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Politics : The Donkey's Inn

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To: Karen Lawrence who wrote (6041)2/6/2003 12:33:40 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (16) of 15516
 
Environmentalists say the Republicans' leadership choices will aid business and end the party's tradition of conservation
January 25, 2003

"The Republican leadership has slammed the door on the party's tradition of conservation in order to open
for business with corporate polluters who gave money to their campaigns," said Alys Campaigne,
legislative director of the Natural Resources Defense Council."


E-mail story
latimes.com

Print

THE NATION

By Richard Simon and Elizabeth Shogren, Times Staff Writers

WASHINGTON -- Rep. Richard W. Pombo (R-Tracy) and Sen. James M.
Inhofe (R-Okla.) walk the corridors of the U.S. Capitol in cowboy boots. Both
also rail against environmental regulations they consider scientifically dubious
and overly burdensome to business.


Now they have the power to do something about it.

Pombo, a rancher who
has crusaded to rewrite
the Endangered Species
Act, is the new chairman
of the House Resources
Committee. Inhofe, who
once called the
Environmental Protection
Agency a "Gestapo"
bureaucracy,
is the new
chairman of the Senate
Environment and Public
Works Committee.

Rep. Charles H. Taylor
(R-N.C.)
is the new
chairman of the House
subcommittee that
appropriates money for the Interior Department. A registered forester, he
pushed a bill through the House in the 1990s that temporarily removed
protections from certain timber harvests.

This trio is among a group of pro-business conservatives with reputations for
attacking environmental laws who now control committees charged with
managing public lands and regulating pollution.
In the new, Republican-controlled Congress, these
chairmen will be central figures in advancing President Bush's agenda, which includes opening the Arctic
National Wildlife Refuge for oil and gas exploration and allowing more logging in national forests.

They already are testing their clout.

Sen. Pete V. Domenici (R-N.M.),
who has taken the gavel of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources
Committee, hopes to win approval of Arctic oil drilling by using a parliamentary device to overcome a
threatened Democratic filibuster.

Environmentalists say the leadership selections signal that Republicans have made a U-turn from the days
when they chose lawmakers such as the late Sen. John H. Chafee (R-R.I.), a champion of environmental
protection who helped shepherd the 1990 revisions of the Clean Air Act through Congress.

"The Republican leadership has slammed the door on the party's tradition of conservation in order to open
for business with corporate polluters who gave money to their campaigns," said Alys Campaigne,
legislative director of the Natural Resources Defense Council.


The Republicans reject the view that they are despoilers of the environment. "It's just that I come from a
business background," Inhofe said. "I know that bureaucracies, if left alone, can become abusive."

Inhofe does not apologize for being the only senator to vote against the $7.8-billion federal commitment to
restore the Florida Everglades, a pet project of the president and his brother, Florida Gov. Jeb Bush.
Inhofe said the project's costs outweighed its benefits.

Now Inhofe is the chairman of the committee that will decide whether parts of the plan are implemented.

Inhofe and his staff outlined an agenda for this Congress that includes exempting the Pentagon from an
array of environmental laws and introducing more cost-benefit analysis into regulatory decisions.

Will Inhofe be willing to take on President Bush on the Everglades plan and other topics? The senator has
signaled he hopes to dilute one of the administration's environmental priorities.

The Bush administration has proposed for the first time regulating mercury emissions from power-plant
smokestacks. Inhofe spokesman Mike Cantanzaro said the senator sees regulating mercury as
impractical.


The League of Private Property Voters calls Inhofe a "champion" and regularly gives him perfect scores
on its legislative report card.

In the House, Pombo has the same distinction. An ally of House Majority Leader Tom DeLay (R-Texas),
Pombo jumped over more senior members to win the gavel of the House Resources Committee.


The owner of a cattle ranch in California's Central Valley, Pombo has been a longtime critic of the
Endangered Species Act, contending that protections for certain species such as the kangaroo rat have
ruined lives and livelihoods.

"We have to develop a way so it becomes a positive to have endangered species [on your property]
instead of a negative," he said, suggesting that federal grants be offered to "encourage people to do things
that attract wildlife and endangered species to their property."

He also has opposed a massive conservation-funding bill supported by many of his Republican colleagues.

"Before we buy more land, we should do a better job of taking care of what we've got," he said.

He said the government should inventory the land it owns. "If there are lands that are not environmentally
sensitive -- there's not a specific reason for them to be held by the public -- we should look at the
possibility of selling those lands and using the money from that to purchase lands that are environmentally
sensitive or lands that there's a reason for the public to own."

Pombo said he had not decided how to respond to the Pentagon's wish to be exempted from
environmental laws.

"My only hesitation is if there is an underlying problem with the way the [law] is being implemented, then
we should go in and fix" the law, Pombo said. "We shouldn't just exempt part of the federal government
because the same things they're doing to the military, they're doing to private landowners."

Pombo said that environmental groups' criticism was "all about raising money."

But he said he acknowledged that his new job would require give and take with Democrats. "In order to
get these bills to the president's desk, it has to be a compromise," he said in an interview.

Democrats who have clashed with Pombo hope to work with him.

"We obviously have sharp disagreements on a number of environmental policy issues, but we will work
together where we can," said Rep. George Miller (D-Martinez), a former Resources Committee
chairman. He said he prefers a chairman from California.

As for the other pro-business Republicans in strategic spots in the new Congress, Taylor in 1995
sponsored a controversial salvage timber amendment. The measure, which expired after 18 months,
waived environmental laws to allow the removal of dead and dying trees from national forests. Many
green trees as well as some old-growth trees in the Northwest were harvested as a result.

"He's the author of the single most controversial piece of forest legislation in a decade," said Marty
Hayden, legislative director of Earthjustice, an environmental legal group.

Some analysts said the party and possibly the president could suffer if the chairmen fail to heed the
lessons of the 1994 Republican takeover of the House. Then the new GOP majority, led by Newt
Gingrich of Georgia, aggressively pushed to open the national forests to logging and to scale back clean
water programs, only to run into a tide of public opposition.


"They overshot on environmental issues and later regretted it," said William Lowry, an environmental
politics specialist at Washington University. "When the next election cycle comes around, the more out of
step the Republican Party is with the majority on environmental issues, the greater the number of voters
who will hold them accountable."

Others said the GOP victory in last year's congressional elections gave the Republican chairmen a
mandate to change environmental policy.

"Ranchers, Western landowners, farmers, etc., are a core base of support for the Republican Party," said
Republican strategist Joe Garecht, "and they're fed up with Clinton-era land regulations."
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