New York Daily News

Check his pockets on the way out!

Corrupt Pruitt quits after toxic disaster as EPA boss

- BY DENIS SLATTERY, CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T

Scott Pruitt couldn't do it anymore.

The embattled Environmen­tal Protection Agency chief finally resigned Thursday, putting a meek end to a short federal career darkened by a thick, smog-like cloud of controvers­ies.

The paranoid climate change denier entrusted by Trump to defang the agency meant to cut back on pollution heaped praise on the President in a resignatio­n letter replete with religious references and declaratio­ns of fealty.

“My desire in service to you has always been to bless you as you make important decisions for the American people,” Pruitt, 50, wrote. “I believe you are serving as President today because of God's providence. I believe that same providence brought me into your service.”

Trump returned the favor in a couple of lofty tweets.

“Within the Agency Scott has done an outstandin­g job,” Trump tweeted, “and I will always be thankful to him for this.”

The scandal-scarred EPA administra­tor's resignatio­n officially takes effect Friday. His deputy, Andrew Wheeler, will take over as acting EPA administra­tor while Trump looks for a successor.

“I have no doubt that Andy will continue on with our great and lasting EPA agenda,” Trump tweeted.

While en route to Montana later in the day, Trump conceded some of Pruitt's actions were sketchy.

“You know, obviously the controvers­ies with Scott but within the agency we were extremely happy,” Trump told reporters onboard Air Force One. “He'll go on to great things and he's going to have a wonderful life, I hope. But he felt that he did not want to be a distractio­n for an administra­tion that he has a lot of faith in.”

Pruitt's EPA tenure was plagued by a seemingly neverendin­g stream of scandals that

c uded e o b ta t ta paye funded travel, security and accommodat­ion costs, questionab­le raises and bizarre management moves.

Pruitt's desire to deregulate and do away with longstandi­ng environmen­tal protection­s was only matched by his penchant for first class travel, 24 hour-a-day security and the paranoia that led him to spend more than $43,000 in taxpayer money on a soundproof booth in his office. He spent thousands more on bulletproo­f furniture and car seats.

He burned through more than $120,000 in public funds for a trip to Italy — and spent more than $105,000 on firstclass airfare alone since February 2017, outspendin­g his predecesso­rs by astronomic­al proportion­s.

His expenses in Italy — all of which were funded by taxpayer dollars — included $30,500 for his security detail and $90,000 for food, hotels, commercial airfare and a military jet.

More recently, congressio­nal testimony and reports have revealed Pruitt used the leverage of his top government post to try and get his wife a lucrative franchise from Chick-fil-A and a cushy job offer from a Republican think tank, drawing a sharp rebuke from government ethics watchdogs.

Citizens for Responsibi­lity and Ethics and Washington, one of Pruitt's most persistent critics, issued a one-word statement after the resignatio­n announceme­nt: “Good.”

Pruitt's congressio­nal critics, of which there are nearly as many Republican­s as Democrats, also breathed a sigh of relief.

“Scott Pruitt was the worst EPA administra­tor in the history of the agency,” Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders said. “Not only has he acted, time and time again, in an unethical manner, but he has led the agency in exactly the wrong direction.”

Outside the walls of the EPA, Pruitt rented a Capitol Hill condo from the wife of a fossil fuel lobbyist who repped companies that were actively petitionin­g against EPA regulation­s.

After EPA's internal watchdog launched at least 14 ethics probes into Pruitt, some of his most bizarre cases of misconduct surfaced.

Records reveal he sent top aides on bizarre scavengerh­unt-style quests for a discounted Trump Hotel mattress, moisturize­r and other odd items.

Despite the scandals and a bipartisan chorus for his resignatio­n, Trump remained supportive of Pruitt until the end, lauding him for spending his first year battling environmen­tal groups and meeting regularly with corporate executives from the automobile, mining and fossil fuel industries.

Environmen­tal and science groups bristled when Trump first appointed Pruitt, while oil and gas companies were giddy to see strict oversight implemente­d in previous administra­tions scaled back.

coalition of AGs in blocking some of Pruitt’s deregulati­on efforts, welcomed his resignatio­n and vowed to continue her work.

“No matter who leads the EPA, my office will continue to hold the agency accountabl­e,” Underwood said. “As we have proven again and again, when the EPA threatens New Yorkers’ health and environmen­t, we will take the agency to court — and we will win.”

For Kristen Mink, Pruitt’s resignatio­n carried a vein of poetic justice.

The sixth-grade teacher confronted Pruitt in a Washington, D.C., restaurant on Monday, urged him to resign and told him the country deserves an EPA chief who “believes in climate change.”

“I hope that this empowers everyone to speak up when they see public servant out and about,” Mink told the Daily News after Pruitt’s resignatio­n. “Our job is not over. Everyone has to go to the polls in November and do their part.”

Pruitt steered the President toward pulling the U.S. out of the Paris climate accord and embarked on a record-setting series of regulation rollbacks, including filing a proposal to undo Obama-era climate change regulation­s.

He also squashed legal plans to halt pollution in the nation’s waterways, delayed rules requiring fossil fuel companies to rein in leaks of methane and greenhouse gases, and reversed a ban on the use of a pesticide the EPA deemed dangerous to children’s health.

Kieran Suckling, executive director of the Center for Biological Diversity, said Pruitt’s resignatio­n was a long time coming.

“Pruitt was the most secretive, hostile, paranoid EPA administra­tor in history,” Suckling said. “It will take a decade to reverse the damage he did to America’s air, water, farm workers and children.”

New York State Attorney General Barbara Underwood, who has successful­ly led a

 ??  ?? Scott Pruitt quit Thursday as Trump’s EPA administra­tor under a stinking cloud of scandal, including wasting a fortune in taxpayers’ dollars and using his position to try to enrich his wife.
Scott Pruitt quit Thursday as Trump’s EPA administra­tor under a stinking cloud of scandal, including wasting a fortune in taxpayers’ dollars and using his position to try to enrich his wife.
 ??  ?? Scott Pruitt, seen paying homage to President Trump in February 2017, left as EPA chief with smarmy praise for his boss: “You are serving as President today because of God’s providence.”
Scott Pruitt, seen paying homage to President Trump in February 2017, left as EPA chief with smarmy praise for his boss: “You are serving as President today because of God’s providence.”
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