As I read about the people who Bush is appointing to key environmental positions, I am reminded of the folks who during the campaign said there was no difference between Bush and Gore regarding the environment. Daryl Smith Jack Eastman wrote: > > Bush Picks Industry Insiders to Fill Environmental Posts > > By KATHARINE Q. SEELYE > > > > Expanded Coverage > Politics: White House > > Join a Discussion on The Environment > > ASHINGTON, May 9 Ð President Bush has filled several senior > environment-related jobs in his administration with pro-business advocates > who have worked on behalf of various industries in battles with the federal > government, largely during the Clinton years. > > Mr. Bush has announced his intent to nominate a mining industry lobbyist as > the No. 2 person at the Interior Department. He has chosen a lobbyist for > the National Cattlemen's Beef Association to be the department's chief > lawyer. > > His choice for No. 2 at the Environmental Protection Agency was a lobbyist > for Monsanto, the chemical company now devoted to agribusiness. He wants as > chairman of the Council on Environmental Quality a lawyer who represented > General Electric in its fight with the E.P.A. over toxic waste sites. > > Many of these candidates share a pro-property rights philosophy as well as a > libertarian leaning, and conservatives find this just the right approach. > Supporters also say that the individuals selected are deeply familiar with > the issues that will come before them, and that they will know how to > balance environmental protection and economic interests. > > "We're real happy with the team that Bush is putting in," said Mike > Hardiman, legislative director of the American Conservative Union. > > "After eight years of the extremist, anti-people, anti-access policies of > the Clinton administration and its overzealous application of the Endangered > Species Act and the shutdown of recreational access to public lands as well > as the commercial access, we're now going to have more of a balance," he > said. > > The list of intended nominees Ð most have not been officially nominated Ð is > notable for the absence of picks from the environmental movement. Mr. Bush > was considering John Turner, president of the Conservation Fund, for the No. > 2 job at Interior, but Mr. Turner was dropped after strong opposition from > Mr. Hardiman's group and others. > > In Mr. Turner's place, Mr. Bush has nominated J. Steven Griles, a mining > industry lobbyist who once worked in the Interior Department under James > Watt, President Reagan's first Interior secretary. > > "They are lawyers and lobbyists who built their careers by helping industry > get out of environmental regulations," said Maria Weidner, policy advocate > for the Earthjustice Legal Defense Fund. "Now, assuming they're confirmed, > they will be doing the same thing, only the taxpayers will be paying for > it." > > Business advocates assert that the industry credentials of the nominees does > not necessarily foreshadow their approach in their new jobs. > > William L. Kovacs, vice president for environment, technology and regulatory > affairs at the United States Chamber of Commerce, said that critics had > portrayed the Bush team as anti-environment even as the president let > stricter standards concerning diesel emissions and reporting on lead > emissions go into effect. > > "I don't think that just because these people worked for business, you can > call them pro-business," Mr. Kovacs said. "They're not as clear- cut as the > enviros would like to paint them." > > Guided by the tone set at the top Ð from Mr. Bush and Vice President Dick > Cheney to Gale A. Norton, the Interior secretary, and Christie Whitman, the > E.P.A. administrator Ð these nominees will help determine what policies to > advocate, what regulations to enforce and what litigation to pursue. > > They replace Clinton loyalists who came largely from strong environmental > backgrounds. When President Bill Clinton took office, for example, his > Interior secretary, Bruce Babbitt, was a former governor of Arizona but also > head of the League of Conservation Voters. Mr. Babbitt put George Frampton, > a former head of the Wilderness Society, in charge of fish, wildlife and > parks; Mr. Frampton ended up in charge of the White House environmental > council. > > Now, some former Clinton officials Ð many of whom work for environmental > lobbying groups Ð complain that the Bush team generally views the > environment as resources to be mined, logged and drilled. > > "Their collective orientation is clearly pro-development and > pro-exploitation of public resources for the personal profit of various > industries," said Dave Alberswerth, who worked at the Interior Department > under Mr. Babbitt and is now at the Wilderness Society. > > Some holdovers Ð like Dale Bosworth, the new Forest Service chief, who was a > regional forester in Montana Ð have not drawn environmentalists' fire. And > Mr. Bush has yet to name picks for a handful of key posts. > > But many of those he has named at Interior, E.P.A. and other agencies with > environmental oversight have corporate backgrounds and appear skeptical of > the regulatory process. Most candidates declined to discuss their > prospective roles before their Senate confirmation hearings. > > One of Mr. Bush's most influential choices would be John D. Graham as > administrator of the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs in the > Office of Management and Budget. If confirmed, Mr. Graham, a Harvard > professor who has argued that the costs of most environmental regulations > exceed their benefits, would be in charge of reviewing all regulations > proposed by federal agencies. > > As he said in a 1996 speech at the Heritage Foundation, "environmental > regulation should be depicted as an incredible intervention in the operation > of society." > > Mr. Bush has also said he would nominate Linda J. Fisher to be deputy > administrator of the E.P.A. Most recently she headed the government affairs > office at Monsanto. Ms. Fisher served at the E.P.A. in the Reagan and first > Bush administrations as director of the office of pesticides and toxic > substances; assistant administrator for policy, planning and evaluation; and > as chief of staff. > > Phil Clapp, president of the National Environmental Trust, called her a > "moderate, corporate-style Republican, not a hidebound conservative" and > said Ms. Fisher was seen as "pretty reasonable by environmentalists" during > her tenure as head of the agency's pesticide office. > > "But afterward," he said, "she headed Monsanto's lobbying operation while > the company was trying to head off any government oversight of genetically > engineered crops." > > Mr. Griles, the mining lobbyist picked as deputy Interior secretary, worked > in the Reagan Interior department at a series of jobs, ending up as > assistant secretary of lands and minerals management. > > He then became an executive at the United Company, a coal, oil and gas > development company. Until recently he was a lobbyist for National > Environmental Strategies, with clients including the National Mining > Association, Occidental Petroleum, Edison Electric and the Coalbed Methane > Ad Hoc Committee. > > John Grasser, a spokesman for the National Mining Association, said that Mr. > Griles's industry experience was an important asset for his new post. > "You've got to get the people who understand the issues," he said. > > And he disputed the complaint of environmentalists that the candidates were > captives of industry. "When they get into these jobs, they have to walk > somewhat of a middle line," Mr. Grasser said. > > William Geary Myers 3d is Mr. Bush's choice to be solicitor for the Interior > Department. As lobbyist for the National Cattlemen's Beef Association and > the Public Lands Council, Mr. Myers advocated pro-rancher positions. While > most issues involved land access and water allocation, he also opposed > reintroducing wolves in Yellowstone National Park and Idaho and supported > the state of Montana in the killing of bison that wandered out of > Yellowstone. > > Mr. Myers said this week that as the potential lawyer for the department, > "my primary clients will be the president and the secretary." He said he > would not characterize himself as pro-industry or anti-industry. > > For chairman of the White House Council on Environmental Quality, Mr. Bush > has picked James Connaughton, a partner at Sidley & Austin, a law firm that > advises corporate clients and trade groups on environmental law. He has > represented General Electric and Atlantic Richfield in fights against the > E.P.A. about cleanup of Superfund sites. > > Mr. Bush's choice for assistant attorney general at the Justice Department > for the environment and natural resources is Thomas Sansonetti, a lawyer > from Wyoming who specializes in minerals and energy and is a member of the > libertarian Federalist Society. As the solicitor at Interior in the first > Bush administration, Mr. Sansonetti helped negotiate the Exxon Valdez > oil-spill settlement. > > Other Interior nominees include Bennet William Raley, a lawyer who has > represented farm interests, as assistant secretary for water and science, > and Lynn Scarlett, president of the Reason Foundation, a libertarian group, > as assistant secretary for policy, management and budget. > > "I don't like to tell people how to live their lives," Ms. Scarlett said. > "If that means I'm gun-shy of mandates, where they'll undermine > environmental performance, stifle innovation and heighten conflict, then > I'll say so. But I think too often we judge environmentalism as being the > equivalent of adherence to a particular statute rather than achieving > specific results, and they're not the same thing." > > - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - > To get off the IOWA-TOPICS list, send any message to: > [log in to unmask] - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - For SC email list T-and-C, send: GET TERMS-AND-CONDITIONS.CURRENT to [log in to unmask]