[Congressional Record Volume 151, Number 53 (Wednesday, April 27, 2005)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4438-S4439]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                     NOMINATION OF STEPHEN JOHNSON

  Mr. CARPER. Mr. President, I have been here 4 years. I have never 
placed a hold, as I recall, on any nomination for anyone to serve in 
this administration.
  When Christie Whitman was nominated to head up EPA, I said: 
Congratulations. What can I do to help get you confirmed and to confirm 
the members of the team you want to surround yourself with? And I went 
to work on it.
  When Mike Levitt was nominated to succeed her, I called Mike Levitt--
both him and Governor Whitman, with whom I served--I called Mike Levitt 
and I said: Congratulations. What can I do to help get you confirmed 
and the team you want to surround yourself with? And I went to work on 
it.

  When Tommy Thompson was nominated to be Secretary of Health and Human 
Services, I called to congratulate him and said: What can I do to help 
get you confirmed and confirm the team you want to surround you? And I 
went to work on it.
  When Tom Ridge was nominated to be Secretary of Homeland Security, I 
called him and I said: Congratulations. What can I do to help get you 
confirmed and to confirm the team you want around you?
  For me to stand here today in an effort to stop, at least for a short 
while, the nomination of Stephen Johnson to be Administrator of EPA is 
out of character for me. That is not the way I do business. I hope my 
colleagues realize that after 4 years I am a guy who likes to work 
across the aisle, and whether the issues are some of the issues Senator 
Reid just mentioned--class action reform, bankruptcy reform 
legislation, now asbestos, overhauling the postal system, comprehensive 
energy bill--I am one on the Democrat side who looks forward to working 
not only with my colleagues but with our colleagues on the other side 
of the aisle.
  We have problems in our country, challenges we face on all fronts. 
Among those challenges we face is what to do to improve the quality of 
our air and how we can do that in a way that does not cost consumers an 
arm and a leg. What can we do to improve the quality of our air that 
does not encourage the shifting of utility plants from coal, which we 
have in abundance, to natural gas, which we don't.
  We have had sort of a Hobson's choice in the last couple of years--
the administration's clear skies proposals, multipollutant bill dealing 
with reducing sulphur dioxide, nitrogen oxide, mercury from utility 
plants, compared to the proposal of our colleague from Vermont, Senator 
Jeffords, and others, who would propose to go further, a lot further, a 
lot faster than the administration on those three pollutants, and add a 
fourth, carbon dioxide.
  The Presiding Officer, as well as my friend from Pennsylvania--we 
have all served in the House together. I don't know about them, but 
when I served in the House, I never liked it when I was dealt a 
Hobson's choice--a position over here and another position over here. I 
never liked it.
  One of the great things about the Senate is we can craft something in 
the middle. What I sought to do in working with people such as Senator 
Lamar Alexander from Tennessee, Lincoln Chafee from Rhode Island, and 
Judd Gregg from New Hampshire, was to come up with something in the 
middle, a centrist approach that we believe reduces the emission of 
sulphur dioxide, nitrogen oxide, mercury from utility plants, gets a 
start in slowing down the growth of emissions from CO2, and 
does so in a way that does not cost consumers an arm and a leg and, 
frankly, does not lead to a lot of shifting off of coal and onto 
natural gas.
  We introduced legislation the first time in 2002. That was the year I 
first asked EPA for comparative analysis, comparing the 
administration's clear skies proposal with our bipartisan bill with the 
Jeffords bill. In 2003 we got a lot of raw data and not much analysis 
from EPA. Along with the raw data and the limited analysis they sent 
us, they said some of the assumptions on which this analysis was 
conducted are, frankly, out of date and that the information we have 
shared with you is maybe not as valid as it otherwise would be.

[[Page S4439]]

  We renewed the request and asked for the comparative analysis of the 
President's proposal of the clear skies with the Jeffords proposal and 
our proposal in the middle. We found out in 2004--we heard the 
information could not be provided because it looked as if Congress, the 
Environment and Public Works Committee, was not going to move to 
cleaner legislation in 2004, so they did not want the EPA to do the 
analysis.
  We renewed our request in 2005 for the comparative analysis, and we 
were told that no, the EPA does not have time because we are moving so 
quickly toward enactment of clean air legislation.
  We are now in a situation where the President's proposal was not 
approved by committee, and we are not moving anything. The only thing 
that is moving right now is lawyers--to file lawsuits on behalf of 
environmental groups or on behalf of utilities. It is not a good 
situation.
  I came here to legislate. I didn't come here to litigate. I came here 
to get things done.
  We have about 50,000 people in my State who suffer from asthma, and 
about 20,000 of them are kids. We have too much smog in my State--the 
ozone problem and too much smog--especially in the summertime, more 
than we do in other parts of the country. We have in my State too much 
mercury that has been ingested by fish, and pregnant women in Delaware 
and other places around the country eat those fish. There are high 
levels of mercury in those fish. We know what it does to the brains of 
the unborn those pregnant women carry.
  Not everybody believes carbon dioxide leads to global warming and 
that we are actually seeing a temperature rising on this planet of 
ours. I will tell you NASA says this year will be the warmest year on 
record since we have been keeping records, and we have been keeping 
records for 150 years. We are told that 9 out of the last 10 years have 
been the warmest years since we have been keeping temperature records 
in this country.
  The glaciers--I have seen some of them, and maybe others here have, 
too--are disappearing way up North and way down South. The snowcaps on 
some of the tallest mountains in the world are disappearing, too. We 
are actually seeing temperatures rise. We are seeing sea levels rise.
  I am not going to get into an argument today about whether there is a 
real problem. I believe there is. I respect the views of others who 
disagree, but I think the preponderance of scientific evidence says we 
need to get started on this issue.
  How does that lead us to the nomination of Stephen Johnson? I have 
been asking for 3 years, from the EPA, for scientific analysis that 
will enable our committee and, frankly, the Senate to decide what kind 
of clean air legislation, multipollutant legislation, to move out of 
committee to bring to the Senate floor. Frankly, we have not gotten an 
altogether satisfactory response.
  The responses are getting a little better, but we are not quite where 
I think we need to be. Stephen Johnson is a good man. He will be a good 
administrator if this administration will let him do his job. If we do 
not have the scientific analysis we need to be able to use good science 
to decide how far, how fast to go in reducing the emissions of these 
four pollutants, we are not going to get a clean air bill. It is just 
that simple.
  Someday, we will have a Democratic President. It could be in a couple 
years. It could be longer than that. Someday, we will have a Democratic 
majority in the Senate, maybe even in the House. I do not think it 
should matter who is in the White House or who is in the majority here 
in the Senate. We need to work across the aisle on issues such as this. 
If you look at the history of this body: clean air, bipartisan 
legislation; clean water, bipartisan legislation; brownfields, 
bipartisan legislation.
  If we are going to find agreement, common ground on multipollutant 
legislation, it is going to be because we work together, not because 
EPA was compelled to withhold data or information from one side or the 
other, but because they shared that information, and we used that 
information and good science to go forward.
  Let me close with this. There is going to be a vote on cloture--it 
could be tomorrow; it could be Friday--on Stephen Johnson. As much as I 
am convinced he is a good man and would be a good administrator of EPA, 
I am even more convinced we need not just a good person to head up EPA, 
but we need strong, balanced multipollutant legislation in this 
country. The only way I believe that legislation is going to move 
through our committee and through this Senate is if we have good, 
comparable analysis, good comprehensive analysis. It is not hard to 
get.
  I spoke with Mr. Johnson twice today. He was good enough to respond 
to me in writing to my requests. We met and talked a number of times. 
He has suggested to me what he thinks might be a compromise on the 
amount of information they would be willing to share. I responded, in 
turn, with a counterproposal. In my judgment, it is eminently 
reasonable.
  I would hope somebody on the other side--our Republican friends 
either here or down at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue--would see that maybe 
the better part of valor and a way to get to a win-win situation is to 
simply say: We will provide the information that has been requested. We 
will stop squabbling about it and just provide it.
  If they do that, we can negotiate in earnest this spring on a 
multipollutant bill; and we can pass, this year, that legislation. I 
would call that a win-win situation--a win-win because Stephen Johnson 
would be allowed, literally, to be confirmed this week to head up EPA; 
and our country would be on the road to having air that is cleaner to 
breathe and less polluted with sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxide, and 
mercury; and we would have a world where the threat of global warming 
has been reduced a little bit as well. Those are two good outcomes.
  My hope is, before we push this ball any further down the court, we 
can come to agreement and get those two things done.
  Mr. President, I yield back my time and thank the Senator from 
Pennsylvania for his accommodation.
  Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. SANTORUM. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. SANTORUM. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to speak as in 
morning business.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.

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