South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

EPA criminal action against polluters falls to 30-year low

- By Ellen Knickmeyer

WASHINGTON — The Environmen­tal Protection Agency hit a 30-year low in

2018 in the number of pollution cases it referred for criminal prosecutio­n, Justice Department data show.

EPA said in a statement that it is directing “its resources to the most significan­t and impactful cases.”

But the 166 cases referred for prosecutio­n in the last fiscal year is the lowest number since 1988, when Ronald Reagan was president and 151 cases were referred, according to Justice Department data obtained by the nonprofit Public Employees for Environmen­tal Responsibi­lity advocacy group and released this week.

“You don’t get closer to the core of EPA’s mission than enforcing the law,” said Jeff Ruch, PEER’s executive director. “We’re reaching levels where the enforcemen­t program is lacking a pulse.”

EPA efforts to prosecute polluters reached 592 criminal referrals under President Bill Clinton in

1998. Criminal referrals have been on a downward trajectory since then, and have fallen by more than one-fourth since fiscal year 2016, the last of the Obama administra­tion.

A supporter of deregulati­on, President Donald Trump as a candidate called for doing away with all but “little tidbits” of the federal environmen­tal agency.

Asked for comment, EPA spokesman John Konkus pointed to the civil settlement of about $800 million with Fiat Chrysler over claims the automaker rigged its diesel-powered Ram and Jeep vehicles to cheat on emissions tests. EPA agents referred 166 cases for prosecutio­n last year, the lowest number since 1988. Efforts to prosecute polluters reached 592 criminal referrals in 1998.

EPA referrals resulted in 62 federal conviction­s in fiscal year 2018, the fewest since 1995.

Scott Pruitt was the agency’s head for most of fiscal year 2018, resigning in July amid ethics scandals over his spending and allegation­s of favor-seeking in office.

Pruitt rankled many by insisting on an unusual round-the-clock security detail that included taking agents from regional EPA offices away from their work investigat­ing possible environmen­tal crimes to work two-week stints “baby-sitting” Pruitt, said Michael Hubbard, a former special agent who led the EPA’s Criminal Investigat­ion Division regional office in Boston.

Andrew Wheeler, whose nomination to succeed Pruitt as the agency’s chief went before a Senate committee Wednesday, stopped the 24-hour guard when he was named Pruitt’s acting replacemen­t.

Congress in 1990 mandated that the agency’s

Criminal Investigat­ion Division deploy at least 200 special agents. PEER said the number had fallen to 140 special agents by last April.

“They’re being gutted,” Hubbard said.

With so few EPA special agents to investigat­e polluters around the country, “as leads come in, they can’t be followed up on,” Hubbard said. “You end up saying ‘no’ to potential leads routinely because you just don’t have the wherewitha­l to investigat­e them.”

Justice Department figures show the agency’s referrals for criminal prosecutio­n slowing even more in the first two months of fiscal year 2019, to 24, under Wheeler.

Wheeler, like Pruitt, at times emphasizes giving states more say in regulation of polluters within their borders. Wheeler also has continued a centraliza­tion of enforcemen­t action and decision-making within the agency. Critics say that could discourage enforcemen­t.

 ?? PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS/AP ??
PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS/AP

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