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New Superfund trust fund tax going away
From today's Houston Chronicle:

[link|http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/story.hts/editorial/outlook/1287641|editorial]

March 10, 2002, 6:03PM

A proposal that stinks: Dumping 'polluter pays'
By CAROL M. BROWNER

In 1980, after Love Canal entered the public's consciousness, Congress made an important commitment to Americans who found themselves living on toxic dump sites, exposed to deadly carcinogens and chemicals that threatened their health and lives. As a nation we said we would clean up toxic sites -- and the polluters, not the American people, would pay.

For more than 20 years, the "polluter pays" principle has been a cornerstone of environmental policy. Not only has the principle made possible the cleanup of hundreds of the worst toxic waste dumps across the country, it also caused private industry to better manage its pollution and waste.

Remarkably, that principle is now under attack. The Bush administration has announced that it will not seek reauthorization of the taxes levied on oil and chemical companies that go into the Superfund trust fund that is used to pay for cleanup of toxic waste sites.

The original Superfund law established three ways to pay the costs of cleanups: Those responsible for creating the site could clean up the site; the Environmental Protection Agency could perform the cleanup with moneys from the trust fund and recoup the costs from the responsible party later; for those sites where no responsible party could be found, the cleanup would be paid for out of the trust fund.

The very existence of the fund, in addition to financing cleanups, has given the EPA crucial leverage in getting reluctant parties to move forward with cleanups on their own. A healthy trust fund enables the EPA to say to polluters: Clean up your site or we will use trust fund money to do it. And it will cost you more if we do it -- you will have to pay for the cleanup plus additional penalties.

The 1980 law imposed a tax on the oil and chemical industries to finance the trust fund. In return, the oil industry was relieved of most of its liability for petroleum contamination. While the oil industry is covered by other environmental laws such as the Clean Air Act, it is the only industry to receive special treatment under the Superfund act.

Presidents Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton all collected these Superfund taxes and sought their extension. Congress, however, allowed the taxes to expire at the end of 1995, despite the Clinton administration's annual requests that they be extended. In 1993, 1994 and 1995, these Superfund taxes generated more than $2 billion a year.

The Bush administration's decision not to seek extension means that the Superfund trust fund will be out of money by 2004. Yet the end of the tax does not alter the limit on liability that the oil industry continues to enjoy under the Superfund law. Failure to collect the taxes amounts to an enormous windfall for the oil and chemical industries.

Without the tax, the administration has only two choices: Force taxpayers to pay for more cleanups or clean up fewer sites. Given budget constraints, it seems very likely that we will see far fewer cleanups in coming years.

That result would turn back the clock on the substantial progress made during the past decade. In its early days, the Superfund program was inefficient and slow. In fact, after the first 12 years of its existence, only 155 sites had been cleaned up.

During the Clinton administration, the EPA carried out an aggressive set of reforms that helped reduce litigation delays over how cleanups would be conducted and allowed more flexibility in reaching agreements with the polluters. With these reforms, 602 cleanups were completed in eight years -- with an average of 85 sites being cleaned each year in the administration's final four years.

In addition, the Clinton administration created a new program to clean up and redevelop less contaminated brownfield sites with a mix of public and private funds. The EPA also became more involved in helping cities turn blighted and toxic sites into productive parts of a community: a world-class golf course in Montana; soccer practice fields in Virginia; and numerous commercial developments.

Weakening the Superfund program, as the administration's plan would do, would seriously compromise the health of our cities and neighborhoods. There is no reason why any community with a toxic waste site should have to wait for cleanup or why the pace of cleanup for the hundreds of Superfund sites now awaiting action should slow down.

There is no reason why oil companies should not pay their fair share. And there is no reason why the "polluter pays" principle that has worked so well should be abandoned and more of the financial burden shifted onto average taxpayers.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Browner was administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency from 1993 to 2001.
BConnors
"Beating plowshares into swords for the tired old men we elected king" - Don Henley
New Only a Bush-Republican could love the timing, too -
Just after the most profitable year in history for oil companies!
Of course too, just after pigs fly - Congress could.. continue the funding.

Just add it to the list. It's assumed that no one is watching, or will remember this for more than 11 minutes.



A.
New Not sure that's a bad thing - seriously
You *do* know who the main beneficiaries of the Superfund have been?

The lawyers.

The romantic Erin Brockovich image aside, lawyers have been using the Superfund to reach into everyone's pockets for everything. Pretty much crowding out real victims and real sites that need cleanup. Not directly related, but [link|http://www.overlawyered.com|overlawyered.com] has pointed to a number of asbestos articles recently, in which (arguably superfund candidates) asbestos lawyers have been raking in the dough in a feeding frenzy while real victims aren't getting dipsquat.
Where each demon is slain, more hate is raised, yet hate unchecked also multiplies. - L. E. Modesitt
New An interesting angle
but How..! could we possibly create legislation both lawyer and greed-proof? (And after all - they are there because we want them there = we sue; it's always in the back of the mind after ANY unexpected ocurrence which inconveniences someone.. somewhere.. anywhere at all.)

Vicious circle, that.
New Eh? You ever lived in a superfund affected city?
So the lawyers make money off this. So f*cking what? The crap gets cleaned. I lived in Waukegan IL for many years. That harbor was a national disgrace. You can now swim in it, eat the fish caught there and swim in the water, and not have to watch giant, mutant, green eyed seagulls snatch babys from their mother's arms and eat them in mid air... oops, sorry. I guess I read too many science fiction books.
With this much manure around, there must be a pony somewhere.
New Lake Erie was getting cleaned up before Superfund
Superfund sites are *specific* chemical contamination sites, not just general pollution. I don't know if the Waukegan harbor is a Superfund site, or if its cleaning is just a matter of enforcing environmental regulations.

I don't mind lawyers getting paid. I *do* mind them getting paid mega-millions for paper pushing any legal intern could do (and at their legal firms, probably did do).
Where each demon is slain, more hate is raised, yet hate unchecked also multiplies. - L. E. Modesitt
New same issue goes for the endangered species act
legitimate areas that need assistance go unhelped while lawyers rake in bucks by using activists lawsuits on economic targets.
thanx,
bill
There is no difference between a "settler," "soldier," "secular," or "Chassidic Jew." The target is the JEW.
\ufffd Harvey Tannenbaum
New I do know
Outboard Marine dumped PCBs in that harbor for years. Waukegan was, in fact, and still is, a superfund clean up site. About a year left to go until all the dredging is complete.

BTW, Waukegan is on Lake Michigan, not Erie.
With this much manure around, there must be a pony somewhere.
Expand Edited by Silverlock March 12, 2002, 11:49:04 AM EST
New Not just lawyers.
I live a few miles from the largest Superfund site in Michigan.

It's been dug down 30 feet, replaced, and capped 10 feet above ground level. They were talking about turning it into a golf course.

If it hadn't been for Superfund, it would still be a landfill with tens of thousands of barrels of chemical waste.

On the not-so-good side... there's a lake across the street (Spring Lake -- get it?) with new houses going around it. Word is that they found barrels while they were digging the foundations, and quietly just moved them. We were looking at that sub until we found out it was across from a Superfund site.
Regards,

-scott anderson

"Welcome to Rivendell, Mr. Anderson..."
New I'm sorry to see it go, but
I certainly understand why it is that so many businesses have been against it.

The problem is that the phrase "polluter pays" is a simple, stinking lie.

The person who pays is whoever happens to have their hands on it when the EPA comes calling. The EPA doesn't even have to ask who the polluter is or was; the EPA doesn't give a damn if the pollution happened fifty years ago and you're the fifth person since then; if you own the property, you pay, RIGHT NOW IN FULL OR GO TO JAIL. The EPA won't even send an expert to court to testify if anyone wants to find out who really did the polluting.

The original intent of those provisions was that, in cases where the pollution happened long ago and the polluter no longer exists, somebody would be around to carry the can. Unfortunately EPA got taken over by ideologues and bureaucratic empire-builders, each happily reinforcing the anothers' efforts; the result got to the point where it would gag Congress -- a remarkable achievement -- so Superfund, which is badly needed and has some excellent results in its portfolio, has very few friends, and none with enough power to notice.
Regards,
Ric
     Superfund trust fund tax going away - (bconnors) - (9)
         Only a Bush-Republican could love the timing, too - - (Ashton)
         Not sure that's a bad thing - seriously - (wharris2) - (6)
             An interesting angle - (Ashton)
             Eh? You ever lived in a superfund affected city? - (Silverlock) - (3)
                 Lake Erie was getting cleaned up before Superfund - (wharris2) - (2)
                     same issue goes for the endangered species act - (boxley)
                     I do know - (Silverlock)
             Not just lawyers. - (admin)
         I'm sorry to see it go, but - (Ric Locke)

What... is the airspeed of an unladen swallow?
53 ms