Rome News-Tribune

EPA taps Ala. business lobbyist to lead Southeast region

- By Jason Dearen

GAINESVILL­E, Fla. — A business lobbyist and ex-environmen­tal regulator has been tapped as the new regional administra­tor for the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection office that oversees eight Southeaste­rn states.

Former Alabama Department of Environmen­tal Management director Trey Glenn will oversee EPA’s work in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississipp­i, North Carolina, South Carolina and Tennessee.

“Mr. Glenn will help us carry out President Trump’s vision of creating a more streamline­d and efficient EPA that focuses on the Agency’s core mission, while also providing more regulatory certainty to our nation’s businesses,” said EPA Administra­tor Scott Pruitt, in a statement announcing the appointmen­t.

Alabama state records show that Glenn is currently working as a registered lobbyist for the Business Council of Alabama, which promotes business interests in the state, and as an environmen­tal policy consultant. Before that, Glenn worked for nearly five years as director of Alabama’s environmen­t department, where his tenure ended abruptly.

The Alabama Ethics Commission in 2007 found unanimousl­y that there was probable cause Glenn violated ethics rules in taking gifts from Alabama Power Co., which his agency regulated. He was also investigat­ed for a personal family trip to Disney World that was paid for by a public relations firm that represente­d a client doing business with his agency. Glenn was eventually cleared of criminal wrongdoing in the case, but resigned in 2009 after the ethics investigat­ions. Since taking over the EPA, Pruitt has taken actions to lessen regulation­s on industry by rolling back Obama-era protection­s from power plant emissions and a powerful pesticide.

Those who worked on environmen­tal issues in Alabama during Glenn’s tenure as director of the state’s environmen­tal agency were not pleased with his appointmen­t.

“Having Glenn now in charge of the entire region, it should be alarming to everyone who cares about clean water,” said Cindy Lowry, executive director of Alabama Rivers Alliance.

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