Americans do not fully appreciate the efforts of government
to protect them from a wide variety of threats to their health and safety. This
effort occurs to some degree at the more local levels, but the real champion of
this grand effort is the federal government.
While many federal agencies contribute to this effort, one
goes far beyond the others at trying to keep us safe: the Environmental
Protection Agency, the EPA.
The EPA is so concerned for the safety and protection of the
citizens of the U.S. that it has issued thousands of regulations requiring specific
steps be taken to reduce or eliminate actual or potential harm. This agency is
so concerned for our welfare that it has even required, under penalty of heavy
fines, the use of things that are unavailable.
As part of the Renewable Fuel Standard the EPA required gasoline
producers to use cellulosic biofuels, and in its paternalistic effort to keep us
safe from threats real and imagined, the EPA fines producers for not using the
required quantities of biofuel ingredients, even though those quantities are
unavailable.
Not everyone is on board with the EPA’s magnificent efforts
on our behalf, such as Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV) and Nebraska Attorney General
Jon Bruning, whose office is suing the EPA over greenhouse gas standards for
new power plants. These standards are, according to the AG and the Senator, “impossible”
to meet.
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce and energy industry groups have
jumped on the anti-EPA band wagon by urging the United States Circuit Court of
Appeals for the District of Columbia last August to strike down a federal rule
limiting mercury and other toxic emissions from coal- and oil-fired power
plants, saying the Agency used flawed methods to create unachievable emissions
standards.
Even the EPA’s fellow federal agency, the State Department,
has shocked Americans by daring to disagree with the ideological environmental dogma
of the Obama administration.
When the State Department was performing an environmental
review of the Keystone XL pipeline project, the EPA intervened. The pipeline
project would carry crude oil from Alberta, Canada to refineries in the U.S., which
supporters say would provide a big step toward energy independence. The EPA argued,
however, that this pipeline should be treated differently than every other
pipeline ever constructed in the country.
The State Department’s report found that the project would
create nearly 2,000 jobs lasting for two years and would support more than
40,000 jobs, and further finds that the pipeline provides enough positives to
negate whatever negatives the EPA believes may result.
Even the International Brotherhood of Boilermakers found
reason to criticize the EPA’s zealous efforts to protect us from every conceivable
negative influence in our lives. The Boilermakers’ President Emeritus Charles
W. Jones states in a commentary on the union’s Web site, “particle and ozone
standards will damage the economy without significantly helping the environment.”
The EPA has moved to make ozone and airborne particle
standards so strict, in fact, “that former EPA administrator William
Ruckelshaus has called them ‘an impossible standard of perfection,’" the
commentary continues. “So strict that many U.S. electrical power plants, pulp
mills, cement kilns, chemical plants, smelters, and manufacturing plants are
expected to close down rather than try to meet them. Thousands of American
workers could lose their jobs. So strict that many of the scientists on the
Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee (CASAC) cannot support them,” Mr. Jones
states, citing the effects on his organization’s members.
Thirty-nine Congressional Republicans led by Senate Minority
Leader Mitch McConnell (R -KY) are attempting to use a rare legislative tactic
to block planned Environmental Protection Agency greenhouse gas standards that
would limit the amount of carbon new power plants can emit. The rarely used
Congressional Review Act enables the filing of a formal resolution of
disapproval that allows Congress to block executive branch regulations that it
considers onerous.
Last month, a federal court dealt a serious blow to the EPA's
renewable fuels push by ruling that the agency exceeded its authority by
mandating refiners use cellulosic biofuels because of their commercial
scarcity, a determination that should not require legal action.
It is encouraging to see opposition to the tyranny of the
EPA growing, and at last see meaningful opposition coming from Congress.
However, the majority of this opposition comes from Republicans, while the
timid Democrats mostly sit on their hands, allowing the executive branch to run
roughshod over the legislative branch, while their constituents get crushed
under the federal boot.
The Democrats simply look the other way, likely because the lead
perpetrator of this unconstitutional behavior is one of their own. They ought
to think a little (for a change) and realize that someday it may be a
Republican in the position to abuse the office, and the Congress.
It is doubtful that any of this will have much of a positive
effect on this out-of-control agency, which, because of its ideological
blinders and the infection of uncontrolled zealotry that is the hallmark of the
Obama administration, ignores the damage its policies and
regulations do to the country it is supposed to serve.
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