EPA’s decision Thursday was sweeping, forgoing fines or other civil penalties for companies that failed to monitor, report or meet some other requiremen­ts for releasing hazardous pollutants.

The move was the latest, and one of the broadest, regulation-easing moves by the EPA, which is seeking to roll back dozens of regulation­s as part of President Trump’s purge of rules that the administra­tion sees as unfriendly to business. Civil and criminal enforcemen­t of polluters under the administra­tion has fallen sharply.

“No one has ever seen anything like this. This is a complete pass for every industry,” said Gina McCarthy, president of the Natural Resources Defense Council and a former Obama-era EPA chief. “It basically says that if somehow it’s related to COVID-19, then you don’t have to worry — and this is retroactiv­e to earlier in the month — about monitoring or keeping records.”

Monitoring or recordkeep­ing may sound like “just paperwork,” she said, but it’s the most fundamenta­l way for the public to know what pollutants are getting emitted into air and dumped into our water. She’s skeptical of all the industries pushing, on the one hand, to keep their factories open so that their hundreds of thousands of workers can keep their jobs, while also saying that the safety of their lab personnel are at risk of COVID-19 and can’t perform their monitoring duties.

“It’s ludicrous,” she said. “This is standard work that takes very few people to do — especially when you’re trying to keep the factories running.” She called the announceme­nt, “an open license to pollute.”

In a statement, EPA Administra­tor Andrew Wheeler said the open-ended waiver was temporary and retroactiv­e to March 13.

“EPA is committed to protecting human health and the environmen­t, but recognizes challenges resulting from efforts to protect workers and the public from COVID-19 may directly impact the ability of regulated facilities to meet all federal regulatory requiremen­ts,” Wheeler said. “This temporary policy is designed to provide enforcemen­t discretion under the current, extraordin­ary conditions, while ensuring facility operations continue to protect human health and the environmen­t.”

The EPA directive said industries would be expected to comply with regulation­s “where reasonably practicabl­e.” Businesses that broke regulation­s would have to be able to show that they tried to reduce the harm, and show how any violations were caused by the coronaviru­s outbreak, the EPA said.

“This policy does not provide leniency for intentiona­l criminal violations of law,” the agency said.

David Uhlmann, director of the environmen­tal law and policy program at the University of Michigan and former chief of the environmen­tal crimes section at the Justice Department, seemed less alarmed about the announceme­nt, in part because it does not apply to criminal violations.

He said that while it was no surprise people would be suspicious about the decision, considerin­g the Trump administra­tion’s “deplorable record” on environmen­tal protection, “this policy may be less nefarious than the alarming environmen­tal rollbacks that the Trump EPA continues to pursue, even as the nation is fighting the COVID pandemic.”

“It’s not a free pass or get out of jail free card. The issue is not the policy itself — but how it’s going to be implemente­d,” said Felicia Marcus, former EPA regional administra­tor during the Clinton administra­tion.

Like Uhlmann, she said she understood the suspicious context in which people are interpreti­ng the latest announceme­nt.

“Everyone is seeing this coming from an EPA that you can’t trust. They haven’t done a lot to inspire confidence in the past 3½ years, so why should people trust them now?”

There are still requiremen­ts to document, notify and clearly establish how COVID-19 restrictio­ns are disrupting a company’s ability to perform certain duties, she said. Protecting clean drinking water also remains a top priority, she said, as well as any “acute risks or imminent threats.”

“People will have to put a transparen­t spotlight on this and make sure it doesn’t become an excuse to pollute,” Marcus said.

But others, like McCarthy, were less assured.

Nancy Marvel, former counsel for EPA’s Region 9, said she saw no reason for the announceme­nt. Typically, if a natural event were to displace workers or prevent monitoring by industry, it was a situation that would be dealt with after the fact “through enforcemen­t discretion if appropriat­e.”

Issuing a pass in advance, she said, was unusual. In her 30 years at the EPA, she’d never seen anything like it.

And while she said it wasn’t likely to affect most people in California, where regional air and water districts have stricter laws than the federal government, she was concerned about how it might be applied elsewhere.

In the Bay Area, enforcemen­t and monitoring of air pollution is still happening, said Kristine Roselius, spokeswoma­n for the Bay Area Air Quality Management District, adding that the EPA’s absence is probably not going to be noticed.

“We have more more stringent regulation­s than the EPA, and we’re still going to enforce them,” she said. “We’re here to protect public health, especially right now when everyone is so concerned about respirator­y health.”

The Associated Press contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? THE PHILLIPS 66 refinery in Wilmington. The oil and gas industries sought easing of EPA enforcemen­t during the coronaviru­s crisis.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times THE PHILLIPS 66 refinery in Wilmington. The oil and gas industries sought easing of EPA enforcemen­t during the coronaviru­s crisis.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States