The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Malloy: ‘Science is under attack’

Governor says Trump’s EPA cuts undermine environmen­t

- By Jack Kramer ctnewsjunk­ie.com

HARTFORD >> President Donald Trump’s budget cuts government programs across the board, but no agency is hurt more than the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, which was slashed 31 percent.

Using the Connecticu­t Science Center as a backdrop, Gov. Dannel P. Malloy, Department of Energy and Environmen­tal Protection Commission­er Robert Klee, and other champions of the environmen­t, called on Congress Wednesday to block Trump’s plan to cut funding for environmen­tal programs.

“What department do they pick on to the greatest extent,” Malloy said. “It’s the one, EPA, that are the biggest foes of some of his (Trump’s) best friends.”

For some reason this government agency ”has gotten under the president’s skin,” Malloy said.

But it’s more than the environmen­t.

“Science itself is under attack by the Trump administra­tion,” Klee said.

Malloy and Klee said if Trump’s budget plan goes through, as proposed, it would mean a $6 million cut to Connecticu­t’s environmen­tal program budget. That’s about 3.4 percent of the DEEP’s total budget.

Malloy himself is proposing to reduce the DEEP budget by $2.2 million. That’s in addition to a $1.85 million reduction in funding that’s carried forward from last year.

Trump has expressed doubts about the science of climate change and has said the United States can reduce green regulation drasticall­y without compro-

mising air quality. His proposed EPA budget cuts, however, besides axing climate change funds, also would cut some $427 million to regional pollution cleanup programs. Funding for the Superfund program to clean up the nation’s most contaminat­ed sites would drop by $330 million to $762 million.

His budget proposal would also cut the budget for the EPA’s enforcemen­t division, which fines companies for pollution, by 31 percent. It would axe dozens of other programs including the Energy Star appliance efficiency program aimed at reducing U.S. energy consumptio­n.

Trump’s budget summary said the rationale for the changes is to give local and state government­s, many of whom are facing severe budget issues themselves - responsibi­lity for clean-up efforts.

Malloy said Trump’s budget plan couldn’t come at a worse time for Connecticu­t, stating, for instance that the Connecticu­t River “is slowly but surely getting cleaner.”

“There is a larger, greater cost of not doing these things properly,” Malloy said. “It’s a cost in illness, in child deformity, in asthma rates, in hundreds of thousands of deaths.

“And now comes the Trump administra­tion after all these years of success. By the way, I’ve had to make tough choices. But I’ve made better choices than the ones are represente­d in this budget in tough economic times.”

Malloy added that environmen­tal issues aren’t state, or even regional issues.

“We are not in clean air attainment levels for most of the warm weather months in Connecticu­t,” Malloy said. “We could stop every car. We could shut down every energy plant. And we could stop manufactur­ing anything in the state. And we would still not be in attainment levels.”

That’s “because we live by a different set of rules than they live by in Illinois, in Ohio, in Indiana, in Kentucky, in Pennsylvan­ia, where our air comes from,” Malloy said.

Malloy said Trump’s EPA budget is “absolutely an attack on future generation­s — those yet unborn.”

Asked whether he thought the Republican­controlled Congress would hear the pleas of those looking to protect the environmen­t, Malloy said he was hopeful Congress would make some alteration­s to Trump’s plan before approving it.

“This is not a partisan issue,” Klee said. ”This is really a risk to our state and to our nation.”

Another critic of Trump’s environmen­tal agenda was Gary Yohe, a Huffington Foundation professor of Economics and Environmen­tal Studies at Wesleyan University and 2007 Nobel Peace Prize recipient for his work on climate change. He noted that under President Barack Obama, an agreement was reached between the United States and China — and signed on by 190 other nations — to reduce global emissions of greenhouse gasses, and to accelerate efforts to come up with alternativ­e energy options.

Yohe worked for Obama as vice-chair of the organizati­on that brokered the agreement.

Trump’s administra­tion has “attacked climate science and has announced its intention to abandon any initiative designed to ameliorate climate risk in any way,” Yohe said.

Also critical of Trump’s environmen­tal budget was Donald Strait, president of the Connecticu­t Fund for the Environmen­t/Save the Sound.

He described Trump’s budget as “taking a chainsaw to the protection of safety to Connecticu­t residents,” stating parents will have to worry if the state’s waters are safe to swim in if funding is slashed to test for bacteria levels, among other things.

And Bill Dornbos, Connecticu­t director of the Acadia Center, said he was particular­ly concerned about that Trump’s budget would eliminate the Energy Star program.

The program was created by the EPA in 1992. Devices carrying the Energy Star service mark, such as computer products, kitchen appliances, homes, buildings and other products, generally use 20-to-30 percent less energy than required by federal standards.

“It’s the wrong budget at the wrong time,” Dornbos said. “It would set us back decades.” This story has been modified from its original version. To view the original, visit ctnewsjunk­ie.com.

 ?? JACK KRAMER- CTNEWSJUNK­IE ?? Gov. Dannel P. Malloy with DEEP Commission­er Robert Klee and Gary Yohe, a Huffington Foundation professor of Economics and Environmen­tal Studies at Wesleyan University and 2007 Nobel Peace Prize recipient
JACK KRAMER- CTNEWSJUNK­IE Gov. Dannel P. Malloy with DEEP Commission­er Robert Klee and Gary Yohe, a Huffington Foundation professor of Economics and Environmen­tal Studies at Wesleyan University and 2007 Nobel Peace Prize recipient

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States