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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Richard S who wrote (459609)9/16/2003 12:03:07 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 769667
 
Hearing Bush deliver this "address" yesterday, once again renewed my belief that he can't even talk .....wish they had the real quotes of him making up new words again

September 16, 2003

THE NATION
Bush Touts Jobs in Clean Air Debate
The president focuses on the economy as he speaks of relaxed pollution rules during a stop at a power plant.

By Maura Reynolds, Times Staff Writer

MONROE, Mich. — President Bush adopted a new tack Monday in arguing
for more lenient pollution regulations, saying the need to create jobs should not
take a back seat to protecting the environment.

"When we talk about environmental policy in this Bush administration, we
don't just talk about clean air, we also talk about jobs. We can do both," the
president told cheering workers at the Monroe Edison coal-fired power plant
about 40 miles south of Detroit.

The president's new
emphasis on jobs in the
debate over
environmental policy
comes as poll numbers show Americans increasingly concerned about job
losses since the 2001 recession. Analysts say the high unemployment rate is a
major liability for the president as he seeks reelection.

Since Bush came into office, the Environmental Protection Agency has made it
easier for utilities and other companies to avoid installing pollution-control
equipment under the terms of the 1970 Clean Air Act.

Bush said his administration put new rules in place last month to "clarify and simplify" a cumbersome
review process for equipment changes at power plants. The rule changes relax requirements that
companies install state-of-the-art pollution controls when they increase their production capacity.

"We simplified the rules. We made them easy to understand. We trust the people in this plant to make
the right decisions," the president said.

Environmental groups say the new rules make it easier for utilities to keep polluting.

"I'm stunned that they picked the Monroe plant as a place to talk about clean air. It's one of the dirtiest
in the country,'' said Eric Schaeffer, former head of enforcement for the EPA who now directs the
Rockefeller Family Fund's environmental integrity project.

Both sides use the 3,000-megawatt Monroe plant — the second-largest coal-fired plant in the country
— in the debate over environmental regulation.

Bush blamed EPA regulations for forcing Detroit Edison to delay upgrading two turbines at the Monroe
plant that would have made the plant more efficient without boosting pollution.

"The old regulations on the books made it difficult to either protect the environment or grow the
economy," the president said. "Therefore, I wanted to get rid of them. I'm interested in job creation and
clean air, and I believe we can do both."


HE WANTS JOBS>>>AHAHAHAHAHA

But environmental groups point out that under the former rules, the plant was not prevented from
upgrading the new turbines. In fact, the Clinton-era EPA encouraged Detroit Edison to proceed with its
plans to replace the turbine rotors.

Schaeffer, who was with the EPA at the time, said one reason it took 11 months for the agency to
approve the project was that the power company deliberately delayed providing requested data.

"What Detroit Edison wanted was a blanket exception because they didn't want to worry about
whether the project would increase emissions," Schaeffer said. "They were always trying to find ways
to beat the rap."

Bush said air pollution data released Monday demonstrated that the country was making good progress
in cleaning the air. He said the new EPA figures showed that since the Clean Air Act was passed,
emissions of six major pollutants had fallen by 48% while economic output had increased 164%.

"Since 1974, the power generated from here has increased by 22% and yet the particulate-matter
emissions have fallen by 80% to 81%," Bush said. "You're good stewards of the quality of the air."

Environmental groups criticized Bush's argument as backward.

"President Bush used a bizarre argument today in calling for a weakening of the Clean Air Act: He
noted that the Clean Air Act is working," said Frank O'Donnell, a spokesman for the Clean Air Trust.

Winston H. Hickox, California Environmental Protection Agency secretary, issued a statement saying,
"This is preposterous rhetoric from a federal administration that is failing on both the environment and
the jobs front."

The new EPA data indicate that pollution from power plants has continued to decline as a result of a
variety of regulatory programs designed in response to 1990 Clean Air Act amendments. Power plants
emitted 41% less acid rain-producing sulfur dioxide and 33% less smog-producing nitrogen oxides in
2002 than in 1990, according to the data.

"President Bush is committed to continuing protection of the nation's environment, and we will build on
this good news," said the EPA's acting administrator, Marianne Lamont Horinko.

Anthony Earley, chairman of Detroit Edison, said the former EPA regulations were so confusing that
they forced the plant to delay installation of the turbine rotors by as much as five years.

"You're forcing us to run less-efficient, less-clean plants," Earley said. "It incrementally reduces the
reliability of the electric grid."

Senior administration officials acknowledged that there was no direct link between pollution controls
and last month's blackout, which resulted from energy transmission problems, not production failures.

Bush ended his day in Drexel Hill, Pa., where he attended a $2,000-a-plate fund-raiser for his 2004
reelection campaign; 775 guests were expected to raise $1.25 million.



To: Richard S who wrote (459609)9/16/2003 12:06:19 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 769667
 
Speaking of Ohio...and Bush.....
In a Bush Stronghold, Some Are Losing
Heart
In Xenia, Ohio, the war and the economy are eroding people's faith in the president.

By Faye Fiore, Times Staff Writer

XENIA, Ohio — When the price of stamps went up
another penny awhile back, it was more than one man
could stand. Waiting in line at the post office here, he
spotted the nearest politician — who happened to be
the mayor of this friendly little town known as the City
of Hospitality — and took a swing at him.

"People don't always understand what's going on 5,000
miles away, but they know what's happening in their
own hometown," said Mayor John Saraga, who
ducked the punch that day. "And if things aren't good
for them, they are going to hold somebody responsible,
whether it's the mayor, the governor or the president."

Today, there is a lot more on the minds of the people of
Xenia than the price of postage. The downturn in the
economy has hammered Ohio, costing it 185,000 jobs
over the last 2 1/2 years. Ninety-four of them are here
at the Hooven Allison rope factory, set to shut down
this month after 134 years in business.


The citizens will be asked to approve three local tax
increases this fall to fend off cuts in school, city and
hospital services.

And President Bush has attached an $87-billion price
tag to an Iraq mission some here believe was
well-intentioned but badly conceived.

"If things don't improve it could be a disaster for him,"
said Saraga, a Republican who supports Bush. "He's
going to pay the price, unfortunately."

Concern about the war in Iraq — and the Bush
administration's rationale for the open-ended U.S.
presence there — has rippled across the country,
nowhere more than through this city of 24,000 outside
Dayton. For many here, that concern is inextricably
linked with worries about the economy.

Bush won by less than 4% in Ohio, one of roughly a
dozen "swing" states that will be hotly contested in next
year's presidential election. Ohio is seen as crucial to his
hopes for winning a second term — no Republican has
ever claimed the White House without it.

But there are signs that support for the president is
eroding, with a recent statewide poll showing his
approval rating down 11 points since shortly after the
war began.

Even here in Republican-dominated Greene County —
where an obstetrician put a "Support President Bush
and Our Troops" sign in his waiting room last spring
and got requests for 100 like it — there are growing misgivings about the costs of
lives and dollars in Iraq.

"I won't vote for Bush again," said Penny Fox, 47, who opened Fox's Antiques
and Such off Main Street in May but kept her part-time job at Kmart just in case.
"He just came on too powerful, too gung-ho, too cocky."

Like many in Xenia, Fox backed the war at first. But now she is suspicious
because no weapons of mass destruction have been found, and she is disturbed
by the stream of body bags coming home — more since Bush declared the major
combat over.


Just about everyone here knows of a soldier overseas. The City of Xenia paid
$300,000 in overtime to plug vacancies from employees called to reserve service.
Eighteen photos of soldiers in Iraq hang in the lobby of the Xenia Daily Gazette.

Pictures of two of Fox's friends from Kmart are there. Their unhappiness is
evident from their letters.

"At first they were excited and pumped up," Fox said. "Now they're depressed
and want to come home. I'm upset for them. I don't think they need to be there
any longer."

To be sure, plenty of Xenians remain solidly behind the war and the president.
Bush may have squeaked to victory in the state of Ohio, but he carried Greene
County handily.

Here, conservative values run deep. There are more churches — 47 at last count
— than bars. Crime is low. High school football games fill the stands, and
NASCAR fans will race anything on wheels, including school buses.

Edged by farmland, 200-year-old Xenia is anchored by a stone courthouse that
has survived decades of tornadoes. The worst one, in 1974, tossed railroad cars
through grocery store windows. Half the town was blown away, 10,000 people
were left homeless and 33 were killed, many at the local root beer stand.

But Xenia always recovers and rebuilds. Lately, though, it has suffered from
economic malaise, as some people worked six-day weeks to keep up.

"These Colors Don't Run," intones the patriotic window display at Xenia Archery,
owned for 31 years by Stan Freelan, 65. His sign supports the mission in Iraq,
but his more pressing concern is the duplex he and his wife can't afford. A loan
application for the property lies facedown on the counter. The interest rates crept
up and out of their reach. Business has been slow most of the summer. And if the
city thinks it's getting his vote on a tax increase, it can think again.

"Xenia wastes more money than it needs," he declared, a line of crossbows and
arrows behind him, photographs of slain deer dotting his glass countertop.

He has problems of his own. "Business took a drastic dive — I mean drastic —
since the first of August. Nobody's doing good."


He doesn't blame Bush, though. "One man can't change the economy, hon," he
tells his visitor. He says he believes Bush embodies American strength and is on
the right track.

"I don't believe in killin'," he said. "But if it has to be done, I believe we have to
get it done."

Next door, Xenia's mixed views on the war are writ small this Saturday morning
inside Fast Fashions on Main Street, a men's clothing store that offers a rack of
$75 "zoot suits" in every color and an assortment of derbies to match.

Bob Pry, 62, is working the counter. He endorsed the war and still does, and
thinks we should "eradicate" Saddam Hussein, though he'd like to see a little more
help from the United Nations. America's image sometimes gives him pause.

"We need to quit looking like the bully," Pry said. "Sometimes I don't think
President Bush realizes he comes off arrogant." But that wouldn't sway his
support for the president. "Not at this point," he said.

Jesus Delossantos, 71, stood by quietly. A retired haberdasher, he's here helping
out his friend, looking sharp in a shirt the color of papaya and a tie of
unforgettable geometry.

"I know for a fact I won't vote for Bush," he softly confided when asked, another
war supporter turned skeptic. "I think the weapons thing was a farce. They just
wanted to go in there."


A retired Air Force dietician and lifelong Democrat, Delossantos worked in
Vietnam's largest hospital, putting together special diets for wounded GIs.
"They're sitting ducks now," he said of the troops abroad. "And they're just kids.
Either get them some support or get them out. I don't want to see a Vietnam
again."

In walked Bill McDavid, 66, in the market for a new blue suit for church. An Air
Force veteran of the Korean War, he doesn't like what he's seen. "I think Bush
lied to the troops, I really do. They lied about the weapons of mass destruction.
They said the war was over and the troops are still dying — that's what upsets
me," he said, helping himself to a squirt of cologne from the tester on the counter.

Here, the war and the economy seem inextricably linked, and many believe one is
making the other worse. The military has always lifted up this town.
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base — a think tank where the next generation of
American jets exists on paper — is just 15 minutes away, and Xenia is not
ungrateful for the 15,000 jobs or the strong defense it provides.

But $87 billion sounds like a lot of money to a state that ranks third in the nation
in manufacturing jobs lost since 2001. Many of the troops trying to maintain order
in Iraq are native sons and daughters — only five other states send more troops
to the U.S. armed forces than Ohio.

Here, they are already feeling the fallout from budget deficits swelling in
Washington, D.C., and Columbus, the state capital. Revenue from the state to
local governments like Xenia has fallen 8% in the last 18 months.

The school district has been told it will not receive $1.5 million in funds the state
promised through next March — which could mean larger classes and fewer
teachers and supplies. At the same time, the district must meet the "No Child Left
Behind" mandate that is a centerpiece of Bush's education policy, requiring
student testing each year, annual progress reports and better-qualified teachers.

"The idea sounds good but it's unrealistic," said Robert P. Dillaplain, 54, a Xenia
obstetrician who is also a member of the school board. The district desperately
needs the emergency tax levy on the ballot this fall or cuts will be inevitable. But
higher taxes are a hard sell, particularly in times like these. A similar increase
failed seven times in the early 1990s. "We almost had to have a bake sale to pay
teachers," he recalled.

While Dillaplain takes exception to Bush's education policy, he supports his Iraq
strategy. As a doctor, he knows what it is to be second-guessed when things
don't go as planned, and he says he believes Bush critics are doing just that.

"George Bush can't tell everybody what he knows," Dillaplain said, sitting in the
backyard of his small horse farm with a cup of coffee, a "Support Bush" sign still
standing at the end of the driveway. "His biggest strength is he doesn't waffle.
He's very smart because he doesn't waste any time explaining his decisions and
his mistakes. He's decisive."

He predicts the people of Greene County will stick by the president through the
long haul. "There's a big difference between disagreeing with the captain of the
ship and changing the captain of the ship," he said.

But from where Darla Parrish sits, behind her desk at the dying Hooven Allison
plant, a new captain might not look like such a bad idea. She came to the brick
building with its looming smokestack when she was 23, a single mother trying to
support a 6-year-old son. She started as a machine operator and worked her
way up; seven years ago they made her plant manager.

Co-workers at Hooven Allison have become a second family, one that is
unraveling as surely as the spools of yellow rope moving around on forklifts. A
core group of about 20 have been there as long as 30 years. One of them, Gary
Shook, left this month to take a new job. Parrish gave him a surprise party with
balloons and cake at 7:30 in the morning. Shook's eyes filled up. A week later, he
was back to say hello.

Now, there are night-school applications on Parrish's desk. At 43, she is going to
learn real estate and home inspections. She's looking forward to a new life, but is
sad to watch the old place wind down. There are just 65 of the original 94 people
left; the Saturday work has dried up and she's the only manager.

"It's a chance for a new career, a new beginning," she said, but conceded, "It's a
bad time to go out there. If we went out when things were booming, we would
have all felt better."

Parrish sat in her living room recliner and watched the television as Bush
addressed the nation Sept. 7, asking for $87 billion for Iraq. The war is not on
her mind as much as the economy is, she said, but she follows the news.

"I do not believe it was a mistake, but it wasn't planned well-enough ahead. We
should have gone in there, but with other countries. We were too alone in it. I
think he just chose to go."

She voted for Bush and liked his no-nonsense image. But as she watched, his
words about fighting terrorism there to make streets safer here, his vision of giving
Iraq back to the Iraqis, sounded sort of far-fetched, she said.

"I think he means very well by what he's doing. He's painting a pretty picture. But
I believe reality and a dream are two different things."

Mayor Saraga didn't see the speech. His 3-week-old son was crying through the
whole thing, so he read about it the next day in the Dayton Daily News. He has
said for some time that the president needs to talk to the American people more
and help them understand.

Saraga, 49, knows about bad government intelligence firsthand. He spent 22
years in the Marines, serving in Vietnam and the Persian Gulf. Once, when 2,000
Marines were dispatched to rescue a spy ship from an island off Cambodia,
intelligence officers said the east side of the island was heavily fortified so they
should go in from the west. The trouble was, the aerial photograph was sent
backward, so west was really east. Thirty-eight Marines died.

"Ever since then, when intel told me it was going to rain, I left my umbrella at
home," he said.

He thinks Bush got similarly bad advice. Now the war and the economy are
putting people in a bad way. And although there are a lot of loyal Republicans in
Ohio, there are a lot of independents too — more than half of the 85,000
registered voters in Greene County, by his numbers. And if things don't improve
in the next year, they are likely to take their anger into the voting booth.

"What's bothering people is they believe they are losing jobs because of the war,"
he said. "We're a manufacturing state. The recession is hurting. That's causing
people to ask questions. Whether or not they understand why they are mad, they
are just mad, and they want to blame somebody."