Y2K didn't crash the EPA's dirty schemes

By Bonner R. Cohen
Copyright 1999 Washington Times
January 2, 2000



Wouldn't it be nice to start out the new millennium secure in the knowledge we had turned our backs once and for all on mind-boggling schemes dreamed up by Washington bureaucrats?

A report by the Texas-based Institute for Policy Innovation and the Lexington Institute provides no such comfort. Titled "Big Government, Bad Science: 10 Case Studies in Regulatory Abuse," it throws cold water on any ideas that Leviathan has been put in its place or gotten any wiser over the years.

Following is what the public policy experts who contributed to the report unearthed on topics ranging from clean air to endangered species and from "factory farms" to drinking water.

* Clean Air: The Environmental Protection Agency wants to slap new restrictions on tailpipe emissions of hot-selling sport utility vehicles. The agency claims the new regulations, together with cuts in the sulfur content of gasoline, would save 2,400 lives annually.

The claim, however, is based on a single, EPA-funded study whose supporting data haven't undergone independent peer review. In fact, the agency hasn't even seen the data.

It was on the basis of this secret science that President Clinton Dec. 21 declared that the new measures "will prevent thousands of premature deaths, and protect millions of our children from respiratory disease."

* Information Technology: Washington should keep supercomputers out of the hands of unfriendly nations. But in a world where yesterday's supercomputer is today's laptop, regulators must keep pace with the rapid evolution of technology.

By failing to keep pace, the Commerce Department has threatened America's dominance of information technology by preventing U.S. exports of computers that are already widely available. This provides no benefits to national security but does give an edge to overseas competitors.

* Drinking Water: By ignoring the recommendations of its own scientists and torpedoing a science-based standard for chloroform in drinking water, the EPA is forcing water systems across the country to expend precious resources combating fictitious risks.

Chloroform is created when water is purified to remove life-threatening microbes. Even though exhaustive scientific research shows that trace elements of chloroform pose only a negligible risk, the EPA insists that water systems adhere to a zero standard - which is unobtainable in any event.

* Fishing: The White House and an interagency task force have devised an elaborate scheme to deal with a low-oxygen area in the Gulf of Mexico where fish cannot live. This "hypoxic" zone is said to lie at the mouth of the Mississippi River and to have been created by Midwest farmers using too much fertilizer.

To reduce the nutrient content of waters spilling into the gulf, the feds propose cutting the use of fertilizer in the Midwest and converting 24 million acres of prime farmland into wetlands and forests.

Trouble is, the hypoxic zone has nothing to do with fertilizer runoff. Instead, it is a natural phenomenon associated with rainfall in the Mississippi River Valley. It expands during floods and contracts during droughts. By reducing nutrients reaching marine life, Washington's plans would have a devastating effect on gulf fishing.

* Biotechnology: The EPA plans to regulate genetically modified plants as "pesticides." Instead of applauding the work of scientists who have boosted the world's food supply by making plants more resistant to insects, viruses, bacteria and fungi, the agency wants to begin requiring case-by-case regulatory review of plants modified through gene splicing.

The Council on Agricultural Science and Technology, an international consortium of scientific and professional societies, has called this approach "scientifically indefensible," concluding that treating genetically improved plants as pesticides would "undermine public confidence in the food supply."

* Land Use: The Endangered Species Act, instead of protecting species, has been cynically used as a cover for cost-free control of land use. Under the act, landowners whose property is home to threatened or endangered species lose the economic use of their land -and receive no compensation.

Tragically, the law's perverse incentives have turned landowners against species, giving rise to the "shoot, shovel and shut-up" syndrome.

* Clean Water: And then there's the matter of polychlorinated biphenyls, better known as PCBs. Even though the alleged cancer threat posed by PCBs has been debunked by recent scientific findings, the EPA still plans to rid the Hudson River in New York state of these slowly dissipating chemicals.

To the horror of local residents, the agency wants the General Electric Co. to dredge the river of PCBs. But dredging would only stir up the PCBs, requiring more dredging. The whole self-defeating exercise could go on indefinitely.

* Big Farms: The EPA is also aiming its regulatory guns at confined animal feeding operations. "By doing so, the agency may inadvertently end up contributing to more agricultural manure finding its way into rivers and streams."

The manure and liquid waste from animals raised in confinement is treated rather than discharged willy-nilly into the environment. Obviously, this is not the case with free-range farm animals. Indeed, it is the manure runoff from free-range chickens and hogs that poses the real environmental problem.

Hiding data, playing fast and loose with science, solving problems that don't exist: These are some of the things in the bag of tricks that regulators use to keep the rest of us under their thumb.

Science-based regulations can save lives, but these abuses show how far we are from that ideal.

BONNER R. COHEN
Senior fellow
Lexington Institute
Arlington, Va.


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