The EPA is going to get what’s coming to them thanks to the House GOP (and presumably some Democrats, but we’ll wait for a vote to name names because a few of you are sensitive), The Hill reports:
House Republicans on Monday made no secret that their Department of the Interior, Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and Related Agencies spending bill is designed to trim back the EPA, which they said is a huge creator of uncertainty in an already uncertain environment for business and job creation.
The overall bill, H.R. 2584, cuts spending by about 7 percent, but the EPA could be cut by 18 percent.
Quoth House Appropriations Chair, Hal Rogers (R-KY)
“Some have complained that these cuts are too much, too fast,” Rogers said. “It’s important to remember that these agencies and programs have seen unprecedented massive increases in spending in recent years. This sort of excess has contributed to our astronomical debt.”
Indeed. It is important to remember what caused our astronomical debt. It’s also important to remember what the EPA does:
The House began debate today on an interior-environment spending bill (HR 2584) that would slash spending on a raft of conservation and environmental programs. These include a 40 percent cut to sewage treatment programs aimed at cleaning up California beaches. Storm water washes pollution and sewage onto the state’s beaches, many of which have been periodically closed because of contamination.
Democrats are calling it the most anti-environment bill they’ve ever seen. Environmental groups are in an uproar. The Center for American Progress slide show shows huge cuts to big restoration programs ranging from the Great Lakes to the Chesapeake Bay. The bill guts wildlife refuges. The American Bird Conservancy called it one of the “worst assaults on birds and other wildlife ever to come before Congress.”
But who cares about California beaches and raw sewage and environmental groups and CAP slide shows.
What really matters to us here in the Commonwealth is how the EPA is trying to force us to drink clean water and not poison kids and other acts of treason (via WFPL).
Kentucky Coal Industry Calls New EPA Guidance ‘Overreaching’
In 2009, the Environmental Protection Agency announced it would increase scrutiny on a number of mountaintop removal permits in Appalachia and would release guidelines for future permits. Those guidelines were released last week.
Mine operators will now find it much harder to get permits for valley fills—where valleys and streams are filled with debris from mining.
For two years, the coal industry has criticized the Environmental Protection Agency for creating a climate of uncertainty in the coalfields, as the agency changed its rules for permitting mining operations.
So cut their money. Slash it! If they’re not going to work for our corporate citizens, they shouldn’t work for anyone.

SHE WON'T GO!


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