remember that point I gave to the epa, yesterday? taking it back….
December 3, 2008 by admin
Filed under environment science, politics
So, yesterday, The White House approved a plan that allows for debris from coal mining to be dumped into nearby streams and valleys.
Edward C. Hopkins, a policy analyst at the Sierra Club, said: “The E.P.A.’s own scientists have concluded that dumping mining waste into streams devastates downstream water quality. By signing off on this rule, the agency has abdicated its responsibility.”
The issue at hand is that this opens the doors for coal companies to blast the tops off of mountains, hauling the debris into valleys, with no concern for dumping on top of streams and blocking their flow. Which, of course, can have a negative impact to the ecosystems downstream.
And, as if that isn’t enough:
The Environmental Protection Agency is trying to finish work on a rule that would make it easier for utilities to put coal-fired generating stations near national parks. It is working on another rule that would allow utility companies to modify coal-fired power plants and increase their emissions without installing new pollution-control equipment
The Bush Administration argues that these allowances means a lessening on our dependency to foreign oil. Although, critics argue that there are much more environmentally safe ways to mine with out blowing the tops off mountains. The Bush Administration is sending a message that you can’t have both an environment and choosing clean coal, which many argue is just not the case.
This is also a slap to the face of the new administration. President-elect Obama has stated many times that he does not agree with this ruling. The Bush Administration has stated it would participate in a smooth transition from one administration to the next; then turns around and creates these “midnight” rulings, that the next administration now has to spend time overturning.
Why does it not surprise me that Bush and Cheney would much rather support energy industries, then stay true to their word?
You can find the full article HERE, via the New York Times



