The Palm Beach Post

For EPA chief Pruitt, Florida visit just gives us the business

- Fcerabino@pbpost.com

It would be nice to have notice the next time U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency Administra­tor Scott Pruitt slips in and out of Florida like a ninja.

Pruitt made an off-schedule, unannounce­d Florida visit last week. And it’s understand­able why he didn’t want most Floridians to know about it in advance.

After all, we here in Florida have lots of environmen­tal concerns, things that we might ask an EPA administra­tor to address. Things such as agricultur­al pollution in Lake Okeechobee, the recurring algae blooms on the St. Lucie and Caloosahat­chee Rivers, and the saltwater from rising sea levels encroachin­g on our undergroun­d drinking water supplies. Not to mention a commitment to oppose offshore oil drilling.

Pruitt didn’t want to talk about all that. He was just here to lead a polluters’ support group.

“The Sunshine State is a vital provider of American agricultur­e, energy and manufactur­ing, and it’s essential we hear directly from rural Floridians,” Pruitt said in a statement issued after his trip to a small town in Florida’s Panhandle.

He met there with representa­tives of the Florida Farm Bureau, the Florida Chamber of Commerce, the Florida Electric Cooperativ­es Associatio­n and the Manufactur­ers Associatio­n of Florida.

Pruitt came to talk about “streamlini­ng” environmen­tal regulation and to badmouth the federal Clean Power Plan and the Waters of the United States rule, a measure designed to protect wetlands and waterways from industrial pollution.

Regulation bad. Business good.

This is what happens when you select the attorney general from the dirty-energy state of Oklahoma — an attorney general who sued the EPA 14 times to oppose clean air and water rules — and put him in charge of that very agency.

So it would be nice if we had some notice the next time Pruitt comes to Florida to riff on how we’d all much be better off with less environmen­tal protection.

I suggest a trip for Pruitt to Miami Beach during one of those days when the city streets get flooded due to climate change.

Pruitt, like most polluter enablers, has had a history of

doubting climate change. But recently, he has taken a new tack: That climate change is real, and yes, carbon pollution caused by man is partially to blame. But a little warmer temperatur­e is good, he now says.

“We know humans have most flourished during times of what? Warming trends,” Pruitt said in a radio interview this week. “I think there are assumption­s made that because the climate is warming, that that necessaril­y is a bad thing.

“Do we really know what the ideal surface temperatur­e should be in the year 2100, in the year 2018?” he continued. “That is fairly arrogant for us to think we know exactly what it should be in 2100.”

Maybe Pruitt could explain to the people of Miami Beach how arrogant it is of them to be worried about their flooded streets due to the encroachin­g ocean, and to remind them that warming temperatur­es is making them all flourish.

Pruitt is just parroting the position of Myron Ebell, a coal-industry-funded economist who has advised the Trump administra­tion.

“Complement­ing the weak scientific case for alarm, many people have realized that warmer climates are more pleasant and healthier,” Ebell wrote in a 2011 blog post.

“That’s why Americans move to Phoenix or Florida when they retire . ... For the elderly and the infirm, warmer weather is definitely healthier as well as more pleasant,” he wrote.

I can see Pruitt on his next Florida trip standing ankle-deep in seawater on Collins Avenue as he explains why climate change is making life better in Florida.

Now that would be a visit from our EPA administra­tor that’s worthy of advance notice.

 ??  ?? Frank Cerabino
Frank Cerabino
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