РефератыИностранный языкOzOzone Regulations Essay Research Paper In 1997

Ozone Regulations Essay Research Paper In 1997

Ozone Regulations Essay, Research Paper


In 1997 the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) established new ozone


standards. The EPA also placed special restrictions on twenty-two states in the


Ohio Valley and Midwest regions to prevent emissions from coal-burning power


plants from being carried into the New England States by wind currents.


(Tennessee is one of these twenty-two states.) Both of these rulings were


recently either struck down or placed on hold by Federal Appeals Courts. Why:


The regulations put into place in 1997 by the EPA were more restrictive than the


1990 standards. The regulations limit the amount of ground level ozone and fine


particle pollution permitted. Ground level ozone is produced by nitrogen


oxide(NOx) which is created by burning fossil fuels. Since gasoline and diesel


are both fossil fuels, then NOx is a major component of automobile emissions.


Several members of the trucking and fossil fuel industries, as well as members


of the twenty-two state region, have challenged the regulations in Federal Court


and have been successful in blocking the implementation of the new rules. In the


past two months, two separate Federal Court Of Appeals panels have ruled that


the EPA?s authority to establish clean air standards is not properly delegated


by Congress under the Clean Air Act. Therefore, since the EPA is a part of the


Executive branch of government and not the Legislative, they have no authority


to produce regulations on their own. The plaintiffs in the case also argued that


the amount of pollution a person can tolerate has not been established and until


it is the EPA should not make the current regulations more restrictive. How: The


main actors in this event are the American Trucking Associations and their


fellow plaintiffs, the twenty-two state coalition, the EPA, and the Federal


Appeals Court. Why would the American Trucking Associations and other fossil


fuel burning industries want to limit the EPA?s authority? What do they have


to gain? Last year, according to the EPA?s own press release detailing their


enforcement efforts in fiscal year 1998, the EPA referred 266 criminal cases to


the Department of Justice, as well as 411 civil court cases. Approximately half


of the civil cases required violators to change the way they manage their


facilities or to reduce their emissions or discharges. The EPA also assessed


almost $93 million dollars in criminal fines and another $92 million in civil


penalties. In addition to fines and penalties, polluters spent over $2 billion


dollars to correct violations. Not included in this estimate would be the legal


expenses incurred or the advertising and marketing costs required to mend a


damaged pubic relations image. Clearly it is in the industries? best financial


interest if the regulations are less restrictive. Many companies that spent


large amounts of money to meet the 1990 Clean Air Act standards would have to


spend even more to meet the amended 1997 standards. Do the states in the


twenty-two state region have another reason to argue against the standards?


According to Sean Cavanagh?s article in the April 4, 1999 edition of the


Chattanooga Times/Free Press, Atlanta lost $700 million in federal roads money


as a result of failing to come up with a pollution containment plan. In


addition, the state of Georgia had to fund a state ?superagency? to develop


and enforce transit plans that meet federal standards. The states joined the


industrial groups in claiming that the new standards are too strict and are


unnecessary. Chattanooga is not expected to meet the new requirements by the


year 2000 deadline and Chattanooga Mayor Kensey and Tennessee Governor Sundquist


were two of the public officials who protested the new standards as being too


strict. Are the new standards too strict? How does the EPA determine the


required levels? According to the press release issued by the EPA following the


court?s decision, the Federal Courts are not questioning ?the science and


process conducted by the EPA justifying the setting of new, more protective


standards.? The EPA claims that their standards, which are designed to limit


the affects that smog and soot have

on people with respiratory problems, protect


125 million Americans including 35 million children. The Federal Courts only


have issue with the constitutionality of certain parts of the Clean Air Act that


allow the EPA to establish clean air regulations in the interest of public


health. The EPA is recommending that the Department of Justice appeal the ruling


to the US Supreme Court. Several interest groups are closely watching the case.


The powerful industrial and truckers lobby groups are supporting the plaintiffs,


while several environmental lobby groups and health associations, such as the


American Lung Association, are supporting the EPA?s efforts. All interest


groups have apparently been relatively quiet so far since the issue is a court


case and most are probably afraid of being accused of trying to influence the


courts decision. If the issue gets a new life in Congress then obviously the


lobbyist will be more active. Opinion: Who gets what, when and how. The EPA is


trying to establish new clean air requirements to take effect in the year 2000


by using the public health clause of the Clean Air Act. The plaintiffs are


trying to avoid having to spend more money to meet the requirements by 2000 by


arguing that the public health clause is unconstitutional. What is the federal


government?s stand on the issue. White House press secretary Joe Lockhart


claimed that they are ?deeply disappointed? by the courts decision.


Considering that the liberals are generally supportive of environmental issues


this is not surprising, but what about the conservatives? Republicans are


usually more protective of business interest. More strict laws on environmental


issues will cause fewer new companies to start-up. This would of course have an


adverse affect on the economy. It should be noted that the two judges who voted


on the side of the plaintiffs in both of these case were Reagan appointees and


therefore probably conservatives. Is it fair for the EPA to impose new strict


standards only seven years after instituting sweeping changes in clean air


regulations? Many companies are probably still paying for the new programs they


implented to help meet the previous standards. Fair or not these standards are


probably necessary. Ground level ozone contributes significantly to smog. Smog,


according to an editorial by the Chattanooga Times? Harry Austin on May 20,


1999,in turn affects not only our health, but also crop and forest loss, acid


rain and fog production, and increases regional haze. If there are so many


important benefits to reducing ground level ozone then why is the public so


silent on the matter? Probably for two reasons. First, confusion with


atmospheric ozone. The ozone surrounding the Earth blocks out radiation from the


sun. Ground level ozone traps in fine particles. The hole in the Earth?s ozone


layer makes the evening news. Smog also makes the evening news, but very little


is ever said about the contribution made to it by ground level ozone. Many


Americans probably just consider more ozone a good thing, but it?s not if


it?s not in the right place. Secondly, in an article written by Jeff Dean for


the Associated Press a survey was cited that stated that Americans are


discouraged by the Earth?s environmental problems and are beginning to feel


there is nothing that can be done, therefore why even worry about it. The EPA is


trying to do something about our problems and is meeting with resistance from


industrial and transportation groups. If the Supreme Court does not overturn the


lower court?s ruling and reinstate the new regulations then millions of


Americans will continue to suffer the effects of smog. If the court rules the


regulations void because they are not properly delegated by Congress then the


floodgates will open on lawsuits against numerous such regulations. If an


already unproductive Congress is forced to create all of their own regulations


then the country will come to a stand still. If, however, these regulations are


created at random without proper Congressional supervision then a main portion


of our system of checks and balances will be voided. A compromise must me


attained.


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