Scott Pruitt’s Back-to-Basics Agenda for the EPA: to follow his statutory mandate—clean air and water—and to respect states’ rights.
[This interview by Kimberly Strassel of the Wall Street Journal on February 17 is worth reading. Secretary Pruitt reveals himself to be less of a counter-revolutionary or theologian; and, more of a legal scholar and environmentalist with an understanding of economics. He believes the previous EPA "didn’t bother with statutes. They displaced Congress, disregarded the law, and in general said they would act in their own way. That now ends.”
For those of us, who have worried about the end of "cooperative federalism," this is good news. Allowing an under-prepared federal agency the power over the waterways (2015 Waters of the US) and the ultimate power over America's electrical grid (Clean Power Plan) at a time when the EPA didn't have a political or legislative mandate was simply undemocratic.
If anything, the EPA had many problems staying non-political or even competent: The Colorado Toxic spill of 3 million gallons on August 25, 2015 and the EPA's slow response--it took over one day to alert Colorado and New Mexico government officials and almost 6 days to acknowledge the spill to the media; The heavy-handed (and behind-the-scene) politics dealing with the Pebble Mine approval process; and the Flint tainted water scandal, where the EPA already identified the water contamination in February 2016 and yet waited until October to publicly voice its concerns. Most people believe that the Michigan Department Environmental Quality and the EPA share the majority of the blame for allowing the political wangling to go on for over 7 months, before acting.
In retrospect, the scathing political attacks on Scott Pruitt seem to prove the point that EPA had become so politicized it was incapable of enforcing the environmental laws written by Congress and signed by the President. Ultimately, the previous EPA was unwilling to admit its own flaws, mistakes and misjudgments. Steve]
Scott Pruitt’s Back-to-Basics Agenda for the EPA
The new administrator plans to follow his statutory mandate—clean air and water—and to respect states’ rights.
By
Kimberley A. Strassel