Jay Rockefeller proposes two-year halt to EPA rules on
emissions
May 26 - The Register-Herald, Beckley, W.Va
Talk is mushrooming on Capitol Hill of an impending vote on the
so-called Murkowski resolution to reflect disapproval of the
Environmental Protection Agency's handling of greenhouse emission
sources.
And that is moving Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., to accelerate his push
for more definite action -- a proposed two-year hiatus for the EPA to
regulate emissions at stationary sources as a safeguard for West
Virginia's coal industry.
Which means a hands-off attitude to coal mining installations and power
plants, provided the Rockefeller bill clears Congress.
Rockefeller introduced his bill March 4, but so far, it hasn't reached
the floor of the Senate. Instead, it remains lodged in the Senate
Committee on Environment and Public Works.
The resolution, offered by Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Minn., is
aimed at gutting EPA's "endangerment finding" that permits the agency to
regulate greenhouse emissions under the Clean Air Act.
A showdown is planned June 10.
"I think my approach is more effective and has a better chance of
becoming law," Rockefeller said Tuesday in a statement issued by his
office.
An aide said the senator spoke out, given the timing of the Murkowski
resolution vote after the Senate returns from the Memorial Day weekend
holiday break.
"The bottom line is, we cannot wait any longer to send the message that
relying on EPA is the wrong way to go," the senator said.
"The fate of our entire economy, our manufacturing industries and our
workers should not be in the hands of the EPA."
An aide to Rockefeller said the proposed legislation isn't tied to coal
mining permits still in limbo. Those remain under scrutiny with regard
to potential conflicts with the Clean Water Act.
Rockefeller had gained a pledge from EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson back
in February that she would hold off on greenhouse emissions until the
end of the year. But the senator protested this isn't sufficient time.
"We must set this in stone and give Congress enough time to consider a
comprehensive energy bill to develop the clean coal technologies we
need," he said.
"At a time when so many people are hurting, we need to put decisions
about clean coal and our energy future into the hands of the people and
their elected representatives, not a federal environmental agency."
-- E-mail: mannix@register-herald.com
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