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Great Lakes
Article:
Super-un-funded
Superfund could be weakened by recommendations from EPA
subcommittee
By Amanda Griscom
Grist Magazine
Published May 6, 2004
Arsenic in water, mercury emissions, new-source review,
Dick Cheney's energy task force -- these are the issues
that have elicited the loudest howls of protest about
the Bush administration's environmental record during
the past three years. By comparison, the grumbling over
Superfund has been remarkably muted.
But lately the grumble has risen to a growl. In mid-April,
Time ran a feature by Margot Roosevelt entitled "The
Tragedy of Tar Creek," which exposed what it called
"eco-assault on an epic scale." The article
looked at a neglected Superfund site that has led to widespread
lead poisoning, among other scourges, in a nearby Oklahoma
community -- where "Little League fields have been
built over an immense underground cavity that could collapse
at any time. Acid mine waste flushes into drinking wells
... [and] neon-orange scum oozes onto the roadside. Wild
onions, a regional delicacy tossed into scrambled eggs,
are saturated with cadmium."
It's one thing to lament this particularly egregious
case; it's another to accept that the Tar Creek tragedy
is just one of many Superfund screw-ups. As Roosevelt's
article pointed out, Tar Creek can be counted among 29
other cleanup projects in 17 states that stalled out because
they were underfunded by the U.S. EPA last year, according
to the agency's inspector general's office.
Since President Bush took office, the Superfund program's
budget has decreased by 25 percent in inflation-adjusted
dollars, and some 50 percent fewer sites have been cleaned
up, according to a report produced by the Sierra Club
and the U.S. Public Interest Research Group Education
Fund. In fiscal year 2003, the Bush administration completed
cleanups at only 40 Superfund toxic-waste sites, whereas
an average of 87 Superfund cleanups were completed per
year between 1996 and 2000.
Industry representatives and Bush officials argue that
these numbers are misleading because many of the easiest-to-tackle
Superfund sites were cleaned up early in the program's
history, leaving behind bigger, more complex sites that
take longer to deal with. Environmentalists counter that
so-called "mega-sites" have been part of the
agency's agenda for decades, and the shortfall is due
to meager funding and a flimsy commitment to the Superfund
cause.
"The Bush administration has watched the Superfund
program dwindle to a shadow of itself. It's in the worst
shape since it was passed by Congress in 1980," said
Grant Cope, an environmental attorney who specializes
in toxic waste. "The data unequivocally show that
there has been a dramatic slowdown in the pace of cleanups
at the nation's worst toxic-waste sites and a reduction
in the number of new sites that EPA is listing as eligible
for cleanup. Both problems are due to gross deficiencies
in funding."
Granted, this is partly attributable to circumstances
that pre-date the Bush administration. In 1995, the GOP
majority in Congress refused to reauthorize a tax levied
on polluting industries that supplied the grubstake for
the Superfund and enabled the EPA to clean up contaminated
sites even if the costs were too high for a polluting
company to handle. That tax hasn't been renewed since.
Then again, the Bush administration is the first ever
to argue against the tax and refuse to advocate for it
on the Hill; moreover, the administration has made only
meager efforts to replenish the fund by other means. Although
the White House did request an increase in Superfund allocations
for fiscal year 2004, which Congress refused to grant,
"it was clear their request was placed at the bottom
of their list of priorities," said Cope. "Over
and over again, this is an administration that has proven
it can force its priorities through Congress. Superfund
is simply not a priority."
But while the Bush administration has been remiss on
the funding front, it did make an effort to shape the
future of Superfund through creating a subcommittee under
the EPA's National Advisory Council for Environmental
Policy and Technology (NACEPT). After 22 months of investigation
and debate, and more than 1 million in taxpayer dollars
to fund the deliberations, the subcommittee released its
report [PDF] in mid-April with recommendations for the
Superfund program. That report got virtually no media
coverage, other than a brief mention in the Time article
as the reason that Superfund advocates are "bracing
for a new battle."
"While the [subcommittee] process highlighted the
need to address serious problems with the Bush administration's
implementation of the program, the report was biased,
unacceptable, and off the mark," said Cope, one of
the subcommittee's 32 members. So unacceptable did he
find its recommendations, in fact, that he was one of
five subcommittee members who refused to sign the final
document. Other dissenters included representatives from
the Sierra Club, the Center for Public Environmental Oversight,
the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection,
and the Mineral Policy Center (now known as Earthworks).
Chief among their concerns was that the report's conclusions
disproportionately represented the interests of an industry-stacked
panel: "Two-thirds of committee members represented
the interests of PRPs [potentially responsible parties]
-- corporations responsible for toxic-waste sites listed
on [Superfund's] National Priorities List," said
Vicky Peters, a subcommittee participant from the Colorado
attorney general's office. "Not just executives,
but people who have a stake in the PRPs -- scrap recyclers,
lobbyists, insurers, legal reps, developers. These are
all people who have liabilities or who represent companies
with liabilities."
Not surprisingly, the industry-heavy committee blocked
any recommendations that would increase funding for the
Superfund program -- presumably for fear that it would
empower the EPA to issue more administrative orders forcing
them to pony up cleanup funds.
"It got ugly," Cope told Muckraker. "During
deliberations there were strained discussions between
the members. There were people yelling in the room, pointing
fingers. It was not a pretty sight. Some of us came out
of that process pretty bruised up."
Industry folks agreed that the atmosphere was contentious
and were hesitant to comment on the subcommittee's deliberations.
"I'm very guarded about discussing this," Lindene
Patton, vice president and counsel for the insurance company
Zurich Specialties, told Muckraker. "The funding
discussion in particular got heated, very politicized
in my opinion. It took on a life of its own."
Another committee member, Sue Briggum, a longtime lobbyist
for Waste Management and now director of environmental
affairs for the company, expressed similar sentiments:
"You'd have to be dead not to realize how politicized
these issues are right now in election year. I'm cautious
about discussing this because the issues can be spun in
ways I'm not comfortable with -- like the claims by some
that the 'polluter pays' principle has gone out the window.
That's patently untrue."
While it's true that roughly 70 percent of all Superfund
cleanups are paid for directly by the polluters, some
30 percent are so-called orphan sites that have either
been abandoned or that polluters don't have the funds
to deal with. That's where the polluter tax comes in:
The pooled tax revenues from chemical-producing and polluting
industries pay for orphan-site cleanups as well as for
oversight on the other projects. But with the tax no longer
being collected, mom-and-pop taxpayers are stuck with
the bill. In 2004, taxpayers are expected to pay more
than $1 billion for Superfund cleanups -- roughly 300
percent more than they paid for the program in 1995, according
to a U.S. PIRG analysis.
Industry argues that the polluter tax is unfair because
"it flies in the face of individual accountability.
It's just generic accountability," says Briggum.
"Should a company help pay for a contaminated site
even if they didn't contaminate it, just because they
are part of an industry -- or should general revenues
be used? I don't think it's self-evident who it ought
to be."
To environmentalists (and even to the Reagan and Bush
I administrations, which supported the polluter tax),
the logic was clear enough. As Cope explains it, "If
industries are earning profits off the sale and use of
products that contaminate the environment, they are more
directly associated with [the consequences] than taxpayers."
In March, Senate Democrats lost an effort to reinstate
the polluter tax by only seven votes. That prompted the
Sierra Club to air TV spots in swing states with a "Make
Polluters Pay" slogan, and on tax day, enviros protested
at post offices in 25 states to drive the issue home to
taxpayers.
Still, industry-oriented members of the subcommittee
managed to keep a funding recommendation out of the NACEPT
report entirely, arguing that money is Congress' domain
and the subcommittee should focus on the way Superfund
is managed, a matter that the EPA can directly control.
Environmentalists decried this effort to pass the buck:
"Well, if the EPA isn't going to ask Congress for
money, who the heck will?" asked Cope.
According to Velma Smith, a Superfund specialist at National
Environmental Trust who sat in on a number of the subcommittee
meetings, the General Electric representative Jane Gardner
(referred to by some as "G.E. Jane") didn't
just dismiss the funding problem, she denied it altogether:
"According to my notes, Gardner said she was 'totally
opposed [to] and cannot live with any recommendation for
more money,'" Smith told Muckraker. "She further
added the even more preposterous comment that 'This program
is well funded and always has been.'" Gardner did
not return Muckraker's calls.
Midway through the subcommittee deliberations, when it
became apparent that members would never reach consensus
on most major issues, EPA gave up on that approach and
advised the members to submit a range of views. Problem
is, the range of views were mostly published without attribution,
and many that came from industry could weaken Superfund's
protections. "The final conclusions drawn in the
report totally lacked accountability, and basically gave
[industry's unattributed recommendations] as much legitimacy
and weight as the consensus recommendations," said
Jessica Frohman, a Sierra Club toxic-waste specialist
who served as an alternate representative on the subcommittee.
Every dissenter who refused to sign the report agreed
that its first major flaw was the failure to acknowledge
the need for a significant, stable funding source and
to even entertain the idea of reinstituting the tax on
polluting industries. The program's dire funding shortages
were even acknowledged in an internal EPA report quietly
posted on the agency's website this week, although no
real funding solutions were proposed.
Among the range of recommendations that dissenting subcommittee
members found problematic was the notion that sites be
added to Superfund's National Priority List based on EPA's
budgetary constraints, weighing the financial viability
of site cleanups instead of focusing on how much of a
threat sites pose to public health. Even more alarming
to some was the suggestion that sites be cleaned up based
on their potential to be redeveloped for commercial purposes
-- a proposal that would disadvantage the cleanup of sites
in rural communities and inner-city areas, which are generally
less favorable markets for commercial development.
"The most discouraging thing that came out of this
committee meeting is that it could change the fundamental
mission of Superfund," said Frohman. "This was
a program developed first and foremost to protect human
health, to save lives. These recommendations have the
potential to turn it into a program contingent on expenses
and affordability, rather than protecting public health."
Cope also has concerns about the report's potential ramifications:
"If the Bush administration gets reelected, I think
that
officials could use [the report] to weaken
the program -- either to change the statutory language
or undertake more subtle administrative reforms. And the
report would give them political cover to do so."
These concerns loom large when you consider that one
out of every four Americans lives within four miles of
a Superfund site, according to the General Accounting
Office. That translates into 73 million Americans who
could be at risk of floating down Love Canal if Superfund
continues to be neglected.
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