Since the year began, the Environmental Protection Agency has resolved enforcement actions against 12 different companies in the Chesapeake region for failure to comply with environmental laws. In one case, EPA found that the U.S. Army had failed to inspect more than a dozen underground tanks at one of its Virginia military bases containing hundreds of thousands of gallons of jet fuel, diesel fuel, and gasoline. A D.C. hospital was not properly checking for carbon monoxide leaks. A solvent processing facility in Cockeysville, Maryland, was storing industrial waste in a room with a leaky floor.
The Army paid $41,000; the hospital forked over $15,000; the solvent processing facility was out $80,650. Collectively, the 12 settlements amounted to nearly $325,000 in penalties. Compared with the $5.15 billion the Texas oil company Anadarko Petroleum Corp. agreed to pay this month for a massive cleanup involving nuclear fuel, rocket fuel waste and other toxins, these penalties look like mere peanuts. Yet to the neighbors of the Army base who count on clean groundwater, the patients who went to the D.C. hospital to get better, not poisoned, and the Cockeysville residents who live near the industrial plant, these violations could have serious, even fatal, consequences if left unchecked.
These cases typify the enforcement actions that are at risk under EPA’s newly released FY 2014–2018 Strategic Plan, which prioritizes “the largest, most complex cases that have the biggest impact” over smaller violators. Essentially, this plan broadcasts to facilities like the Cockeysville processing plant, the Virginia Army base, and the D.C. hospital that EPA is very unlikely to get ever around to checking up on them. Anyone who drinks water or breathes air is a potential victim of this new strategy.
Under the Strategic Plan, EPA’s enforcement footprint will shrink dramatically in the coming years. By EPA’s forthright admission, it will be “doing fewer cases overall.” Pages 92–93 of the plan lay out the specifics:
By 2018, EPA will conduct 15,800 inspections per year, down from an average of 21,000 per year between 2005 and 2009.
By 2018, EPA will initiate 2,800 civil cases, down from an average of 3,900 per year between 2005 and 2009. The 12 examples cited above are all civil cases.
By 2018, EPA expects to conclude 2,720 civil cases a year, down from an average of 3,800 per year from 2005 to 2009.
By 2018, EPA will reduce 256 million pounds of water pollution per year, compared to the 320 pounds per year it reduced on average between 2005 and 2009.
The rationale for this retreat from tried and true enforcement techniques is the agency’s vision of a new enforcement paradigm referred to as “Next Generation Compliance,” or NextGen, which relies heavily on self-monitoring and reporting. Instead of looking at the number of civil enforcement cases filed, for example, EPA will encourage polluters to use advanced monitoring to measure their own emissions.
As CPR scholars wrote in January when EPA released the first draft of its vision, the plan “could have a severe effect on regulated entities’ compliance efforts, creating public health and environmental risks that arise not only from previously unregulated or inadequately regulated activities . . . but also from backsliding on established controls applicable to known hazards.” The CPR scholars identified four specific shortcomings:
The plan relies on industry to police itself, an approach that on its face invites noncompliance;
It signals a clear rollback in traditional deterrence-based enforcement, a tested and proven approach;
It seeks to mask the plain harm to enforcement of congressional budget cuts with breezy assertions of improved enforcement; and
The plan’s retreat from enforcement could irreparably delay the restoration of national treasures such as the Chesapeake Bay.
The Strategic Plan comes amidst severe cuts to the agency’s budget. According to CNN, Republicans boast that they have cut the agency’s funding by 20 percent since 2010. The President’s budget also follows the budget-cutting trend. The President proposed a $300 million cut in EPA’s 2015 budget from the previous year and many of the cuts come from EPA’s enforcement efforts.
The table below compares EPA’s budget requests in 2014 in 2015. It shows that EPA proposes to cut funding to each of every aspect of its enforcement activities.
Comparison of Budget Requests: FY 2014 & FY 2015
|
FY 2014 (millions of $$) |
FY 2015 (millions of $$) |
Compliance monitoring |
128.9 |
120.1 |
Civil enforcement |
193 |
183.8 |
Criminal enforcement |
61.3 |
58.3 |
Forensics support |
17 |
15.3 |
Superfund enforcement |
166.9 |
154.3 |
Partnering w/ states |
27.7 (grants for all programs) |
23 (limited to enforcing TSCA and FIFRA) |
Total requested |
840.553.1 |
792.678.1 |
Given this drastic budget-slashing, EPA had little choice but to take a hard look at its priorities. But it’s not fooling anybody when it says its new scheme of letting industry police itself will produce better outcomes. Conceivably, NextGen could produce innovative ways to ensure compliance; EPA’s electronic reporting initiative, for instance, could promote public access to compliance information. But such hope is way too slender a reed upon which to hang EPA’s important enforcement obligation. NextGen must supplement, not supplant, existing enforcement and compliance work. The agency is taking a huge risk when it relies on untested NextGen techniques to replace traditional deterrence-based enforcement efforts that are well understood and have long represented effective tools for enhancing compliance and ensuring environmental improvement.
Would any police chief anywhere in the country take comparable action — removing cops from the beat and then predicting it’ll reduce crime? No way.
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Rena Steinzor | April 14, 2014
Since the year began, the Environmental Protection Agency has resolved enforcement actions against 12 different companies in the Chesapeake region for failure to comply with environmental laws. In one case, EPA found that the U.S. Army had failed to inspect more than a dozen underground tanks at one of its Virginia military bases containing hundreds […]
Erin Kesler | April 9, 2014
Yesterday, The Hill published an opinion piece by CPR scholars Christine Klein and Sandra Zellmer. According to the piece: President Obama recently signed a controversial bill that will directly affect the safety of millions of Americans. The fine print is so complicated, though, that it’s hard to predict exactly how our safety will be affected. Some say that the […]
James Goodwin | April 9, 2014
This week the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA)—the obscure White House Office charged with reviewing and approving agencies’ regulations—took an important and much-appreciated step in the direction of greater transparency by updating and improving its electronic database of lobbying meetings records that the agency holds with outside groups concerning the rules undergoing review. […]
Erin Kesler | April 3, 2014
Today, CPR Senior Policy Analyst Matthew Shudtz will be testifying at OSHA’s hearing on the proposed silica rule. According to Shudtz: The testimony raises some concerns about how OSHA arrived at its proposal to provide limited medical surveillance for silica-exposed workers. It also covers issues related to enforcement and small business impacts. But most importantly, […]
James Goodwin | April 2, 2014
Yesterday, 13 Member Scholars of the Center for Progressive Reform (CPR) sent a letter to the U.S. Senate expressing their concern about S.J. Res. 30, a Congressional Review Act (CRA) “resolution of disapproval” introduced by Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) that seeks to block the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) proposed Clean Air Act New […]
Rena Steinzor | April 1, 2014
Maryland faces an important deadline in its long-running effort to clean up the Chesapeake Bay. By 2017, the state is required to implement specific measures to reduce the massive quantities of nutrient pollution that now flow into the Bay from agriculture, sewage treatment plants, power plants, factories, golf courses, and lawns. Gov. Martin O’Malley and […]
Frank Ackerman | March 26, 2014
Rhode Island has recently learned that its renewable energy standards could be ruinously expensive. But they’re in good company: more than a dozen states have “learned” the same thing, from reports from the same economists at the Beacon Hill Institute (BHI). Housed at Boston’s Suffolk University, BHI turns out study after study for right-wing, anti-government […]
| March 26, 2014
I’ve been in Bangalore, India for about two months on a Fulbright fellowship to study Indian environmental law. While I knew India has major problems with air pollution and sanitation, I didn’t expect that one of the major environmental controversies here would be about greening the idol industry. Apparently, the gods in India can wreak […]
James Goodwin | March 19, 2014
For years, Duke Energy has enjoyed virtual free rein to contaminate North Carolina’s surface and ground waters with arsenic, lead, selenium, and all of the other toxic ingredients in its coal ash waste in clear violation of the Clean Water Act and other federal environmental laws. And it seems that both North Carolina’s regulators and […]