Baltimore Sun

2-time EPA leader refused to join in Nixon’s ‘Massacre’

- By Timothy R. Smith

WASHINGTON — William Ruckelshau­s, a pragmatic and resolute government official who shaped the Environmen­tal Protection Agency in the early 1970s as its first administra­tor and returned to the agency a decade later to restore its shattered morale after its watchdog powers had been muzzled, died Nov. 27 at his home in Seattle. He was 87.

The death was confirmed by a friend, Philip Angell. The cause was not immediatel­y known.

In a long career in government and private industry, Ruckelshau­s was widely promoted as “Mr. Clean” as much for his uprightnes­s as for his role with the EPA. He cemented his reputation for unshakable integrity when, in 1973, as Richard Nixon’s deputy attorney general, he refused a presidenti­al order to fire the special prosecutor investigat­ing the Watergate breakin.

Decades later, as chief executive of Browning-Ferris Industries, the secondlarg­est trash-disposal company in the country, he expanded the company’s presence into NewYork and worked with law enforcemen­t agencies to help break mob control of the city’s trash removal business.

Ruckelshau­s, the scion of a prominent Indianapol­is legal family, was a moderate, Princeton- and Harvard-educated Republican who rose in the Nixon-era Justice Department before guiding the EPA at its birth in 1970.

Ruckelshau­s shepherded several federal environmen­tal entities into a robust regulatory agency and did as much as anyone to mold the EPA’s mission.

During his three-year tenure, he created policies that forced cities to adopt anti-pollution laws, held automakers to strict emissions standards and banned the harmful pesticide DDT.

Around the time Ruckelshau­s stepped down from the EPA in April 1973, the Nixon administra­tion was foundering amid accusation­s that it had obstructed justice by covering up its involvemen­t in the June 1972 break-in at the Democratic National Committee offices at the Watergate complex in Washington.

Ruckelshau­s, who had no connection to the scandal, was made acting FBI director and then deputy attorney general.

On Oct. 20, 1973, Archibald Cox, a Harvard law professor appointed by Attorney General Elliot Richardson to investigat­e the break-in, had requested complete access to Oval Office tape recordings of the time immediatel­y after the break-in. Nixon rebuffed the request and ordered Richardson to fire Cox. Richardson refused and resigned.

Shortly afterward, Gen. Alexander Haig, Nixon’s chief of staff, phoned Ruckelshau­s and instructed him to fire Cox.

Ruckelshau­s, who had promised the Senate during confirmati­on hearings that he would protect Cox, refused to carry out Nixon’s order and then resigned. The duties of the attorney general were transferre­d to Solicitor General Robert Bork, who agreed to fire Cox.

The event became known as the “Saturday Night Massacre” and precipitat­ed the downfall of the Nixon presidency in August 1974.

Of his role, Ruckelshau­s later said, “It was not a heroic act.”

Ruckelshau­s was serving as vice president of legal affairs for timber giant Weyerhaeus­er when President

Ronald Reagan asked him to return as EPA administra­tor in 1983.

An earlier Reagan appointee, Colorado conservati­ve Anne Gorsuch Burford (the mother of Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch) had depleted the agency by asking Congress to cut the EPA budget, eliminatin­g jobs, halting enforcemen­t activities and spinning off many regulatory functions to the states.

Some of her senior staffers kept a list of career appointees deemed disloyal to Reagan and let the entire staff know of the list. During Burford’s tenure, Congress suspected the EPA was misspendin­g hazardous waste cleanup funds and ordered that financial documents be turned over. Burford refused. She and 12 senior EPA officials were fired or resigned.

Reagan appointed Ruckelshau­s to revive the demoralize­d agency. On his first on the job, agency officials unfurled a banner, “How do you spell relief? R-U-C-KE-L-S-H-A-U-S,” a reference to a popular Rolaids commercial.

On his second day, he fired four people to make room for his own management team. Ruckelshau­s set out to improve the agency’s image and, during his two years leading the EPA, received Reagan’s support and opened relations with Congress. In 2015, President Barack Obama awarded him the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor.

 ?? AP FILE ?? Then-EPA chief William Ruckelshau­s, left, applauds as President Richard Nixon signs legislatio­n placing new curbs on smog from auto exhaust on Dec. 31, 1974.
AP FILE Then-EPA chief William Ruckelshau­s, left, applauds as President Richard Nixon signs legislatio­n placing new curbs on smog from auto exhaust on Dec. 31, 1974.

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