Trump
EPA will no longer conduct unannounced inspections
"Only show us the good stuff." |
"The Trump @EPA
is just chucking aside any flimsy pretense that they care about upholding
environmental laws, enforcing against big polluters, or protecting Americans," tweeted John Walke, Clean Air Director
and senior attorney for the Natural Resources Defense Council.
"Giving a courtesy heads up to suspected *ongoing* lawbreakers is beyond the pale even for the Trump @EPA."
"Giving a courtesy heads up to suspected *ongoing* lawbreakers is beyond the pale even for the Trump @EPA."
Watchdog group Public
Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER) publicized the development in
a press statement on Thursday.
It cites a memo, dated July 11, 2019, to regional administrators from Susan Bodine, EPA's Assistant Administrator for Enforcement and Compliance Assurance.
It cites a memo, dated July 11, 2019, to regional administrators from Susan Bodine, EPA's Assistant Administrator for Enforcement and Compliance Assurance.
Her office, according to the EPA site, "goes after pollution problems that impact American communities through vigorous civil and criminal enforcement. Our enforcement activities target the most serious water, air, and chemical hazards. "
Bodine's memo says
"EPA aims to enhance its partnerships with its state, local, and tribal
co-regulators by more effectively carrying out our shared responsibilities
under environmental laws."
The "no
surprises" approach, it continues, is "the foundation of joint work
planning and will minimize the misunderstandings that can be caused by the
lack of regular, bilateral communication."
"EPA regions and
the states should work together to identify which inspections the EPA or a
state will perform," it says.
The memo adds that
"inspection planning will avoid duplicate efforts, improve efficiency,
reduce unnecessary burdens on the regulated community, and could provide EPA
regions and states with more flexibility in setting and adjusting inspection
targets and Compliance Monitoring Strategies."
Among "best
practices" to be followed are for EPA regions to "provide states with
advance notice of inspections."
Regions and states,
the memo adds, should also "consider the use of alternative compliance
monitoring strategies."
There should be a
joint effort by EPA and states about whether possible "enforcement actions
should be federal, state, or joint," and, if any such action is deemed
warranted, EPA should first notify the state before the facility in question,
the memo says.
PEER, in its
statement, rebuked the administration for the move, which it said would likely
undermine the mission of protecting the environment. The group also pointed to
its finding earlier this month that criminal
pollution enforcement under Trump's EPA is at record low levels.
"Taking the
element of surprise away from inspections decreases their effectiveness, for
obvious reasons," stated PEER executive director Tim Whitehouse, a former
EPA enforcement attorney. "I fear that EPA's 'no surprises' posture masks
a 'see no evil' approach to corporate polluters."
"Basing
enforcement on inter-agency consensus places politics above pollution
control," added Whitehouse. "Nobody opposes cooperation or supports
duplication, but this policy risks environmental protection by giving the upper
hand to corporate polluters and states that don't want to enforce environmental
laws."
Esquire's Charles Pierce put the potential impact of
the change in stark terms.
"If it were up to
me," he wrote, "I'd want the people who own power
plants and chemical factories to wake up every morning in cold dread that
someone from the Environmental Protection Agency might drop buy to see what
corners we've been cutting recently. That way, I suspect, fertilizer plants
would be less likely to blow up and take entire towns with them."