[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 13 (Tuesday, January 24, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Pages S420-S421]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FUTURE OF THE EPA AND NOMINATION OF SCOTT PRUITT
Mr. BARRASSO. Mr. President, last week the Committee on Environment
[[Page S421]]
and Public Works held a hearing on the nomination of Oklahoma attorney
general Scott Pruitt to lead the Environmental Protection Agency. The
hearing was really about the future of this Agency and how we can get
it back to doing the job it was meant to do from the very beginning.
We are blessed in this country with enormous natural resources. Our
goal should be to use these resources responsibly in ways that protect
our environment and help make our economy strong.
Over the past 8 years, the leaders of the Environmental Protection
Agency created broad and legally questionable new regulations that
undermined the American people's faith in the Agency. The political
leaders of this Agency have been reckless, irresponsible, and arrogant.
A course of correction is long overdue, and it is exactly what we are
going to get.
If my colleagues have any doubts that the EPA lost its way, they can
just look at two of the biggest environmental scandals we have seen in
a long time. In the summer of 2015, there was what became known as the
Gold King Mine disaster. The Environmental Protection Agency spilled 3
million gallons of toxic wastewater into a river in Colorado. This was
water filled with toxic substances like arsenic and lead. It flowed to
New Mexico and Utah, through the land of the Navajo Nation and the
Southern Ute Indian tribe. There are 200,000 people who drink water
from the river system that the EPA poisoned. Farmers and ranchers
couldn't use the water for their crops or their animals.
The other disaster the Environmental Protection Agency helped to
cause was what happened in Flint, MI. The EPA failed to do the proper
oversight. As a result, thousands of children were exposed to high
levels of lead in their drinking water. The Agency knew about the
dangers to the public health and for months did nothing to warn the
people.
These are just two scandals where the Environmental Protection Agency
actually harmed people's health because the EPA was negligent. There
are also many ways the Agency has harmed families and the American
economy, not by accident but intentionally. It has issued thousands of
pages of regulations trying to shut down the entire coal industry in
the United States. Since 2009, the Environmental Protection Agency has
come out with nearly 200 new regulations.
According to the American Action Forum, the total cost of all of this
new redtape is about $340 billion. The Agency has piled enormous new
restrictions and costs onto American families and businesses, all to
produce miniscule benefits.
One of them was the so-called Clean Power Plan. States sued to block
this destructive bureaucratic overreach. The courts had to step in and
tell Washington not so fast.
We should be looking for ways to make American energy as clean as we
can, as fast as we can, without raising costs for American families.
That is not what the Environmental Protection Agency did with its power
regulations.
The EPA also put out a new rule that dramatically expanded its own
control over what it calls waters of the United States. The Agency
declared that it has control over things like irrigation ditches and
backyard ponds all across America. Two different courts have blocked
this rule from taking effect. Why? Because it goes far beyond the
Agency's own authority.
For 8 years now, the leaders of the EPA have not had their priorities
straight. They have been pursuing a political agenda instead of
focusing on what should be the Agency's core mission. The Environmental
Protection Agency was created for a reason. It was created because
America needed someone to perform this mission. There is a right way to
do the job. We can strike the right balance so we protect our
environment while allowing our economy to grow.
My home State of Wyoming is one of the most pristine States in the
country, one of the most beautiful places in the world, as well as one
of the most energy-rich States in the country. Wyoming has struck the
right balance. We have done it successfully and so have many other
States. We can address threats to our environment best through the
cooperation of States, towns, Indian tribes, and Washington--a
cooperation.
The quality of America's air, water, and land are local concerns as
much as they are national concerns. The Environmental Protection Agency
should not try to dictate regulations from Washington without
consulting its partners at all levels.
Much of the work of the EPA was intended to give States a chance to
take action first. Federal regulators are meant to be a backstop,
acting when States or communities fail to act. Restoring this proper
order and restoring the partnership of States with the EPA is essential
to making sure people see the Agency as legitimate once again. The
Agency needs to learn to listen before it acts.
We can also restore the Environmental Protection Agency by restating
its commitment to the rule of law. That is why the American people
elect a Congress--because of the rule of law. The Agency must enforce
the laws as they are written by Congress. The Agency cannot write the
laws, cannot ignore the parts of the laws it doesn't like, although
that is exactly what this EPA has been doing.
We all know the EPA used to do very good work. In the past, it
protected America's environment while understanding that there need to
be reasonable regulations that allow people to use our natural
resources. Every American wants clean air, clean water, and commonsense
protection for our species. That will not change. We need the EPA to do
its job, and we need it to do the job right.
Through 6 hours of questioning before our committee last week, Scott
Pruitt showed that he understands the need to return the Environmental
Protection Agency back to its proper course. He showed he is committed
to working as a partner with Americans all across the country to find
the best ways to address the threats to our environment. His record as
the attorney general of Oklahoma showed that he is committed to
restoring and maintaining the rule of law.
I am confident that Attorney General Pruitt will be able to right the
ship at the EPA. I am confident that he can restore the balance between
the benefits the Agency can deliver for Americans with the costs that
it imposes.
As chairman of the Committee on Environment and Public Works, I am
committed to making sure the Senate exercises appropriate oversight to
make sure that this happens.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
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. WHITEHOUSE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Hoeven). Without objection, it is so
ordered.
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