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posted by martyb on Thursday September 21 2017, @08:03AM   Printer-friendly
from the your-tax-dollars-at-work dept.

Common Dreams reports

Thanks to a hiring freeze, budget cuts, and the exorbitant travel needs of Trump's cabinet, Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) agents are being forced to ditch climate crime investigations in order to serve as personal bodyguards for EPA administrator Scott Pruitt, resulting in what one critic called an "evaporation of criminal enforcement".

"The EPA head has traditionally had one of the smallest security details among cabinet members," the Washington Post reported [September 19]. But Pruitt's expansive security team--which cost taxpayers over $830,000 in his first three months as EPA chief--has shattered all precedent.

"This never happened with prior administrators", Michael Hubbard, former head of the EPA Criminal Investigation Division's Boston office.

Pruitt's 24/7, 18-member security detail "demands triple the manpower of his predecessors" and is forcing "officials to rotate in special agents from around the country who otherwise would be investigating environmental crimes", the Post's Juliet Eilperin and Brady Dennis noted.

These officials "signed on to work on complex environmental cases, not to be an executive protection detail", Hubbard observed. "It's not only not what they want to do, it's not what they were trained and paid to do."

The impact of this transfer of resources can already be seen in the rapidly falling number of new cases opened by the EPA's Criminal Investigation Division. Eilperin and Dennis note that the "current fiscal year is on pace to open just 120 new cases...down sharply from the 170 initiated last year".


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  • (Score: 5, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 21 2017, @04:24PM (4 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 21 2017, @04:24PM (#571215)

    You have a grave misunderstand of how the EPA works that is echoed in the many talk radio dunderheads out there that have formed this ignorant point. The EPA is overwhelmingly driven by the law Congress levies all this regulatory stuff on them, which is why it isn't so simple to just do away with this or that regulation. Sure, it fits the your misguided narrative of the faceless "petty" bureaucrat with his greedy drive for "influence and power" making life hell for "the little guy", and keeping us from getting to Make America Great Again, but most of that stuff is the law. If the law says EPA has to do such-and-such, Pruitt can't decide not to. He needs to get Congress to change the law. It is the same with the IRS. The overwhelming amount of stuff they do is driven by the Byzantine tax laws put in by Congress! These are issues Congress has to address, not Pruitt nor Trump.

    When you hear apocryphal tales of petty power hungry bureaucrats (is this the supposed "deep state", or does that go deeper than this?) being spun on TV or the radio, here's a clue: you're being sold a bill of goods for some purpose.

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  • (Score: 0, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 21 2017, @05:32PM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 21 2017, @05:32PM (#571274)

    *Yawn* The EPA, like other agencies, are given a broad law and have the choice of how they wish to enforce it. Nice song and dance though.

    • (Score: 3, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 21 2017, @05:57PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 21 2017, @05:57PM (#571289)

      Ignorance will kill us all. Thank you for helping destroy the US /s Though seriously it is probably about time we got our asses handed to us and developed some humility. Trump is the wildest and most accurate caricature of what is wrong with our country.

  • (Score: 2) by fritsd on Friday September 22 2017, @05:49PM

    by fritsd (4586) on Friday September 22 2017, @05:49PM (#571718) Journal

    That was informative. Still, wouldnt it be possible to "drag your heels" quite a lot, if that was to your personal benefit?

    Thought experiment:

    Imagine, that a president appoints mr. Alphonse Gabriel Capone [wikipedia.org], as new director of the Bureau for Alcohol Tobacco and Fire-arms.

    Now it is mr. Capone's duty as head of the department to enforce the law w.r.t. proper regulation of the alcohol businesses of the U.S.A.

    However, imagine that he has also worked other places, where the profit motive inspired a certain attenuation of exactly that set of laws he's now responsible to uphold and implement.
    Wouldn't there be a moral hazard for regulatory capture?

    In which way is it different for mr. Scott Pruitt [wikipedia.org]?
    Serious question.

  • (Score: 1) by khallow on Saturday September 23 2017, @03:33AM

    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Saturday September 23 2017, @03:33AM (#571985) Journal

    Sure, it fits the your misguided narrative of the faceless "petty" bureaucrat with his greedy drive for "influence and power" making life hell for "the little guy", and keeping us from getting to Make America Great Again, but most of that stuff is the law.

    "Most". I mentioned Superfund a few back as an example of law that shouldn't be law because it is unconstitutional.

    If the law says EPA has to do such-and-such, Pruitt can't decide not to. He needs to get Congress to change the law.

    He does have the power to change how those laws are regulated even when they are legal.

    When you hear apocryphal tales of petty power hungry bureaucrats (is this the supposed "deep state", or does that go deeper than this?) being spun on TV or the radio, here's a clue: you're being sold a bill of goods for some purpose.

    So we're supposed to ignore those tales when they serve your interests? I'll note that I linked to a real world tale, not an apocryphal one. It was a couple (the Sacketts) who weren't even allowed to contest the fines and demands that the EPA had made on their construction site for a house (which the EPA had determined had contained some wetlands illegally filled in - and which the Sacketts disputed from the beginning). Basically, according to the EPA, the Sacketts had to pay fines of up to $37.5k per day [reason.com] plus revert the portion of their land that the EPA deemed was wetlands before the EPA would allow them to contest the EPA ruling. In one of the frequent 9-0 rulings during the Obama administration, the US Supreme Court ruled that was bunk.