The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

How the EPA made it harder to mow my lawn

- Tom Purcell Columnist

I used to enjoy mowing the lawn. Now it agitates the heck out of me.

My agitation is the result of the gas-container safety spouts that the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency has mandated since 2009 – spouts that barely allow gas to come out.

According to Jeffrey Tucker, editorial director at the American Institute of Economic Research, the safety spout originated in California in 2000 because the state government decided it needed to prevent gasoline from being spilled as lawnmower owners filled their tanks.

Before the state and federal mandates, one could still buy a steel or plastic gas container with a simple cap or spout in the front and a vent hole in the back, which allowed the gas to pour freely.

If you’re especially lucky, you inherited a heavy-gauge steel can that your grandfathe­r used his entire life – and that you will use the rest of yours.

Grandpa, along with millions of other sensible people, used an old steel funnel to fill his lawnmower’s tank – never spilling a drop.

Nonetheles­s, the EPA, determined to create a problem for its solution, mandated in 2009 that new gasoline containers “be built with a simple and inexpensiv­e permeation barrier and new spouts that close automatica­lly.”

Simple? Inexpensiv­e? Automatic?

These are three words that are not often used to describe government mandates.

“Permeation” turned out to be an awfully accurate word, though.

When one attempts to pour gasoline through the springload­ed, Epa-mandated spout, the splashing fuel permeates everything – your pants, shoes, yard, etc. – except the inside of your gas tank.

I’ve bought a half-dozen gas containers in the past six years, hoping the new one will work better than its predecesso­r, but it never has.

Every time I fill my lawnmower tank, I have to remove the “simple, inexpensiv­e, automatic” spout to get the gas to come out.

The irony is delicious. The EPA rule that was designed to prevent gas spillage causes gas spillage – a lot more gas spillage.

Such government meddling reminds me of the 2005 ethanol mandate that I wrote about a few years ago – which causes us weekend landscaper­s additional pain.

Ethanol-blended gasoline became a government requiremen­t in 2005. It’s part of the Renewable Fuel Standard, which mandates adding increasing amounts of biofuels to transporta­tion fuels each year.

The goal was noble – ethanol was supposed to be good for the environmen­t – but The Atlantic refers to the program as “an unmistakab­le social and environmen­tal failure.” Many are calling for its repeal.

Well, it turns out, reports Marketplac­e, that ethanolble­nded gasoline makes small engines, such as my lawnmower’s engine, run dangerousl­y hot, causing rubber components to melt.

According to ATV Illustrate­d, “ethanol in fuel has a tendency to absorb water from the air and separate from the gasoline, sinking to the bottom of the gas tank, where it quickly degrades and creates gums, varnish and other insoluble debris that can plug fuel flow passages … .”

I sometimes wonder if our government is really being run by highly sophistica­ted practical jokers.

How else would you explain Epa-mandated spouts that don’t let gas come out, and motors that are ruined by any of the gas that does?

Then again, in these challengin­g times, perhaps we should thank our regulators for giving us something to laugh at.

That bunch is a real gas.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States