The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

State suing EPA over pollution

Joins 8 other states in power plant lawsuit

- By John Burgeson

A coalition of eight states, including Connecticu­t, filed a lawsuit on Tuesday against the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency to force it to control pollution from power plants in the Midwest.

The other states are Massachuse­tts, Rhode Island, Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvan­ia, Vermont and New York, whose state Attorney General Eric Schneiderm­an is leading the lawsuit.

The suit takes issue with a Trump administra­tion decision to allow nine upwind states to escape tighter smog requiremen­ts.

“Connecticu­t has stringent air-quality laws and regulation­s, but Connecticu­t suffers from significan­t pollution and airquality issues because the state is downwind of out-of-state sources of pollution,” said Jaclyn M. Severance, a spokeswoma­n for Connecticu­t Attorney General George Jepsen.

“Connecticu­t is a downwind state and much of our air quality is affected by the pollution produced by upwind states like Ohio, West Virginia and Indiana,” said Chris Collibee, a spokesman for the state Department of Energy and Environmen­tal Protection. “The sad reality is that every power plant in the state could be forced to shut down during the summer months because of the pollution that blows in from the Midwest.”

This is not the first time EPA actions — or inaction — concerned Hartford.

In March, Gov. Dannel P. Malloy sent a letter to Trump’s controvers­ial EPA chief, Scott Pruitt, blasting the agency’s preliminar­y decision to exempt nine states, most of which are in the Rust Belt, from tougher scrutiny of coal-fired power plants.

Those states, the governor wrote, should be held accountabl­e for their adverse impact on the air quality in the Northeast.

In October 2016, six Northeaste­rn states sued the EPA to compel the agency to add nine “upwind” states to its so-called “Ozone Transport Region.”

Those states were Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, North Carolina, Ohio, Tennessee, Virginia and West Virginia.

The states already in the OTR are Connecticu­t, Delaware, Maine, Maryland, Massachuse­tts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvan­ia, Rhode Island and Vermont. These states are required to submit plans and install a certain level of controls for pollutants that form ozone. The states outside the OTR don’t have to follow those requiremen­ts.

Connecticu­t leaders fear the Trump’s administra­tion, under pressure from U.S. automakers, will unwind Obama-era fuel efficiency standards and caps on tailpipe emissions of carbon dioxide.

“Obviously, this is a guy (Pruitt) who was a sellout to fossil fuels to begin with and doesn’t mind polluting Connecticu­t’s air with (emissions) from Illinois, Ohio, Kentucky and Pennsylvan­ia,” Malloy told reporters at the time.

EPA officials could not be reached on Wednesday for comment.

 ?? David Howells / Corbis via Getty Images ?? The coal-fired power station, owned by American Electric Power Co., in Cheshire, Ohio.
David Howells / Corbis via Getty Images The coal-fired power station, owned by American Electric Power Co., in Cheshire, Ohio.

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