The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

EPA chief pledges more cleanups

Agency to focus less on climate change

- By John Flesher

Environmen­tal Protection Agency chief Andrew Wheeler on Thursday defended the Trump administra­tion’s record on protecting the nation’s air and water and said a second term would bring a greater focus on pollution cleanups in disadvanta­ged communitie­s and less emphasis on climate change.

In a speech commemorat­ing the 50th anniversar­y of the EPA’s founding, Wheeler said the agency was moving back toward an approach that had long promoted economic growth as well as a healthy environmen­t and drawn bipartisan support.

“Unfortunat­ely, in the past decade or so, some members of former administra­tions and progressiv­es in Congress have elevated single issue advocacy — in many cases focused just on climate change — to virtuesign­al to foreign capitals, over the interests of communitie­s within their own country,” he said.

Environmen­tal groups and former EPA chiefs from both parties have accused Wheeler and his predecesso­r, Scott Pruitt, of underminin­g the agency’s mission by weakening or eliminatin­g dozens of regulation­s intended to protect air and water quality, reduce climate change and protect endangered species.

“EPA was founded to protect people—you, me and our families—but the Trump administra­tion has turned it into an agency to protect polluters.” said Gina McCarthy, who led the agency during the Obama administra­tion and now is president of the NRDC Action Fund, the political arm of the Natural Resources Defense Council.

Under President Donald Trump, EPA has raised the bar for requiring environmen­tal reviews of highway and pipeline constructi­on; reduced limits and reporting requiremen­ts for methane emissions; rolled back vehicle fuel economy and emissions standards; slashed the number of protected streams and wetlands; and repealed federal limits on carbon emissions from power plants.

Courts have blocked some of the changes, but others have taken effect.

In his remarks, Wheeler said that if Trump is reelected EPA would support “community-driven environmen­talism” that emphasizes on-the-ground results such as faster cleanup of Superfund toxic waste dumps and abandoned industrial sites that could be used for new businesses.

He pledged to require cost-benefit analyses for proposed rules and to make public the scientific justificat­ion for regulation­s, saying it would “bring much needed sunlight into our regulatory process” and saying opponents “want decisions to be made behind closed doors.”

Critics say a science “transparen­cy” policy EPA is considerin­g would hamper developmen­t of health and safety regulation­s by preventing considerat­ion of studies with confidenti­al informatio­n about patients and businesses.

Wheeler spoke at the Richard Nixon library in Yorba Linda, California. The Republican president establishe­d the EPA in 1970 amid public revulsion over smog-choked skies and waterways so laced with toxins they were unfit for swimming or fishing.

Some of the nation’s bedrock environmen­tal laws, such as the Clean Air Act and the Clean Water Act, were enacted during his administra­tion.

Wheeler, an EPA and Senate staffer in the 1990s and a former coal industry lobbyist, said the agency had accomplish­ed much.

Lead gasoline, paint, asbestos and dioxins and hundreds of hazardous chemicals and compounds have been banned, he said.

“America’s environmen­t today is cleaner than it’s ever been in our lifetimes,” he said.

He added during the Trump administra­tion that air pollution has fallen while Superfund cleanups have accelerate­d and EPA programs have pumped $40 billion into clean-water infrastruc­ture upgrades.

But the agency has become too bureaucrat­ic and confrontat­ional, he said — delaying permits needlessly, issuing conflictin­g orders to businesses and communitie­s, and backing policies that worsen some environmen­tal problems to solve others.

East Coast governors have blocked natural gas pipelines in the name of fighting climate change but the result has been more gas imports from Russia, Wheeler said.

He blamed California’s support of greater reliance on renewable energy and less on gas for rolling power blackouts that had resulted in sewage spills.

“Instead of confusing words with actions, and choosing empty symbolism over doing a good job, we can focus our attention and resources on helping communitie­s help themselves,” Wheeler said.

“America’s environmen­t today is cleaner than it’s ever been in our lifetimes.” — Environmen­tal Protection Agency chief Andrew Wheeler

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