Los Angeles Times

EPA fines drop sharply

Lower penalties for polluters suggest the agency is enforcing laws less aggressive­ly under Trump’s watch.

- By Anna M. Phillips

WASHINGTON — Numbers released by the Trump administra­tion Friday show an 80% drop in some penalties levied against polluters, the latest sign that the Environmen­tal Protection Agency has become a less aggressive watchdog.

Injunctive relief — the amount of money polluters commit to pay to correct problems and prevent them from reoccurrin­g — fell from $20.6 billion in fiscal 2017 to $3.95 billion in fiscal 2018. That represents a 15-year low for the agency.

Civil penalties in 2018 declined to $69 million. That was far less than the $1.68 billion in 2017, but that year’s figure was affected by fines negotiated during the Obama administra­tion.

Volkswagen agreed in 2016 to a $1.45-billion penalty as punishment for its diesel emissions scandal.

In releasing the figures, EPA officials said they were focused in 2018 on ensuring that facilities were in compliance and expediting site cleanup.

“A strong enforcemen­t and compliance assurance program is essential to achieving positive public health and environmen­tal outcomes,” Susan Bodine, assistant administra­tor of the Office of Enforcemen­t and Compliance Assurance, said in a statement.

The EPA’s data span fiscal year 2018, which ended Sept. 30. For the most part, the figures reflect enforcemen­t activity — cases that were settled, fines that were assessed — that took place under the Trump administra­tion.

Civil penalties are at their

lowest since 1994, when the enforcemen­t office was created, said Cynthia Giles, assistant administra­tor for the EPA’s enforcemen­t office during the Obama administra­tion.

“EPA is trying to convince media and the public that EPA is still doing its job on enforcemen­t, despite all of the reports showing that isn’t the case,” Giles said in a statement. “Not only are the Trump EPA’s enforcemen­t numbers at historic lows, they are on track to get worse.”

Some of the numbers in Friday’s report suggest that future declines in enforcemen­t are in store. For example, federal inspection­s and evaluation­s conducted by the EPA have continued to drop. Last year, the agency conducted about half as many inspection­s as it did in 2010.

David Coursen, who was an attorney in the EPA’s office of general counsel until 2015, said that the danger of drasticall­y lowering penalties is that it removes the incentive for corporatio­ns to follow environmen­tal laws.

“Anytime there’s a reduction, there’s going to be a suggestion that there’s a free pass,” Coursen said. “So the requiremen­t to follow the law is going to be less compelling.”

Last month, the Department of Justice released numbers showing that the EPA had hit a 30-year low in 2018 in the number of pollution cases it referred for criminal prosecutio­n.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States