Environmental Groups
Seen as Balancing Dual Loyalties
December 29, 2005 — By Rita Beamish, Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Environmental groups
that frequently spar with the Bush administration over protecting the
air, water and human health also have collected millions of dollars in
U.S. government grants, failing in one recent case to properly account
for the money.
More than 2,200 nonprofit groups have received grants from the
Environmental Protection Agency over the last decade, including those
that lobby and sometimes sue the agency.
One of the most prominent, the Natural Resources Defense Council, was
cited in a recent audit for failing to properly document more than a
third of the $3.3 million (euro2.7 million) it received in three EPA
grants.
NRDC used the money to conduct research and education on storm water
pollution, and to develop and encourage energy-efficient technology,
according to EPA's inspector general, the agency's internal watchdog.
NRDC acknowledges recordkeeping errors dealing with benefits, timesheets
and indirect costs. It cited in part erroneous direction from EPA itself
about what was required.
"We're not running away from that and that's why we've offered to pay
back the money," amounting to some $75,000 (euro62,940.58) once the
documentation was corrected, said NRDC attorney Mitch Bernard. He noted
there was no criticism of NRDC's research. The case is not yet
finalized.
Groups like NRDC, with their stables of scientists and extensive
monitoring of environmental policy, often are seen as barometers that
help shape opinion on key issues.
Asked about potential conflicts between their government watchdog role
and their financial connections to EPA, the groups say that grants for
specific technical, research and education projects don't interfere with
their advocacy, which they conduct with separate funds.
"It may be confusing to the public that with the right hand we're
accepting government money and with the left hand sometimes we're
beating up the government," said Charles Miller, communications director
for Environmental Defense, which has received more than $1.8 million
from EPA since 1995.
"But the government is a complicated beast. Some of the things they're
doing we think are wrong. A lot of the things they're doing we think are
right. We're using the grant money to further the environmental cause,"
Miller said.
Others see such grants posing at least an appearance problem.
"It raises the specter of a conflict of interest. It's an ethical
question," said Roberta Baskin, executive director for the nonprofit
Center for Public Integrity, an investigative organization that accepts
no government, union or corporate money. "They're supposed to be
watchdogs. Does it make you a lap dog if they're funding you? Is your
loyalty to -- the environment -- or is it to the bottom line?"
From another standpoint, the grants have drawn fire in recent years from
political conservatives, like Sen. James Inhofe, chairman of the
Environment and Public Works Committee, who last year called
environmental groups "simply Democrat political machines."
EPA doesn't turn away grantees because of their criticism or lawsuits,
said spokesman Bob Zachariasiewicz. A new policy requires competitive
bidding for any grant more than $15,000 (euro12,588.12) and the money
cannot be spent on lobbying, political or litigation work.
NRDC spokesman Jon Coifman said there's been no dilemma for his $65
million (euro54.5 million) a year organization whose government grants
were less than 1 percent of its budget --"far too small to have any
effect one way or the other on NRDC's broader policy decisions," he
said.
NRDC has sued EPA 35 times the past two years, he said. "We don't feel
that we've given up an inch of our integrity on this," Coifman said.
Source: Associated Press
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