An update on the “Save the Environment – Save the EPA” Campaign


AFGE Inside Government Radio Show -

March 9, 2012 

Three very imporatant pieces of information for you–click on the link below to listen to the broadcast:
 

President, AFGE National Council of SSA Field Operations Locals

  • Terms of the union’s conceptual agreement with SSA for a new national contract
  • The impact of SSA office closures on the public

Carolyn Federoff
Executive Vice President, AFGE Housing and Urban Development Council 222

  • An analysis of the federal deficit and what’s needed to balance the budget

Tom Link
Executive Vice President, AFGE Environmental Protection Agency Council 238

 

http://www.federalnewsradio.com/216/2777259/AFGE-Social-Security-Administration-reach-agreement-on-national-contract–March-9th-2012

 

 

Posted in Environment and Public Health Issues

EPA faces third straight year of cuts


EPA faces third straight year of cuts

President Obama’s environmental agenda, under political attack and on the back burner in a sluggish economy, will face budget cuts for the third straight year.

The proposed Environmental Protection Agency budget for fiscal year 2013 is $8.3 billion, down from $9.0 billion last year. This year’s request represents a 1.2 percent decrease, or $105 million, from the 2012 enacted level. Continue reading

Posted in Environment and Public Health Issues, Environmental Protection Agency, General Announcements

House Transportation Bill Split Into Three Parts, Just Like Titanic


House Transportation Bill Split Into Three Parts, Just Like Titanic

Posted February 14, 2012 in Moving Beyond Oil

Mirroring the record-setting 18-hour, 100+ amendment markup in the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, the House Rules Committee posted almost 300 amendments this morning. There are some real gems in here (being facetious, of course), including:

  • Two from Rep. Broun (R-GA), one would zero out funding for transit entirely and the other would zero out funding for all Amtrak rail lines except the Acela;
  • One from Rep. Graves (R-GA) which would ramp the federal program out of existence entirely;
  • One from Rep. Garrett (R-NJ) which would pilot elimination of the federal program in two states;
  • Several proposing to carve out even more waivers of environmental reviews;
  • Two from Rep. McKinley (R-WV) that would slash regulation of coal residual and coal ash;
  • One from Rep. Sullivan (R-OK) that would add a cement deregulation bill; and
  • One from Rep. Pombeo (R-KS) that would prevent regulation of hydraulic fracturing or “fracking.”

And those are just the worst ones! Continue reading

Posted in Clean Air, Clean Water, Environment and Public Health Issues


CBO Concludes that Oil Shale Fail Equals Transportation Fail for the Boehner Package

Posted February 10, 2012 in Moving Beyond Oil, Saving Wildlife and Wild Places

CBO Scores Oil Shale Revenues at Zero

As Congress heads to a vote on Speaker Boehner’s proposal to fund the nation’s transportation and infrastructure needs by generating revenues via increased oil and gas drilling, a new revenue score from the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) places the whole notion of the package under serious doubt. In fact, one of the more questionable parts of the drilling package is the inclusion of the PIONEERS Act, a bill that would gut a number of environmental laws in order to promote commercial oil shale development. As discussed previously, there is no such thing as a commercial oil shale industry in the United States. Hence, the notion of fulfilling our nation’s financial needs on what amounts to a delusion, seems particularly reckless. The CBO seems to agree – for it projected that oil shale development, as conceived by the PIONEERS Act, would generate no revenues through 2022. Zero. Nada. Zilch.

The fact that oil shale would not be able to contribute to the nation’s financial future did not seem to faze the primary sponsor of the PIONEERS Act, Representative Doug Lamborn from Colorado, who admitted to the Denver Post last week that oil shale “is not a real contributor to the highway transportation needs we have.” A remarkable pivot given that when the PIONEERS Act was introduced in November, Lamborn stated that one of the critical points of the bill was to “…create good paying American jobs and generate new revenue without raising taxes on families and small businesses.”

But the very reason the Boehner package exists, is to generate revenues through increased drilling in order to cover a budgetary shortfall in the nation’s transportation funding. To break it down to its parts, the funding component of the Boehner bill is basically held up by a three-legged stool composed of drilling initiatives: one leg is represented by a plan that would open up America’s coasts to increased offshore drilling; the second leg would allow new drilling in previously untouched areas of the Arctic; and the third leg would open Western lands to oil shale development. If this nation is going to sacrifice its natural heritage just to satisfy the nation’s transportation needs – a dubious proposition to say the least – then one would sure hope that the entirety of the concept is at least structurally and financially sound. The CBO score establishes that it is anything but sound, and that all three of the drilling initiatives combined would only generate $2 billion in five years – which amounts to at least an annual $30 billion dollar shortfall. When considering that oil shale’s contribution is practically nothing, and the other two drilling proposals are also not up to the task – that three-legged stool might as well be a pogo stick, because the House Republicans keep bouncing around the fact that the Boehner package is structurally doomed to fail.

Posted in Energy, Oil Shale, tarsands

Demolishing Public Participation and Environmental Reviews: The Six Worst Ideas in H.R. 7


Demolishing Public Participation and Environmental Reviews: The Six Worst Ideas in H.R. 7

Posted February 11, 2012 in Moving Beyond Oil, U.S. Law and Policy

“I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves; and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise their control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them but to inform their discretion.”
- Thomas Jefferson (quote I kept handy when I served as a state gov’t bureaucrat)

The National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) was enacted in 1969 by overwhelming bi-partisan majorities, and is one of the only laws guaranteeing oversight citizens like you and me over government bureaucrat and industry decisions that affect our communities’ social, economic, and environmental health.

Under the law, agencies including the Department of Transportation (DOT) must fully assess the environmental effects of actions funded by our taxpayer dollars that may significantly affect the human environment. Critically, the process provides citizens an opportunity to learn about the actions federal agencies are proposing and offers agencies, in turn, an opportunity to receive valuable input from the public, state, and local governments. Although the law does not require the most environmentally friendly option, it does require that agencies “look before they leap,” make decisions in a transparent manner, and that the effects will not be overlooked or underestimated.

There is no evidence that environmental reviews are the cause of most project delays. The most common reasons for delay based on what little study has been done are: lack of funding, low project priority, and local controversy. And in fact only 4% of all transportation projects require the most extensive review – an Environmental Impact Statement or EIS. 92% of all projects are categorically excluded from review. H.R. 7 ignores such facts and eviscerates core protections of NEPA and fails to address real causes of transportation project delay.

Here are the worst of the provisions in this section of the House Republican transportation bill (Thanks to Stephen Schima at the Save Our Environment Action Center for compiling it, a full list is available by writing him at stephen@saveourenvironment.org):

  1. Arbitrarily and Entirely Waives Reviews For Projects (Sec. 3009) – would waive environmental reviews of projects which cost less than $10,000,000 or where the federal funding is less than 15% of the entire project. There is no reason to shut stakeholders like us out of decisions where tens of millions of dollars are spent affecting the safety, health, and environment of their communities.
  2. Imposes Severe Limitations on Consideration of Alternatives (Sec. 3010) – would limit the range of alternatives, which could preclude efficient land-development, transit-friendly, cheaper or no-build alternatives.
  3. Mandates Severe Limitations on Judicial Review (Sec. 3010)– the bill further  reduces the time to file a complaint from what was originally six years to 90 days, places extreme limitations on venue and standing, and prevents agency review of alternatives, the heart of the process, from court review by imperiously deeming them “legally sufficient.”
  4. Commands Short, Arbitrary Timelines for Environmental Review With Default Approvals (Sec. 3019) – limits all environmental reviews to 270 days and provides that, if the deadline is not met, the project is approved by default – regardless of harmful environmental, economic, or health effects on our communities.
  5. Carves Out New, Extremely Broad Categorical Exclusions (Sec. 3018) – eliminates reviews of projects within a right-of-way or any activity carried out under the Title 23 – an extreme provision that slashes reviews for all highway projects.
  6. Mandates Unnecessary Exemptions During Emergencies (Sec. 3004) – would exempt any road, highway or bridge reconstruction from environmental review under NEPA and several other laws if rebuilt in the wake of an emergency. Such an exemption is unnecessary, as the quick rebuilding of Minneapolis’ I-35W bridge indicates, because regulations already provide for expedited NEPA review.

The hot air about this section is that it’s supposedly about “streamlining” project delivery; however wrongheadedness and overreach shows it’s actually “EXTREMElining.”

Time for Congress to vote NO on H.R. 7.

Posted in Endangered Species Act, Energy, Environment and Public Health Issues

NRDC in the News 2/10: Keystone XL study falls short, contaminated waters, new nuclear reactors and more…


NRDC in the News 2/10: Keystone XL study falls short, contaminated waters, new nuclear reactors and more…

Posted February 10, 2012 in The Media and the Environment

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Anthony Swift spoke to Huffington Post about the State Department Inspector General Report, which found that the environmental impact study of the Keystone XL pipeline had fallen short of providing an independent and objective review… Anthony was also quoted in an E & E News piece about the IRS exempting most tar sands oil from spill cleanup taxes… CNN.com’s the Chart blog quoted Steve Fleischli on the EPA recreational beach water quality criteria proposal, which fails to properly account for all public health risks associated with swimming in contaminated waters… Chris Paine was quoted in a Boston Herald piece about a consortium of utilities in the South that won government approval to construct two new nuclear reactors

In an E & E News piece, adopted from Meg Waltner’s blog, Meg commended the Department of Energy’s proposed new standards for microwave ovens which will “slay the energy waste ‘vampire.’”… In an eco-business.com piece, Yang Fuqiang discussed how Chinese companies need to shift their focus from the slumping international carbon market to their own domestic market… Chuck Clusen explained to Mongabay.com how the Arctic region is an environmentally-sensitive area and petitioned the Obama Administration to refrain from exploratory drilling in the Beaufort Sea and the Chuckchi Sea… Brad Sewell spoke to the Cape Cod Times about the effects on herring from power plants that use large amounts of water from bays and rivers.

Posted in Endangered Species Act, Energy, Environment and Public Health Issues

Revenge of the Climate Scientists: 38 Experts Set the WSJ Straight


Revenge of the Climate Scientists: 38 Experts Set the WSJ Straight

By | Bio | Published: February 1, 2012

Two days ago, I wrote about a flawed global warming analysis in the Wall Street Journal.

The paper published an opinion piece, No Need to Panic About Global Warming, written by a small group of scientists and engineers who are global warming skeptics.

Today, the other side was heard from. Continue reading

Posted in Clean Air, Global Climate Change

All Politics IS Local!


I was sitting in my office one week before the AFGE National Council of EPA Locals held its annual training session in July 2011 at the National Labor College, and was dreading the fact that we would spend Wednesday of that week on the Hill, starting with a Congressional Breakfast, followed by visits to Congressional Representatives and Senators in the afternoon.

I knew I had to meet with both sides of the aisle, particularly in the House since the Republicans have a substantial majority.  But, what will have changed after their staff politely listens and the visit is over?  How could we possibly change some of their extreme attitudes, opinions and positions regarding the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and its mission to protect human health and the environment, let alone Federal civilian employees? Continue reading

Posted in Clean Air, Clean Water, Environment and Public Health Issues, Environmental Protection Agency

Tell the Obama administration to protect our oceans from harmful offshore drilling


 Tell the Obama administration to protect our oceans from harmful offshore drilling

The Obama administration has proposed an offshore oil drilling plan that would allow drilling in the pristine Arctic Ocean and more drilling in the Gulf of Mexico. Instead of additional drilling that would needlessly endanger critical ecosystems, we need investments in clean, renewable energy to reduce our dependence on oil. Tell the Obama administration, before the February 8th comment deadline, to keep the Arctic off limits to drilling and not to increase drilling in the Gulf of Mexico.
Learn more about this issue »

Posted in Energy


Stand With These Three Appalachian Communities And Help Stop Mountaintop Removal Mining

My name is Donna Branham, and I live in Mingo County, West Virginia. I’ve seen first-hand the results of mountaintop removal mining, an extremely destructive form of coal mining that entails blowing up mountains, removing the tops, and dumping the rubble into streams, filling entire valleys and waterways. My family’s homeplace was destroyed by it, and the ruthlessness of the coal mining industry. Our drinking water was contaminated, and blasting shook our house and our community every day. We also dealt with extreme dust pollution and noise pollution, and flyrock, or large boulders that the explosion spits out through the air. I’m so thankful that people like you are getting involved in this fight. I’ve been in this for 20 years, and for so long, I felt like I stood alone. One voice doesn’t go very far. Many voices do. I am asking you to join this chorus of voices so that we are heard by our nation’s leaders.

Please take action now and help stop mountaintop removal mining.

Donna’s story is not unique—there are families across Appalachia who are living with the same injustice. Across this ancient mountain range, coal companies are blowing up mountains, burying streams, and contaminating waters—forever altering in the most extreme way possible our nation’s landscape and contaminating drinking water supplies for local communities. Continue reading

Posted in Clean Air, Clean Water, Mountaintop Removal Strip Mining