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Pentagon fights EPA on pollution cleanup
Monday, June 30, 2008
(msnbc.com)By Lyndsey Layton
WashingtonPost.com
WASHINGTON - The Defense Department, the
nation's biggest polluter, is resisting orders
from the Environmental Protection Agency to
clean up Fort Meade and two other military
bases where the EPA says dumped chemicals pose
"imminent and substantial" dangers to public
health and the environment.
The Pentagon has also declined to sign
agreements required by law that cover 12 other
military sites on the Superfund list of the
most polluted places in the country. The
contracts would spell out a remediation plan,
set schedules, and allow the EPA to oversee the
work and assess penalties if milestones are
missed.
The actions are part of a standoff between the
Pentagon and environmental regulators that has
been building during the Bush administration,
leaving the EPA in a legal limbo as it
addresses growing concerns about contaminants
on military bases that are seeping into
drinking water aquifers and soil.
Under executive branch policy, the EPA will not
sue the Pentagon, as it would a private
polluter. Although the law gives final say to
EPA Administrator Stephen L. Johnson in cleanup
disputes with other federal agencies, the
Pentagon refuses to recognize that provision.
Military officials wrote to the Justice
Department last month to challenge EPA's
authority to issue the orders and asked the
Office of Management and Budget to intervene.
Unprecedented stand
Experts in environmental law said the
Pentagon's stand is unprecedented.
"This is stunning," said Rena Steinzor, who
helped write the Superfund laws as a
congressional staffer and now teaches at the
University of Maryland Law School and is
president of the nonprofit Center for
Progressive Reform. "The idea that they would
refuse to sign a final order — that is the
height of amazing nerve."
Pentagon officials say they are voluntarily
cleaning up the three sites named in the EPA's
"final orders" — Fort Meade in Maryland,
Tyndall Air Force Base in Florida and McGuire
Air Force Base in New Jersey.
Fort Meade borders residential areas in
fast-growing Anne Arundel County; Tyndall and
McGuire are in less-populated regions. At all
three sites, the military has released toxic
chemicals — some known to cause cancer and
other serious health problems — into the soil
and groundwater.
But the EPA has been dissatisfied with the
extent and progress of the Pentagon's voluntary
efforts.
Fines could come next
"Final orders" are the EPA's most potent
enforcement tool. If a polluter does not
comply, the agency usually can go to court to
force compliance and impose fines up to $28,000
a day for each violation.
Cleanup agreements drafted by the EPA for the
12 other sites contain "extensive provisions"
that the Pentagon finds unacceptable, officials
said.
Congress established the Superfund program in
1980 to clean up the country's most
contaminated places, and of the 1,255 sites on
the list the Pentagon owns 129 — the most of
any entity. Other federal agencies with
properties on the list include NASA and the
Energy Department, but they have signed EPA
cleanup agreements without protest.
The law was amended in 1986 to stipulate that
polluting government agencies should be treated
the same as any private entity. During the 2000
presidential campaign, George W. Bush pledged
to direct all federal facilities to comply with
environmental laws and "make them
accountable."
Cooperation varies by branch
In dealing with cleanup efforts, some military
branches have been more cooperative than
others. The Navy has signed cleanup agreements
for all of its Superfund sites, whereas the Air
Force has not signed one in 14 years.
But Superfund sites are only one aspect of the
Pentagon's environmental problems. It has about
25,000 contaminated properties in all 50
states, and it will cost billions and take
decades to clean them up. The Pentagon has a
tremendous financial stake in not only how the
sites are cleaned but also in which chemicals
the government characterizes as toxic.
Rep. John D. Dingell (D-Mich.), chairman of the
House Energy and Commerce Committee, is
investigating the Pentagon's compliance with
environmental regulation. He said it is evading
the law through political maneuvers.
"I find it troubling, not only that the
Department of Defense is in flagrant violation
of final orders issued by the EPA, but that DOD
is now attempting to circumvent the law and
Congress' intent by calling on the Department
of Justice and the Office of Management and the
Budget to intervene," he said in a statement.
"The EPA is the expert agency charged by
Congress with enforcing our environmental laws,
and the Administration needs to allow them to
do their job to protect the public health and
safety."
EPA spokeswoman Roxanne Smith said final orders
were issued because the agency is worried about
drinking water and soil contamination at Fort
Meade, Tyndall and McGuire. "Under DOD's
management, some of these sites have languished
for years, with limited or no cleanup
underway," she said.
Other examples of Pentagon resistance to the
EPA include its successful effort this year to
get greater influence in the process the agency
uses to analyze the risks of industrial
chemicals. Congressional Democrats,
environmental groups and the Government
Accountability Office have criticized the
change.
The Pentagon has also fought EPA efforts to set
new pollution standards on two toxic chemicals
widely found on military sites: perchlorate,
found in propellant for rockets and missiles,
and trichloroethylene (TCE), a degreaser for
metal parts.
TCE is the most widespread water contaminant in
the country, seeping into aquifers across
California, New York, Texas, Florida and
elsewhere.
More than 1,000 military sites are contaminated
with TCE.
In the late 1990s, EPA scientists found TCE to
be much more toxic than earlier believed. In
2001, the EPA prepared tougher new
drinking-water standards for TCE to limit human
exposure, but the Pentagon challenged those
standards and took its case to the White House.
The process ground to a halt; seven years
later, the EPA still has not issued new TCE
limits.
Since Bush took office, one military site has
been added to the Superfund list — the Navy
bombing range at Vieques Island, off Puerto
Rico.
The site was added after the Puerto Rican
governor exercised a federal statute to force
its placement on the list.
Push from Maryland
Maryland has been pushing the EPA to add Fort
Detrick in Frederick County to the Superfund
list. This month, the state sent a forceful
letter to the EPA, suggesting it would follow
Puerto Rico's strategy. On Thursday, the EPA
informed Maryland that in September it will
recommend Fort Detrick be added.
Shari T. Wilson, Maryland's secretary of the
environment, said the state needs the Superfund
designation because of the Army's erratic
efforts to clean up Fort Detrick, which for
decades served as the service's center for
development of chemical and biological weapons.
She said the state wants an independent agency
that is focused on public health to oversee the
effort and hold the Pentagon accountable.
In 1992, the state found chemical contamination
in private wells just outside Fort Detrick.
Under a voluntary agreement with the state, the
Army removed chemical-soaked earth and rusting
drums filled with toxins, set up monitoring
wells and connected nearby residents to the
city water supply.
Two years later, TCE was detected in a spring
outside the base — the first time it was
noticed beyond the facility's boundaries. State
officials say that the presence of TCE in the
aquifer is a serious concern but that they do
not think the contamination poses an immediate
health threat.
For nearly 10 years, Maryland has asked the
Pentagon to analyze the extent and spread of
groundwater contamination, a study that will
happen as a matter of course if it is added to
the Superfund list.
"It's frustrating," Wilson said. "We need to
move ahead and take the steps necessary to
ensure for the public the groundwater is
protected."