THE NATION                    Top EPA Enforcement Official Quits, Blasts Bush Policy                       Environment: The White House is accused of being lax in its pursuit of companies that spew millions of tons                    of pollutants into the air.
                     By FAYE FIORE, TIMES STAFF WRITER
                     WASHINGTON -- A top enforcement official with the Environmental                    Protection Agency has resigned, saying in a two-page letter that the                    Bush administration has failed to crack down on companies that pour 7                    million tons of toxins into the air every year.
                     Eric V. Schaeffer ended his 12-year EPA career Wednesday with a                    missive accusing the administration of dragging its feet on lawsuits filed                    against nine power companies he blamed for one-fourth of the nation's                    annual sulfur dioxide pollution--a gas known to cause haze, acid rain and                    lung ailments.
                                                             Schaeffer, the                                                            agency's director of                                                            regulatory                                                            enforcement and a                                                            decorated civil                                                            servant, said he has                                                            been "fighting a White House that seems                                                            determined to weaken the rules we are trying                                                            to enforce." Addressed to EPA Administrator                                                            Christie Whitman, the letter said the                                                            administration's 90-day review of clean air laws                                                            had stretched to nine months, derailing                                                            negotiations with the nine power companies                                                            and weakening attempts to regulate coal-fired                                                            smokestacks built without the updated pollution                                                            controls required by law.
                     Companies Adopt Wait-and-See Stance
                     Two of those industries agreed more than a year ago to consent decrees that would have decreased                    sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxide pollution levels by 750,000 tons. But those companies--Cinergy                    Corp. and Virginia Electric Power Co.--are now "hedging their bets," refusing to sign the decrees                    until they see where the White House lands on reforming the Clean Air Act, Schaeffer said.
                     "Fifteen months ago it looked as though our lawsuits were going to shrink these dismal statistics. . . .                    Today, we seem about to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory," he wrote. "Other companies with                    whom we were close to settlement have walked away from the table.
                     "The momentum we obtained with agreements announced earlier has stopped, and we have filed no                    new lawsuits against utility companies since this administration took office."
                     The EPA rejected Schaeffer's contentions, saying it "remains committed" to enforcement and to                    reducing air pollution caused by power plants.
                     "The administration believes that its 'clear skies' proposal will dramatically cut air pollution from                    power plants at a rate that is faster, greater and more reliable than under the current Clean Air Act,"                    EPA spokesman Joe Martyak said.
                     But environmental groups cited Schaeffer's parting words as a sign that President Bush "is in full                    retreat from serious environmental protection" and is "letting polluters get away red-handed."
                     "The letter confirms our fears that the Bush administration is preventing the nation's environmental                    cop from policing his beat," said Carl Pope, executive director of the Sierra Club.
                     "The health of millions of Americans will be the worse for his departure," said John Coequyt, senior                    analyst for the Environmental Working Group, a watchdog organization in Washington.
                     Industry insiders said it was rare for an official of Schaeffer's stature to resign with such a candid                    critique.
                     Well Regarded in the Industry
                     In August, Schaeffer was given the Justice Department's prestigious John Marshall Award for                    exemplary public service and is highly regarded even by industry lawyers. He joined the EPA in                    1990 during the administration of the first President Bush.
                     "The resignation of someone at Mr. Schaeffer's level underscores the fact that environmental                    enforcement is a very weak spot in the administration's approach to environmental policy," said Joan                    Mulhern of Earthjustice, a Washington environmental law firm.
                     While environmental activists hoped Schaeffer's words would sound a wake-up call in Washington,                    the EPA publicly dismissed his allegation.
                     "A number of the points that he raises are points that have been discussed in the public dialogue on                    this whole issue," Martyak said. "His point of view is his point of view, and we stand by our                    projections and our numbers."
                     Schaeffer said he informed his superiors weeks ago that he would be leaving to work as a                    consultant for the Rockefeller Family Fund, a foundation that supports environmental work. But he                    decided only this week to write down his frustrations. He delivered his message Wednesday night.
                     The letter cites EPA data presented to a Senate committee last year indicating the scale of pollution                    from the contested coal-fired smokestacks and the attending health hazards they bring, including                    more than 10,800 premature deaths, at least 5,400 incidents of chronic bronchitis, more than 5,100                    hospital emergency visits and more than 1.5 million lost workdays.
                     Schaeffer also faulted the Bush budget proposal to cut the civil enforcement program by more than                    200 staff positions.
                     Agency at Disadvantage Against Big Firms
                     "The proposed budget cuts would leave us desperately short of the resources needed to deal with                    the large, sophisticated corporate defendants we face," he said.
                     The enforcement division where Schaeffer worked has been the focus of some recent controversy                    with the naming of John Peter Suarez as director.
                     Environmental activists have protested the appointment, saying Suarez formerly oversaw gambling                    laws in New Jersey and lacks the qualifications to supervise enforcement of environmental law.
                     "I decided we had hit a wall and it was going to be really hard to do much more in enforcement                    without a change in the climate we were working in," Schaeffer said in an interview Thursday. "I just                    wanted to bring some public attention to the issue."  LATimes CC |