Most Popular This Week
- Eve of Destruction (or How to Destroy a Planet Without Really Trying)
- 'Beyond Orwellian': Outrage Follows Revelations of Vast Domestic Spying Program
- The Bill of Rights Exists: An Open Letter to Dianne Feinstein
- The World Economy Is a Ticking Time Bomb (and The Fuse is Burning)
- 'We Are Movement, Not a Moment': North Carolina Peaceful Uprising Continues
- Eve of Destruction (or How to Destroy a Planet Without Really Trying)
- The World Economy Is a Ticking Time Bomb (and The Fuse is Burning)
- The Bill of Rights Exists: An Open Letter to Dianne Feinstein
- Is Enbridge Building a Secret Keystone Pipeline?
- 'Beyond Orwellian': Outrage Follows Revelations of Vast Domestic Spying Program
Popular content
Today's Top News
Published on Tuesday, August 25, 2009 by CommonDreams.org
A Quota of Daily Pollution
From the moment of its inception, in December 1970, the Environmental Protection Agency was caught in a trap. It could not honestly protect “human health and the environment” from the perpetual onslaught of toxins and outright pollution of the industrial behemoth of the United States.
The federal government organizations that tried to protect human health and the environment before 1970 were the giant Departments of Agriculture; Interior; and Health, Education and Welfare. They had failed miserably, which was the real reason for the establishment of EPA.
The most EPA could do was to learn from its predecessors by “regulating” pollution, i.e., allowing factories a quota of pollution every day and prohibit the most life-threatening practices of those making poisons and other dangerous products.
Under these conditions, EPA puts some limits to pollution and the rivers no longer catch fire and the air is free of dark pollution, but not free of smog and soot, very small toxic particles that come out of the pipes of cars, trucks, airplanes, incinerators, large farms and factories. Some of these microscopic particles kill people as well as cause inflammation and injury to the lungs and the blood.
EPA delays the implementation of advanced environmental protection technologies among industries affecting the atmosphere and water. These technologies, such that could power factories, mining, public transport, aircraft and automobiles, would reduce pollution significantly, which would then become a tremendous boost to public health, including lessening the country’s contribution to global warming.
EPA, however, does not even enforce the law, propping polluters and giving additional savings to old factories.
In 1988, EPA had 14,000 technical staff and a $ 2.7 billion budget for programs dealing with hazardous waste, water, air and radiation, pesticides and other toxic substances. By 2005, EPA had more than 18,000 employees and a budget of $ 7.6 billion.
Most of the technical people working for EPA are stationed in Washington, DC. They act like emergency doctors who fail to heal or lawyers preparing for a trial that never takes place.
Polluters fund hundreds of trips by EPA staff to universities, research organizations and farms.
The excuse for this blatant exercise in influence peddling is always wrapped around science.
Other routine work of EPA scientists includes incomprehensive cost-benefit assessments, useless risk evaluations, cut-and-paste reviews, which lift wholesale the conclusions of polluters, making them conclusions of the government, figuring out triage scenarios, funding studies no one reads, funding travel for political appointees, training managers and those scheduled for the senior executive service and reinventing themselves and their organizations often enough to be timely and in accord with the political demands of the party in power.
In 1978, an EPA scientist, Dwight Welch, revealed that “spray bombs,” used in homes for the extermination of insects, were responsible for fires instead. He accused EPA of being an accessory to the terrible effects of the pesticide bombs. Instead of taking his recommendations seriously, his EPA supervisors made his life miserable and, in 1987, forced him out of the program.
In 1979, aldicarb or temic, a neurotoxin of Union Carbide sprayed by the potato farmers of the East End of Long Island, New York, poisoned the drinking water of their neighbors and came pretty close to killing them. The same poison contaminated the drinking water of Virginia and Wisconsin.
This indifference to public health and nature at EPA is no accident. It continues to this day. For example, the news of August 2009 that excess amount of the weed killer atrazine contaminated the drinking water of Illinois, Ohio, Indiana and Kansas is not news at all. The poisoning of the drinking water of millions of Americans by agrotoxins happens every growing season. We don’t know about it because EPA has become a master in covering-up this and a thousand other infractions of the chemical industry, including environmental and public health crimes.
Corporations and their White House and Congressional allies, including the president’s political appointee administering EPA, have institutionalized the interests and priorities of America’s business into the fabric of EPA.
Public health has become a slogan in the risk assessors’ vocabulary. As for nature – my EPA colleagues preferred to talk of birds and bunnies instead -- “Silent spring” is the answer. This is the ceaseless crippling and killing of wildlife, including an invisible cloud of disease and death surrounding farms and lawns drifting to the rest of the country. Millions of Americans read Rachel Carson, but, strangely, they failed to understand the urgent message of this passionate woman scientist.
We need to make EPA work for us, not the polluters. Americans need to be outraged enough to take their health and the environment seriously, electing people in office who will protect both nature and their health from the toxins of America’s businesses.
To start this struggle would require three things: One, abolish private contributions to the election of federal and state officials; second, forbid lobbying of these officials; and, third, enforce the anti-trust laws, which means breaking up large farmers and agribusinesses, doing away with animal factories, favoring small family agriculture and organic farming, and remaining ever vigilant with any business or organization trying to dominate agriculture.
Health scientists, especially at the universities, need to demythologize agribusiness and other large corporations affecting public health. Finally, a new EPA must be created that is an organization independent of corporate influence and political appointees, something like a Supreme Court for nature and health.
The federal government organizations that tried to protect human health and the environment before 1970 were the giant Departments of Agriculture; Interior; and Health, Education and Welfare. They had failed miserably, which was the real reason for the establishment of EPA.
The most EPA could do was to learn from its predecessors by “regulating” pollution, i.e., allowing factories a quota of pollution every day and prohibit the most life-threatening practices of those making poisons and other dangerous products.
Under these conditions, EPA puts some limits to pollution and the rivers no longer catch fire and the air is free of dark pollution, but not free of smog and soot, very small toxic particles that come out of the pipes of cars, trucks, airplanes, incinerators, large farms and factories. Some of these microscopic particles kill people as well as cause inflammation and injury to the lungs and the blood.
EPA delays the implementation of advanced environmental protection technologies among industries affecting the atmosphere and water. These technologies, such that could power factories, mining, public transport, aircraft and automobiles, would reduce pollution significantly, which would then become a tremendous boost to public health, including lessening the country’s contribution to global warming.
EPA, however, does not even enforce the law, propping polluters and giving additional savings to old factories.
In 1988, EPA had 14,000 technical staff and a $ 2.7 billion budget for programs dealing with hazardous waste, water, air and radiation, pesticides and other toxic substances. By 2005, EPA had more than 18,000 employees and a budget of $ 7.6 billion.
Most of the technical people working for EPA are stationed in Washington, DC. They act like emergency doctors who fail to heal or lawyers preparing for a trial that never takes place.
Polluters fund hundreds of trips by EPA staff to universities, research organizations and farms.
The excuse for this blatant exercise in influence peddling is always wrapped around science.
Other routine work of EPA scientists includes incomprehensive cost-benefit assessments, useless risk evaluations, cut-and-paste reviews, which lift wholesale the conclusions of polluters, making them conclusions of the government, figuring out triage scenarios, funding studies no one reads, funding travel for political appointees, training managers and those scheduled for the senior executive service and reinventing themselves and their organizations often enough to be timely and in accord with the political demands of the party in power.
In 1978, an EPA scientist, Dwight Welch, revealed that “spray bombs,” used in homes for the extermination of insects, were responsible for fires instead. He accused EPA of being an accessory to the terrible effects of the pesticide bombs. Instead of taking his recommendations seriously, his EPA supervisors made his life miserable and, in 1987, forced him out of the program.
In 1979, aldicarb or temic, a neurotoxin of Union Carbide sprayed by the potato farmers of the East End of Long Island, New York, poisoned the drinking water of their neighbors and came pretty close to killing them. The same poison contaminated the drinking water of Virginia and Wisconsin.
This indifference to public health and nature at EPA is no accident. It continues to this day. For example, the news of August 2009 that excess amount of the weed killer atrazine contaminated the drinking water of Illinois, Ohio, Indiana and Kansas is not news at all. The poisoning of the drinking water of millions of Americans by agrotoxins happens every growing season. We don’t know about it because EPA has become a master in covering-up this and a thousand other infractions of the chemical industry, including environmental and public health crimes.
Corporations and their White House and Congressional allies, including the president’s political appointee administering EPA, have institutionalized the interests and priorities of America’s business into the fabric of EPA.
Public health has become a slogan in the risk assessors’ vocabulary. As for nature – my EPA colleagues preferred to talk of birds and bunnies instead -- “Silent spring” is the answer. This is the ceaseless crippling and killing of wildlife, including an invisible cloud of disease and death surrounding farms and lawns drifting to the rest of the country. Millions of Americans read Rachel Carson, but, strangely, they failed to understand the urgent message of this passionate woman scientist.
We need to make EPA work for us, not the polluters. Americans need to be outraged enough to take their health and the environment seriously, electing people in office who will protect both nature and their health from the toxins of America’s businesses.
To start this struggle would require three things: One, abolish private contributions to the election of federal and state officials; second, forbid lobbying of these officials; and, third, enforce the anti-trust laws, which means breaking up large farmers and agribusinesses, doing away with animal factories, favoring small family agriculture and organic farming, and remaining ever vigilant with any business or organization trying to dominate agriculture.
Health scientists, especially at the universities, need to demythologize agribusiness and other large corporations affecting public health. Finally, a new EPA must be created that is an organization independent of corporate influence and political appointees, something like a Supreme Court for nature and health.
- Posted in
Comments are closed
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...

9 Comments so far
Show AllNot a word about how the Bush (genocidal madman) WH told the EPA to lie about the air quality around Ground Zero so Wall Street could get back to business? SURE ARE DOING THEIR BEST TO MAKE US FORGET THE false flag OF 9/11.
BUT, the truth is coming.
This Article is a reality strike.
Why has EPA failed us.
Why has Financial regulators failed us.
Why has CIA failed us.
Why has Banks failed us - strike that. Forgot they are not responsible for us.
Why has HUD failed us.
Why has State Department Failed us.
Why has Medicare Failed us.
Why has Media failed us - strike that.
Why has Insurance companies failed us - strike that.
Why has Motor companies failed us - strike that.
Why has Congress failed us.
...
toophat for you!
Just what I was thinking when I was reading the article.
“To start this struggle would require three things: One, abolish private contributions to the election of federal and state officials; second, forbid lobbying of these officials; and, third, enforce the anti-trust laws, which means breaking up large farmers and agribusinesses, doing away with animal factories, favoring small family agriculture and organic farming, and remaining ever vigilant with any business or organization trying to dominate agriculture. ”
We are singing the same tune for real election campaign reform. I also agree that is the beginning of the real fight to save this country from the destructive path we are on.
The reality is that we will not not see real election reform because many people like the system the way it is now. They like having a government that is the best government money can buy not the best government for the American people. They like having a government who only represents the wealthy.
Even if the American people were to speak out on this issue of real election campaign reform as they are speaking out on health care reform; I am not sure that our government would listen. They aren’t listening to all the people who are speaking out about the evil practice of mountaintop removal mining are they? The people who are working so hard to get the truth out are being ignored. King Coal has paid the price and their indentured servents in the government on local, state and federal level are earning every bit of the money they receive.
Election Campaign reform is an issue that is not even on the rader screen, but actually is the most important issue and as you say the first step in the battle.
We need a pretty chorus on this particular same tune!
There might be more opportunity for success than you grant this. It would likely win in a local referendum, even against the money that would come to bear against it.
'10 and'12 should be good years for this. More than half of those who voted Dem in '08 have been thoroughly, visibly abandoned by their candidate. That betrayal can only become more evident as it continues.
3rd parties lost in '08 because the Repus successfully stole the '00 and '04 elections, but by '10, a lot more people will become aware that the Repus' bosses swindled it in'08 as well.
That has to engender support for reform. Let's get bills on local ballots in '10.
Excellent drive straight through to the focal point - corporations control our society, and must be stopped. The good Doctor has the right prescription.
"We need to make EPA work for us, not the polluters. Americans need to be outraged enough to take their health and the environment seriously, electing people in office who will protect both nature and their health from the toxins of America’s businesses."
Right on the money!!! We need to be outraged!!!!We also need to call out those officials we already elected- (you know the ones who got our vote because they campaigned on this issue)- and have now neglected to recall that promise!!!!
Case in point-
I live within a mile of a landfill that has had violations in the last 2 quarters of 2008 & the first quarter of 2009 of the Clean Air Act per the EPA standards, not including the 72 violations of their DEP operating permit; however this business is due to receive one million in stimulus money to turn methane gas to electricity!!!!
Outrage is a polite word for my situation!
Yes, the EPA cannot, it doesn't, it couldn't, it doesn't doesn't and does not.
Enforcement aside, it has no excuse to not at least provide information. Weedkiller in the water and no one says a word!
"Not a public health concern"? - Gee, might we imagine that people in 4 states and 150 communities might have wanted to make that call themselves?
No, actually: the EPA must have decided to withhold this information precisely because people would have naturally and rightly been upset.
I mean, for crying out loud, even if I were just watering the roses in herbicide I would want to know, let alone were cooking with it, drinking it, and bathing my infant child in it.
The focus here on election and lobby reform is exact, though. Let's get this on some local ballots in '10 and '12!
Dr. Valliantos' article is excellent. I worked at the EPA for nearly twenty years and the relationship between the Agency and the pesticide industry makes it impossible for the organization to advocate on behalf of the public. We desperately need an independent environmental organization whose sole commitment is to protect the public health of our global community.