The Palm Beach Post

A guide to the Pruitt investigat­ions

- — Lisa Friedman

Calls for Scott Pruitt, the head of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, to resign escalated Wednesday when nearly 170 congressio­nal Democrats demanded his departure. A resolution, sponsored by Sen. Tom Udall of New Mexico and Rep. Kathy Castor of Florida, that called for Pruitt’s resignatio­n drew 39 Senate co-sponsors. It was the largest number of senators to ever sign on to a resolution calling for a Cabinet official to be removed from office, according to Kara Baer, a legislativ­e editor in the Senate Library. Here is a guide to the investigat­ions surroundin­g Pruitt:

Travel expenses

The EPA’s office of the inspector general, an independen­t investigat­ing unit within the agency, opened an inquiry last summer into Pruitt’s frequent travel home to Oklahoma.

Early reports found Pruitt had spent 43 out of 92 days either in the his home state or traveling to or from there between March and May of 2017, at a cost of $12,000 to taxpayers.

Lawmakers have argued that a fourday trip to Morocco, during which

Pruitt promoted natural gas exports, was inappropri­ate since the EPA plays no formal role in overseeing gas exports. The trip cost about $40,000, according to agency records, with the flights alone costing $17,000.

Meetings with industry

The EPA inspector general also has taken up an inquiry into a meeting Pruitt held with the National Mining Associatio­n.

Rep. Frank Pallone of New Jersey, the top Democrat on the House Energy and Commerce Committee, requested the investigat­ion after a report that Pruitt had encouraged the coal mining industry group to urge President Donald Trump to withdraw from the Paris climate change agreement. Critics of the meeting said the discussion violated anti-lobbying laws for government officials.

Both the EPA and the industry group have denied that Pruitt did anything improper.

Meanwhile, the GAO is investigat­ing Pallone’s complaint about a National Cattleman’s Beef Associatio­n video in which Pruitt appears. In the video, Pruitt describes his opposition to an Obama-era clean water rule. Pallone and others asked auditors to investigat­e whether there the promotiona­l video involved an inappropri­ate use of taxpayer

dollars.

Spending on security

There are a number of lines of inquiry into Pruitt’s 24-hour security detail.

His security staff of at least 20 people is more than three times as large as ones for previous EPA administra­tors. Agency officials have confirmed that the EPA has spent about $3 million in taxpayer money so far on salary, overtime and travel expenses for the security team.

Two EPA inspector general investigat­ions are looking into Pruitt’s security expenses, as is the House Oversight Committee. Among the allegation­s raised by watchdog groups, lawmakers and former EPA officials are that Pruitt took the security detail on family trips to Disneyland and a Rose Bowl game and that the EPA approved thousands of dollars in bulletproo­f vests, weapons and a $43,000 secure phone booth in violation of spending rules.

Office upgrades

The GAO has already ruled that Pruitt’s purchase of the phone booth for his office broke the law.

Specifical­ly, auditors found, the EPA was required to notify Congress about purchases larger than $5,000 for office renovation­s and that the agency also violated the Antidefici­ency Act, which is designed to prevent unbudgeted spending.

House and Senate Democrats have also asked Pruitt to respond to allegation­s by Kevin Chmielewsk­i, the former EPA deputy chief of staff, that the administra­tor also exceeded the office spending limit with art on loan from the Smithsonia­n Institutio­n and the framing of an American flag.

The $50-a-night condo

The House Oversight Committee wants to know more about Pruitt’s living arrangemen­ts last year.

The EPA has acknowledg­ed that Pruitt paid $50 per night to live in a condo co-owned by the wife of an energy lobbyist who has had business in front of the agency. The EPA produced a memo from the agency’s ethics office saying that Pruitt’s living arrangemen­ts did not violate federal gift rules because the rate was withing “reasonable market value.” However, the ethics office later walked back its assessment with a new memo saying that its staff did not have all the facts before issuing the ethics clearance.

Science advisory boards

Amid the other questions, there is one investigat­ion on an entirely different issue: Pruitt’s selection process for members of a science advisory committee.

Specifical­ly, the GAO accepted a request from two Democratic senators to look into the EPA’s dismissal of scientists from agency boards that advise on health and scientific matters. The GAO has said it will look into the role that political appointees at the EPA had in choosing a new roster of advisers, which drew largely from industry and state regulatory bodies.

Undisclose­d email addresses

Last, in recent days, a watchdog group alerted lawmakers that Pruitt had two undisclose­d government-issued email addresses in addition to two that were known. Democrats have demanded an investigat­ion by the inspector general, although one has not been opened. Separately, Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wyo., has chided Pruitt, and has asked him to explain his email use.

 ?? TOM BRENNER / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Environmen­tal Protection Agency Director Scott Pruitt speaks in February during a meeting at the White House. Pressure on Pruitt to resign grew this week in the wake of numerous questions about his actions in office.
TOM BRENNER / THE NEW YORK TIMES Environmen­tal Protection Agency Director Scott Pruitt speaks in February during a meeting at the White House. Pressure on Pruitt to resign grew this week in the wake of numerous questions about his actions in office.

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