One year ago today, the Supreme Court handed down an epochal decision in the global warming case Massachusetts vs. the Environmental Protection Agency, stating that the EPA had the responsibility to determine how to regulate carbon dioxide for its contribution to global warming. The EPA, led by administrator Stephen L. Johnson, has utterly failed to do so, prompting a series of Congressional investigations and new lawsuits.
Johnson’s adversaries marked the anniversary of the Supreme Court decision today by continuing to press their case. Officials of 18 states filed suit against the EPA for its continued inaction — their petition “asks the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit to require the EPA to act within 60 days.” By a unanimous vote, the House Global Warming Committee issued subpoenas “for EPA documents showing the Agency’s progress in making the ‘endangerment’ finding and proposing national emissions standards.”
The Supreme Court decision mandated that the EPA:
In the past year, EPA Administrator Stephen L. Johnson has only completed one of those tasks, by denying California’s waiver petition following the signing of the 2007 Energy Act in December.
Investigations by Congress, though repeatedly stymied by the agency, have determined that EPA staff actually worked vigorously last year to meet the Court mandate. In late fall Johnson brought the complete package with a health endangerment finding, approval of the California waiver, and motor vehicle regulations to the White House. After that, Johnson issued his waiver denial and all work at the EPA on the issue ceased. Henry Waxman, chair of the House Oversight Committee, has vigorously pursued documents related to the California waiver denial, even as the EPA responds to his subpoenas with document requests of their own.
Johnson’s latest act was to declare last week that the EPA would release an “Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking” asking for new round of comments, a delaying tactic promoted by a “memo from the Heritage Foundation.”
He is now fleeing to Australia with his top staff for two weeks to discuss the “ongoing environmental collaboration” between the countries — and fortuitously delay further Congressional hearings. The $280,000 trip is taxpayer-funded.
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This is all part of the basic strategy the neocons are using to dismantle the government. George Bush appoints a crony to head each department whose primary qualification is political loyalty rather than professional suitability. The department is run by declaration as a hostile workplace ensuring that many of the longtime employees quit in disgust. Even routine decisions are delayed for months or years, the implemented in an illegal fashion. The resulting court cases take years to resolve.
The neocon goal is to prove to the American people that government does not work. It’s an anti-progressive movement which uses willfully incompetent governance as a tool to destroy the credibility of the government.
Unfortunately, the damage will last a long time. The regulations pushed through by these cronies will take years to find and revoke. The lawsuits will take years to resolve. The loss of professional staff and the knowledge which they take with them as they leave the department cannot be undone.
What the taxpayers and voters should realize is that this neocon strategy is very expensive. We end up paying entire departments to essentially sit on their hands and then lawyer up to defend the inevitable lawsuits. We pay to train new employees as the departments are gutted. And, inevitably, once a new administration comes into power, we pay to reconstruct the department and to correct all the damage that has been done.
April 3rd, 2008 at 10:23 am