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


To: steve harris who wrote (461616)9/19/2003 10:04:10 AM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
More BUSHSPEAK.....clear skies....AHAHAHAHAHAA

Bush Pushes Stalled Pollution Proposal
By Maura Reynolds
The Los Angeles Times

The president attempts to revive his Clear Skies initiative by saying it would help
spur the economy. Its passage seems unlikely.

Wednesday 17 September 2003

WASHINGTON — President Bush tried Tuesday to jump-start his stalled air pollution proposal — the
Clear Skies initiative — by gathering industry officials and politicians at the White House and arguing
that his bill would help the struggling economy.

"People in this country must understand that we can have a pro-growth agenda, a pro-job agenda
and a pro-environmental agenda at the same time, and Clear Skies legislation is just that," Bush said
in the White House East Garden.

Bush has spent two days this week pushing his air pollution policies, including the Clear Skies
initiative, which is opposed by most environmental groups and supported by the energy industry and
the coal-fired power plants.

"The companies who would like to see Clear Skies passed have been talking to the White House for
months," said Paul Bailey of Generators for Clean Air, a group of utilities that support the president's
proposal. "If they wait until next year, it gets close to elections, and politics will prevent passage."

However, Bailey acknowledged Clear Skies has little hope of passage this year. The
Republican-controlled Senate is divided about how aggressively they want to cut emissions, and Clear
Skies faces competition in the Senate from two other proposals.

Bush's initiative would set up a nationwide "cap and trade" system similar to the one already in place
in the Northeast to address the problem of acid rain. The program would issue pollution "permits" to
utilities and allow them to trade emission rights among themselves to reach long-term pollution
reduction targets.

"Every year, each facility will need a permit of each ton of pollution it emits," Bush explained in his
remarks. "Plants that can reduce their pollution below that amount are allowed to sell the surplus to
other plants that need more time."

Environmentalists don't object to the idea of "cap and trade," but complain that Clear Skies
effectively pushes into the future pollution reductions that the existing Clean Air Act requires sooner. It
also focuses on three utility emissions — sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxide and mercury — but doesn't
address carbon dioxide, which is widely blamed for global warming.

"Even though it would be a reduction, it is significantly less than the Clean Air Act would require over
time," said the National Audubon Society's Bob Perciasepe, former EPA assistant administrator for air
during the Clinton administration. "And it doesn't do anything about carbon dioxide."

In recent days, Bush has sought to promote his air pollution proposals by linking them to job
creation. He has argued that environmental concerns should not override the need to create new jobs.

"One way to make sure that the job supply is steady and growing in the long term is to have a
realistic energy policy, coupled with realistic environmental policy," Bush said.

Sen. Tom Carper (D-Del.), sponsor of one of the alternate plans, argued that more stringent
environmental legislation would create more jobs, not threaten them.

"Under our bill, the installation of new pollution control equipment on existing power plants mixed
with the construction of new, advanced-technology plants will create tens of thousands of new
high-paying jobs," Carper said. "Our bill also encourages the development of new clean-coal
technology, which should help retain coal's place in our fuel supply and continue to guarantee jobs for
our nation's coal miners."

Bush did not specify why he believes his proposal would create jobs. However, the National Assn. of
Manufacturers, which took part in the White House event, said that the president's plan would keep
energy prices lower, and thus boost economic growth.

"America's manufacturing sector has lost more than 2.7 million jobs in the past 37 months," said
Jeffrey Marks, the association's air quality director. "And the air quality bills now competing with Clear
Skies for congressional support would only hinder economic expansion by driving energy and natural
gas prices higher for businesses and homeowners alike."

At the White House, Bush highlighted the participation of Jerry Roberts, treasurer of Local 233 of the
Utility Workers of America, an AFL-CIO affiliate in Monroe, Mich. While unions are a traditional ally to
Democrats, the president has frequently reached out to union members as part of a strategy to
broaden the Republican Party's appeal to blue-collar workers.

"What we're talking about is good for the working people of this country," Bush said. "What we're
talking about makes sense for those who work for a living."