Saturday, December 13, 2008

Bush Last-Minute Rules Cement Environmental Legacy


Published on Wednesday, December 10, 2008 by Reuters
by Deborah Zabarenko

WASHINGTON - In his waning weeks in the White House, U.S. President George W. Bush is drawing more fire than ever as he presides over a steady stream of environmentally unfriendly regulations meant to last into the Obama administration.

"While the first 100 days of the Bush administration initiated perhaps the worst period of environmental deregulation in American history, the last 100 days of a Bush presidency could be even worse," the staff of the House of Representatives global warming committee wrote just before the November 4 election.

On his first day in office on January 20, 2001, Bush issued an order that blocked regulations to reduce arsenic in drinking water, sulfur in diesel fuel and raw sewage releases generally.

Throughout his presidency, Bush has rejected any mandatory, economy-wide limits on the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide, which is emitted by coal-fired power plants and vehicles running on fossil fuels, as well as natural sources.


This has put the United States at odds with other major developed countries, which have joined the carbon-capping Kyoto Protocol and are working at a meeting in Poland on a successor to this international treaty to fight climate change.

The Bush administration is represented at the meeting but, with most attention focused on the future Obama administration, the prospects for solid progress are slim.

In his last months as president, Bush's team has assembled a long list of so-called environmental "midnight regulations" covering global warming, air pollution, endangered species and coal mining, among other issues.

These last-minute rules overwhelmingly favor industry over human health and welfare, Bush's environmental opponents say. And they are moving through the federal bureaucracy at a pace that will ensure they are in effect when President-elect Barack Obama takes office on January 20.

This means the new rules will be more difficult for the next administration and Congress to undo.

'THE WORST WE'VE EVER SEEN'

"They (Bush administration officials) have been relentlessly opposed to clean energy solutions, climate change responsibility and basic safeguards for air and water and land across all of their agencies over eight long years," said John Walke of the Natural Resources Defense Council.

For Patti Goldman, of the environmental advocacy group Earthjustice, the Bush administration's failings fall into three categories:

-- exploitation of public resources, especially oil and gas development on public land;
-- a refusal to address climate change domestically or internationally;
-- the reversal or delay of public health protections from environmental dangers.


"It's the worst we've ever seen," Goldman said by phone, noting that she has watched environmental policy since the Reagan administration in the early 1980s.

More... http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2008/12/10-6

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"There are a thousand hacking at the branches of evil to one who is striking at the root." - Henry David Thoreau

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