During a Senate Environment and Public Works hearing today,
Jason Burnett, a former EPA official turned
whistleblower testified on some of the White House's recent attempts to
suppress various climate reports drawn up by the agency's staff—including a
"public endangerment finding" that would have compelled the EPA to
start regulating CO2 immediately. As was reported
recently, after Burnett had e-mailed the endangerment finding to the Office
of Management and Budget, officials at the OMB were told not to open it. But
the White House wasn't merely being childish, Burnett explained today—the administration
did this specifically to avoid triggering transparency rules that would've
required any drafts read by the OMB to be made public.
Burnett also made clear that while the current administration
has prevented the EPA from acting on CO2 emissions for now, this delay is only
likely to last until the next president. There's at least one upside to the
White House's recent meddling—while we undoubtedly need to act quickly to start
reducing emissions, if the Bush administration had decided to apply the Clean
Air Act to carbon, it would've been in a position to influence regulations for
years to come. From an environmental standpoint, the country might be better
off if those decisions are made by a President Obama—or even President
McCain—than by the current bunch.
--Patrick Caldwell