Sen. Boxer To Ask Tough Questions At EPA Designee's Hearing

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ProPublica   |  Joaquin Sapien   |   January 13, 2009 06:01 PM

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From ProPublica:

In the latest volley of a years-long battle involving the Environmental Protection Agency, the military and the White House, the EPA announced last week that it will delay its decision [1] on whether to set a drinking water standard for perchlorate, a chemical in rocket fuel that has been found at harmful levels in drinking water across the country. The announcement that the EPA won't act until it receives advice from the National Academy of Sciences puts the contentious decision onto the already-heavy regulatory agenda awaiting Lisa Jackson, President-elect Barack Obama's pick to head the EPA.

Sen. Barbara Boxer, chair of the Environment and Public Works committee, has promised to raise the issue of perchlorate at Jackson's confirmation hearing tomorrow. Boxer has called the EPA's decision "to walk away from this problem and shrug off this danger...immoral."

The EPA estimates that as many as 16.6 million Americans [2] are exposed to unsafe levels of perchlorate, which studies link to thyroid damage that can slow brain development in children.

Jackson, former head of the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, is no stranger to the perchlorate controversy. New Jersey was urged to regulate [3] (PDF) the chemical in October 2005 by a panel of state scientists, environmental activists and industry leaders. But three years later, the DEP still hasn't completed a draft of the rule.

The panel made its recommendation after a statewide study revealed that unsafe levels of perchlorate had been found in six of 123 public water systems the state sampled in 2004. Each of those water systems serves more than 10,000 people (p. 41 [3]).

Jackson's predecessor, Bradley Campbell, promised to propose a perchlorate standard [4] for drinking water by Jan. 31, 2006. But when Jackson moved from assistant commissioner to commissioner in February 2006, that deadline had passed. Standards were still being discussed last month, when Jackson left the DEP to become chief of staff for New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine.

New Jersey DEP spokeswoman Elaine Makatura said the three years it has taken the DEP to develop a perchlorate regulation is not "atypical" and that the rule is now being reviewed by DEP's legal department and by the state's attorney general.

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Meanwhile, New Jersey's DEP has criticized the EPA for not regulating perchlorate. In a November letter to the EPA written on behalf of Jackson's office, Jeanne Herb, director of DEP's office of policy and planning, said "we strongly urge USEPA to reconsider its determination." The letter said that New Jersey planned to regulate perchlorate by the end of 2008 and emphasized that its standard will be more stringent than the EPA's. New Jersey is considering a standard that would allow no more than 5 parts of perchlorate per billion parts of water.

Jackson's supporters blame Corzine, not Jackson, for New Jersey's failure to regulate perchlorate.

"I am very disappointed that the state hasn't moved faster on developing a perchlorate standard," said David Pringle of the New Jersey Environmental Federation, who sat on the panel that urged the state to regulate perchlorate. "That being said, I fully lay the blame on the governor's office. DEP was ready to roll two years ago. It was the governor's office that prevented us from moving forward faster."

One of Jackson's most outspoken critics, Jeff Ruch, who heads Washington-based whistleblower protection group Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility, sees New Jersey's foot-dragging on perchlorate as an example of Jackson's history [5] of "regulatory neglect."

"If the bureaucracy in New Jersey is stymieing her efforts to do her job, then wait until she gets to Washington," Ruch said. "If she does not have the muscle to push these things through in her own state, then her accomplishments will be few and far between here."

For years Democratic members of Congress [6], the Government Accountability Office [7] (PDF) and environmental advocates [8] have criticized the Department of Defense and the White House for pressuring the EPA not to regulate perchlorate. In 2002, the EPA suggested limiting the amount of perchlorate in water to 1 part per billion. But in October it released a health advisory suggesting that 15 parts per billion is safe.

As the EPA deliberates about whether to regulate perchlorate nationally, states are beginning to step in and fill the void. California has set a standard at 6 parts per billion and Massachusetts set its standard at 2 parts per billion.

An Obama spokesperson declined to comment for this story, and Jackson did not respond to requests for an interview.

From ProPublica: In the latest volley of a years-long battle involving the Environmental Protection Agency, the military and the White House, the EPA announced last week that it will delay its decisi...
From ProPublica: In the latest volley of a years-long battle involving the Environmental Protection Agency, the military and the White House, the EPA announced last week that it will delay its decisi...
 
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Boxer should ask the tough questions but PEER has no credibility.

PEER is run by a dude named Ruch who is BFF with Wolfe who is a disgruntle former NJDEP employee.

She is given very high marks from the Sierra Club and Environment New Jersey/NJPIRG who are legitimate environmental groups.

Morefrom Tittel from Sierra Club:

"Lisa Jackson would be an outstanding EPA administrator," said Jeff Tittel, director of the Sierra Club in New Jersey. "If you work on environmental issues in New Jersey, you get to work on more issues than probably any other state in the nation."

"She's been a real leader as far as clean air, clean water. She has said many times she understands firsthand the failure of government in dealing with climate change."

Mottola from Environmental New Jersey:

"She's just real. She'll always give you the straight deal. Whether it's something you want to hear or not," said Dena Mottola, executive director of Environment New Jersey.

Do not listen to Bill Wolfe or Jeff Ruch and their twisting of the facts.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:42 AM on 01/22/2009

So the anon. obstructionist was Boxer? I didn't even know she was a Republican.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:05 AM on 01/22/2009
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No the "obstructionist" was not Boxer.

Schools are indeed failing people - far too many can't read...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:38 PM on 01/22/2009

"The EPA estimates that as many as 16.6 million Americans [2] are exposed to unsafe levels of perchlorate, which studies link to thyroid damage that can slow brain development in children."
Future republicans? The last 8 years is planning for the future?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:00 PM on 01/18/2009

Most Republican politicians have never met a life threatening toxin they didn't like or want deregulated.
Anyone see a problem with their pro life stance?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:21 PM on 01/14/2009
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Good point. That, combined with their enthusiastic support for both the de.ath penalty and war is the reason I call them "pro-birth" instead of "pro-life".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:18 AM on 01/22/2009

New Jersey isn't the only place. Until we have nationwide penalties of the harshest magnitude (and realistic enforcement of existing laws), seeking forgiveness afterward rather than securing permission beforehand will continue to be a way of life in the United States. It's cheaper, after all, and far less susceptible to costly delays.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:18 AM on 01/14/2009
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WE have the most polluted sites by far

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:46 PM on 01/14/2009
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NJ/Dept of Env Protect.

Where it is easier to get forgiveness than permission

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:40 PM on 01/13/2009
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