2nd Bush Administration to Pursue Enviro Goals
11/14/04
Liberty
Matters News Service
With a Republican head-lock on the White House and Congress, the
Bush administration is poised to seek changes to environmental policy
that reflects a market-based economy.
Even as the U. S. has experienced crushing high fuel prices, Democrats
and "moderate" Republicans have refused to approve oil exploration
in the far-reaches of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, a situation
that House Resource Committee Chairman, Richard Pombo, (R-CA) says
will be rectified as part of a House-passed energy bill.
Additionally, Pombo indicated there would be renewed efforts to obtain
bi-partisan approval to streamline the antiquated Endangered Species
Act.
The administration also plans to accelerate distribution of the remainder
of the $40 billion Congress appropriated to pay farmers and other
landowners to set aside portions of their property for wetlands or
wildlife habitat, which will, in turn, give the government or its
agents de facto control over their property.
Environmental groups were quick to point out the administration better
not get cocky about pushing the environmental reform envelope because,
as Phil Clapp, president of the National Environmental Trust said;
"George Bush doesn't have to run again, but Republican lawmakers
do."
RELATED STORY:
G.O.P. Plans to Give Environment Rules a Free-Market Tilt
By FELICITY BARRINGER and MICHAEL JANOFSKY
WASHINGTON, Nov. 7 - With the elections over, Congress and the Bush
administration are moving ahead with ambitious environmental agendas
that include revamping signature laws on air pollution and endangered
species and reviving a moribund energy bill that would open the Arctic
National Wildlife Refuge to energy exploration.
In addition, the administration intends to accelerate conservation
efforts by distributing billions of dollars to private landowners
for the preservation of wetlands and wildlife habitats. The White
House also plans to announce next month a new effort to clean up the
Great Lakes.
The groundwork for the push was laid down in the past four years even
as environmental groups, Congressional moderates and the courts put
the brakes on major changes. But the election returns that gave Mr.
Bush a clear victory and expanded the Republicans' majorities in Congress
have emboldened those determined to hard-wire free-market principles
into all environmental policy.
"The election is a validation of our philosophy and agenda,"
Michael O. Leavitt, administrator of the Environmental Protection
Agency, said in an interview. "We will make more progress in
less time while maintaining economic competitiveness for the country.
That is my mission."
Representative Joe L. Barton of Texas, chairman of the Committee on
Energy and Commerce, said he was eager to get the process started
and encouraged the environmental groups and Democrats who typically
oppose Republican initiatives "to come out of the trenches and
meet me halfway."
But with industry groups anticipating relaxed regulations and environmental
groups fighting to retain stiff regulations, the environmental debate
over the next four years could be contentious.
"What you're going to see is an administration focused on setting
broad goals and then letting states and companies and individuals
work to achieve those, within an economic framework," said Charles
Wehland, a lawyer for Jones Day in Chicago who represents clients
like the OGE Energy Corporation and the Great Lakes Chemical Corporation.
But Phil Clapp, president of the National Environmental Trust, a nonprofit
group, warned the White House and Congressional leadership that it
would be risky to further push the agenda of the last four years.
"George Bush doesn't have to run again, but Republican lawmakers
do," Mr. Clapp said. "They know there is a cost to their
political association with rolling back environmental laws."
Nationally, the environment was a sleeper issue that never awoke.
But concern for environmental and conservation issues was sometimes
visible at the local level. Montana voters, for instance, rejected
an initiative to overturn a ban on a form of mining cyanide, effectively
blocking a large new mine on the Blackfoot River.
Bush administration officials say that among the first measures moving
toward enactment will be those that govern air pollution levels. The
administration initiative known as Clear Skies, which generated lukewarm
support in Congress during Mr. Bush's first term, is about to come
out of mothballs. Will Hart, a spokesman for Senator James M. Inhofe,
an Oklahoma Republican who is chairman of the Committee on Environment
and Public Works, said it was Mr. Imhofe's "No. 1 environmental
issue."
Clear Skies establishes lower emission standards for pollutants like
nitrogen oxide, sulfur dioxide and mercury, but environmental groups
complain that it does not reduce them as much or as soon as levels
set forth in a competing bill or by enforcement of the Clean Air Act.
Senator James M. Jeffords, the Vermont independent who is the ranking
minority member of the committee and a co-sponsor of the competing
bill, said it saddened him that Mr. Bush was leading efforts to undermine
air standards that his father, the first President Bush, supported.
Citing the new alignment in the Senate - 55 Republicans, 44 Democrats
and himself - Mr. Jeffords said, "We have the power to block
any measure detrimental to the environment."
But even if a Clear Skies bill fades again, Mr. Leavitt said he intended
to enact its regulatory equivalent, the Clean Air Interstate Rule,
a "cap-and-trade" approach to lowering emissions that would
set pollution levels for 29 Eastern states and the District of Columbia,
by the end of the year. Such approaches allow companies flexibility
on how to meet standards, including trading pollution credits.
For now, the Bush administration has no intention of regulating the
heat-trapping gases, like carbon dioxide, which scientists believe
contribute to global warming.
A top priority of powerful Congressional Republicans is the 31-year-old
Endangered Species Act. Representative Richard W. Pombo of California,
chairman of the Committee on Resources, has made efforts to raise
the hurdles that scientists must clear to ensure a government determination
that a species is endangered and cut back the amount of critical habitat
required. Habitat designations pave the way for land use controls.
"We will put these back together and really start trying to figure
out how we can put together a bipartisan compromise," Mr. Pombo
said in a recent interview.
On issues like ranching, hydropower and logging, he said, humans are
competing with other species in the same territory. "It's unrealistic
to say that humans are not part of the environment and are not going
to have an impact," he said. "We need to say, 'These two
trains are on the same track; how do we get them not to crash?' "
The energy bill will pass, he said, adding that any bill produced
in the House would open 2,000 acres of the Arctic National Wildlife
Refuge for energy exploration.
A third priority, Mr. Pombo said, is a package of legislation dealing
with ocean resources, including issues like the controls appropriate
for commercial and sport fisheries, the protection of endangered marine
mammals and the mandate of the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric
Administration.
Dana Perino, a spokeswoman for the White House Council on Environmental
Quality, said in an interview on Friday that the administration, like
Mr. Pombo, put a high priority on the energy bill and the oceans issue.
Ms. Perino also said the administration was eager to disburse the
unspent portion of the $40 billion appropriated by Congress for conservation
initiatives undertaken by farmers and private landowners.
Interior Secretary Gale A. Norton, through her spokeswoman, Tina Kreisher,
declined to be interviewed about her agency's top priorities until
Mr. Bush decided who would serve in his new cabinet.
Several pending actions to open up wild areas of the West to energy
development could be made final in the coming weeks, touching on areas
like Roan Plateau in Colorado and Otero Mesa in New Mexico.
David Alberswerth, an expert on public lands issues with the Wilderness
Society, agreed that the Republican gains in Congress had increased
the difficulty of blocking a law opening the Alaska refuge, but he
cautioned that some Bush voters already opposed energy development
projects in their regions.
"When the Bush administration came into office four years ago,
you didn't have ranchers and farmers and hunters and anglers upset
about their energy agenda," Mr. Alberswerth said. "The administration
will continue to pursue the same policies they have pursued, and I'm
confident that if they do, they will encounter opposition from that
quarter."
Jim Range, the chairman of the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership,
a coalition of hunting and fishing groups whose members include some
staunch conservatives who are also conservationists, said energy development
would be "an issue that hits the ground running."
Mr. Range's group is split over the Alaska issue and would probably
sit out that debate, he said. "But in regard to other energy
development, particularly on federal lands," he said, "there's
a consensus that we ought to do energy development but we ought to
do it right."