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June 13, 2006
Environment 0; Rove Won
But Rove just forwarded the letter to the appropriate officials. That couldn't influence anyone!
LA Times
EPA
Rule Loosened
After Oil Chief's
Letter to Rove
The White House says the executive's appeal had no role in
changing a measure to protect groundwater. Critics call it a political payoff.
By Tom Hamburger and Peter Wallsten Iraq issues."
Times Staff Writers
June 13, 2006
WASHINGTON — A rule designed by the Environmental Protection Agency to
keep groundwater clean near oil drilling sites and other construction zones was
loosened after White House officials rejected it amid complaints by energy
companies that it was too restrictive and after a well-connected Texas oil
executive appealed to White House senior advisor Karl Rove. The new rule, which took effect Monday, came after years of intense industry
pressure, including court battles and behind-the-scenes agency lobbying. But
environmentalists vowed Monday that the fight was not over, distributing
internal White House documents that they said portrayed the new rule as a
political payoff to an industry long aligned with the Republican Party and
President Bush. In 2002, an
oilman and longtime Republican activist, Ernest Angelo, wrote a letter to Rove
complaining that an early version of the rule was causing many in the oil
industry to "openly express doubt as to the merit of electing Republicans
when we wind up with this type of stupidity."
Rove responded by forwarding the letter to top White House environmental
advisors and scrawling a handwritten note directing an aide to talk to those
advisors and "get a response ASAP." Rove later wrote to Angelo, assuring him that there was a "keen
awareness" within the administration of addressing not only environmental
issues but also the "economic, energy and small business impacts" of
the rule.
Environmentalists pointed to the Rove correspondence as evidence that the Bush
White House, more than others, has mixed politics with policy decisions that
are traditionally left to scientists and career regulators. At the time, Rove
oversaw the White House political office and was directing strategy for the
2002 midterm elections. Angelo had been mayor of Midland, Texas, when Bush ran an oil firm
there. He is also a longtime hunting partner of Rove's. The two men first
worked together when Angelo managed Ronald Reagan's 1980 presidential campaign
in Texas.
In an interview Monday, Angelo welcomed the new groundwater rule and said his
letter might have made a difference in how it was written. But he waved off
environmentalists' questions about Rove's involvement. "I'm sure that his forwarding my letter to people that were in charge of
it might have had some impression on them," Angelo said. "It seems to
me that it was a totally proper thing to do. I can't see why anybody's upset
about it, except of course that it was effective." Asked why he wrote to Rove and not the Environmental Protection Agency or to
some other official more directly associated with the matter, Angelo replied:
"Karl and I have been close friends for 25 years. So, why wouldn't I write
to him? He's the guy I know best in the administration."
White House spokesmen said Monday that the rule was revised as part of the
federal government's standard rule-making process. They said the EPA was simply
directed by White House budget officials to make the rule comply with
requirements laid out by Congress in a sweeping new energy law passed last
year. The issue has been a focus of lobbying by the oil and gas industry for years,
ever since Clinton administration regulators first announced their intent to
require special EPA permits for construction sites smaller than five acres, including
oil and gas drilling sites, as a way to discourage water pollution.
Energy executives, who have long complained of being stifled by federal
regulations limiting drilling and exploration, sought and received a delay in
that permit requirement in 2003. Eventually, Congress granted a permanent
exemption that was written into the 2005 energy legislation.
The EPA rule issued Monday adds fine print to that broad exception in ways that
critics, including six members of the Senate, say exceeds what Congress
intended. For example, the new rule generally exempts sediment — pieces of dirt and
other particles that can gum up otherwise clear streams — from
regulations governing runoff that may flow from oil and gas production or
construction sites.
Sen. James M. Jeffords (I-Vt.), who joined five Democrats in objecting to the
rule, wrote in March that there was nothing in the energy law suggesting that
such an exclusion of sediment "had even entered the mind of any member of
Congress as it considered the Energy Policy Act of 2005." Moreover,
Jeffords wrote, the rule violated the intentions of Congress when it passed the
Clean Water Act 19 years ago. White House and administration officials disagreed.
At the EPA, Assistant Administrator Benjamin H. Grumbles said the rule
responded directly to congressional action. He cited a letter from Sen. James
M. Inhofe (R-Okla.), chairman of the Senate Environment and Public Works
Committee, endorsing it. He added that the rule still allows states to regulate
pollution, and that it continues to regulate sediment that contains
"toxic" ingredients.
Lisa Miller, a spokeswoman for another senior lawmaker, Rep. Joe L. Barton
(R-Texas), chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, said Monday
that the rule was designed to hold oil companies accountable for putting toxic
substances in the soil, but not for dirt that results from storms.
"When it rains, storm water gets muddy, regardless of whether there's an
oil well in the neighborhood," Miller said. "Congress told EPA to do
this, and now they have. If there's oil in the water, a producer has to clean
it up. If it's nature, they don't."
The change in the rule occurred last year when staffers in the White House
Office of Management and Budget began editing an early version drafted by EPA
technical staff. The Office of Management and Budget oversees another division,
the Office of Information and Regulatory Policy, which critics complain has
served as a central hub in the Bush White House for making government regulations
more business-friendly. A spokesman for the White House budget office, Scott Milburn, said Monday that
the White House's involvement in making rules was intended to "ensure that
agencies issue regulations that follow the law."
White House spokeswoman Dana Perino rejected the suggestion that Rove was
involved in the rule change. Rove frequently receives requests, she said, and
that he tries to reply and direct those requests to the appropriate people. She
said that for environmentalists to accuse Rove of manipulating the EPA rule was
a "typical overreach" by administration critics."That is quite an overreach, when it was the United States Congress that
passed the Energy Act in a bipartisan way to ask the EPA to undertake this
rulemaking," she said.
In their March letter, Jeffords and his Democratic colleagues asked EPA
officials whether the correspondence with Rove influenced the final rule. A response written by Grumbles did not directly address the Rove question. But
the Natural Resources Defense Council and other environmental groups assert
that they know the answer.
"We can't say that Karl Rove walked over to OMB and demanded these
changes," said Sharon Buccino, director of the Natural Resources Defense
Council's land program. "But it is clear that there was direction coming
from the top of the White House, and this was a result of the thinking of the
White House as opposed to environmental experts at EPA." Buccino called the rule "yet another example of the Bush administration
rewarding their friends in the oil and gas industry at the expense of the
environment and the public's health."
In his letter to Rove, Angelo did not hide his political feelings. He thanked
Rove for "all you do," and added words of encouragement on another
topic: "The president has the opposition on the run on the
His letter appeared to gain notice at the highest levels of the administration.
Three months after Angelo sent it, a top EPA official wrote to tell him that
the agency had decided to impose the temporary delay on the construction
permitting rule for oil and gas companies. The letter was copied to Rove, White House environmental advisor James L.
Connaughton and then-EPA Administrator Christine Todd Whitman.
June 13, 2006 in Governance/Management | Permalink
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