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Bill killers.


Are greens planning a hasty retreat from the legislative battlefield?

ON MAY 19, THE U.S. SENate voted to require local water systems to remove radon from tap water, establish a $6.6-billion federal loan program to help small cities and towns up-grade their water-purification systems, and elevate the Environmental Protection Agency Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), independent agency of the U.S. government, with headquarters in Washington, D.C. It was established in 1970 to reduce and control air and water pollution, noise pollution, and radiation and to ensure the safe handling and  to cabinet status. Even so, prominent environmentalists view the 95-to-3 vote to reauthorize the 1974 Safe Drinking Water Act The Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA) is a United States federal law passed by the U.S. Congress on December 16, 1974. It is the main federal law that ensures safe drinking water for Americans.  as a loss.

"The bill lets tap water contain more cancer-causing contaminants than allowed under current law," complained Natural Resources Defense Council The Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) is a New York City-based, non-profit non-partisan international environmental advocacy group, with offices in Washington, D.C., San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago, and Beijing. Founded in 1970, NRDC today has 1.  lawyer Erik Olson to The Washington Post. Relaxed regulations, however, aren't the environmentalists' main gripe gripe
v.
To have sharp pains in the bowels.

n.
1. gripes Sharp, spasmodic pains in the bowels.

2. A firm hold; a grasp.
. They are steamed about two amendments slipped in at the last minute: a requirement sponsored by Sen. Bennett Johnston (D-La.) that the EPA EPA eicosapentaenoic acid.

EPA
abbr.
eicosapentaenoic acid


EPA,
n.pr See acid, eicosapentaenoic.

EPA,
n.
 conduct a cost-benefit analysis cost-benefit analysis

In governmental planning and budgeting, the attempt to measure the social benefits of a proposed project in monetary terms and compare them with its costs.
 for any new water regulation that costs more than $100 million and a rule authored by Sen. Bob Dole (R-Kans.) subjecting any regulation that might cause a taking of private property to a "takings-impact analysis." A takings analysis would force the feds to consider less-costly alternatives to the proposed regulation or to specify how the owner would be compensated for the taking.

Green groups recognize that a backlash against overreaching Exploiting a situation through Fraud or Unconscionable conduct.  environmental regulations has disrupted their cozy relationships with powerful congressional barons and executive-branch regulators. They contend (in private, for the most part) that takings analyses and cost-benefit requirements make up two parts of an "unholy trinity," a group of issues that could gut their pet laws. The third part of the "trinity" is unfunded mandates--costly federal regulations that must be enforced and paid for by state and local governments. Despite frenzied opposition from main-stream environmental groups, the Senate's "unholy" amendments could stop any attempt to make laws greener.

If 1990 marked the 20th anniversary of Earth Day, 1994 should have been the Year of the Greens. Along with the drinking-water bill, four major environmental bills--the Marine Mammals marine mammals

mammals inhabiting the sea; generally taken to include the cetaceans (whales, porpoise, dolphin), the sirenians (sea-cows, including manatees and dugong) and the pinnipeds (the carnivores of the group, seals, sealions, walruses).
 Protection Act, the Clean Water Act, the Endangered Species Act The federal Endangered Species Act of 1973 (ESA) (16 U.S.C.A. §§ 1531 et seq.) was enacted to protect animal and plant species from extinction by preserving the ecosystems in which they survive and by providing programs for their conservation. , and the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act (a.k.a. Superfund)--are up for reauthorization. Environmental groups expected the new bills to greatly extend federal powers to regulate wetlands, protect endangered species endangered species, any plant or animal species whose ability to survive and reproduce has been jeopardized by human activities. In 1999 the U.S. government, in accordance with the U.S. , and pummel pum·mel  
tr.v. pum·meled also pum·melled, pum·mel·ing also pum·mel·ling, pum·mels also pum·mels
To beat, as with the fists; pommel: The angry crowd pummeled the thief.
 polluters. With champions of the ecosphere e·co·sphere  
n.
The regions of the universe, especially on the earth, that are capable of supporting life; the biosphere.



ecosphere  
 controlling the White House and Capitol Hill, you'd think green activists would be breaking out the champagne and making reservations for bill-signing ceremonies on Pennsylvania Avenue Pennsylvania Avenue is a street in Washington, D.C. joining the White House and the United States Capitol. Called "America's Main Street," it is the location of official parades and processions, as well as protest marches and civilian protests. .

But heavy-handed regulations have spawned a grass-roots back-lash against the organized environmental movement. The U.S. Conference of Mayors lobbies Congress to reduce unfunded mandates. Trade associations such as the National Federation of Independent Business The National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB) is a lobbying organization with offices in Washington, D.C. USA, and in all 50 state capitals. NFIB claims a membership base in excess of 600,000.  commission cost-benefit studies to counteract newly proposed regulations. And the property-rights movement has exploded.

Small ranchers, miners, and landowners have gained the sympathy of legislators, who promise to ease regulations in the new versions of green laws. Peggy Riegle, president of the Fairness to Land Owners Committee, works with more than 500 local property-rights organizations. Of the 15,000 "mom and pop Mom and Pop

An adjective denoting a small-scale and family-like atmosphere, often used to describe these types of businesses and investors.

Notes:
A mom-and-pop business is typically a small family-run business.
" landowners who have joined Riegle's group during the past four years, she says more than 10,000 face "having their property stolen by bureaucrats" enforcing wetlands regulations. Every member of Congress, says a Capitol Hill staffer, "has a constituent with one of these problems." (See "The Swamp Thing," April 1991.)

Environmental regulations have reached beyond factory smokestacks and corporate dumpers. Now they can prevent a congregation of 120 Baptists in Florida from building a church and a retired couple in Michigan from constructing a home on a lakefront lot they've owned for 25 years. More and more individuals are asking elected officials what benefits they're getting in return for these tough regulations. Responding to the backlash, the leaders of the Beltway-based viro groups have decided that, if they can't guarantee new environmental laws more draconian than the versions currently on the books, they'll instead try to keep the laws from being reconsidered.

A WIDELY CIRCULATED MARCH 4 MEMO from the NRDC's Olson to the heads of six other environmental groups explicitly spells out the greens' strategy: "The community needs to focus more sharply on a limited number of pieces of legislation and to put more substantial resources into winning that legislation." The memo says, "If we cannot get [Senate environment committee chairman Max] Baucus and [Majority Leader George] Mitchell to agree to move a strong [drinking-water] bill on the floor, we can move to a kill strategy"; "we will want to ask the Hill and the Administration to take Superfund off the table"; "[we should] ask for a drinking water drinking water

supply of water available to animals for drinking supplied via nipples, in troughs, dams, ponds and larger natural water sources; an insufficient supply leads to dehydration; it can be the source of infection, e.g. leptospirosis, salmonellosis, or of poisoning, e.g.
 bill markup delay...so that we can work with Mitchell and Baucus and the Administration to set a good precedent on the unholy trinity issues." The message is clear: Beltway-based environmental organizations can't expect Congress to accede to accede to
verb 1. agree to, accept, grant, endorse, consent to, give in to, surrender to, yield to, concede to, acquiesce in, assent to, comply with, concur to

2.
 their every demand. And their failure to stop the drinking-water act suggests that green groups can't even kill bills they don't like.

The tide started turning against environmentalists with last fall's vote to establish the National Biological Survey. The survey was ostensibly os·ten·si·ble  
adj.
Represented or appearing as such; ostensive: His ostensible purpose was charity, but his real goal was popularity.
 intended to tote up the nation's fish, fowl, and mammals. But property-rights groups like the National Inholders Association, Defenders of Property Rights, and the National Wilderness Institute worried that this agency would give federal regulators a means to regulate private lands on which "candidates" for listing under the Endangered Species Act live.

House members sympathetic to property owners added amendments to the authorization bill that prohibit activist-group "volunteers" from conducting the survey and that require NBS (National Bureau of Standards) See NIST.

NBS - National Bureau of Standards: part of the US Department of Commerce, now NIST.
 agents to get written permission from property owners before they can enter private lands. These amendments have so constrained the NBS that greens don't want the Senate to authorize the agency just yet--Olson's memo suggests taking NBS off the table.

Still, the National Biological Survey isn't dead. Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt Bruce Edward Babbitt (born June 27, 1938), a Democrat, served as United States Secretary of the Interior and as Governor of Arizona. Biography
Born in Los Angeles, California, Babbitt graduated from the University of Notre Dame, and attended the University of Newcastle
 has appropriated $162 million from his budget for the NBS and has carved out territory in his department for its functions. Babbitt shows how a dedicated regulator can keep the regulatory powers of a bill alive even if Congress won't pass it. As long as Babbitt can fund the NBS, opponents can do little to stop him.

Similarly, regulations under the bills due for reauthorization won't disappear if Congress fails to vote on them this year. The laws are set up to continue with their current regulatory powers until reauthorized, whenever that may be. Greens can sit back, hope the fervor over the "trinity" will abate abate v. to do away with a problem, such as a public or private nuisance or some structure built contrary to public policy. This can include dikes which illegally direct water onto a neighbors property, high volume noise from a rock band or a factory, an improvement , and then move to strengthen (or at least preserve) their pet projects.

CONGRESSIONAL POLITICS MAY BE WORKing against that strategy, however. The natural-resources committees in Congress are dominated by environmentalists. But a new, tenuous coalition of congressional back-benchers has started to form. Conservative Southern and Western legislators normally sympathetic to landowners are joining with younger moderates who don't have seniority on Capitol Hill and are more beholden be·hold·en  
adj.
Owing something, such as gratitude, to another; indebted.



[Middle English biholden, past participle of biholden, to observe; see behold.
 to their constituents than to committee chiefs. For instance, fleshmen Florida Reps. John Mica John L. Mica (born January 27 1943), American politician, has been a Republican member of the United States House of Representatives since 1993, representing Florida's At-large congressional district (map).  (R) and Karen Thurman Karen L. Thurman is a former U.S. Representative from Florida. She is a Democrat.

She was born on January 12, 1951 in Rapid City, South Dakota, but has spent most of her life in Florida.
 (D) tried to add a risk-assessment amendment to the EPA cabinet bill in February. When it appeared Mica and Thurman would win the vote, supporters of the cabinet bill removed it from consideration.

Congressional Quarterly reports that Thurman "built a reputation for herself as a Florida legislator pushing laws to protect wetlands and clean up leaky underground storage tanks." But she calls a risk-assessment requirement "common sense." Much like the back-bench rebels who have supported insurgencies to trim federal spending and cut the deficit, these junior legislators have shown they will defy congressional leaders when they believe they can win. Soon after the Mica-Thurman amendment was proposed, Olson circulated his "unholy trinity" memo.

Of the three portions of the "trinity," the takings issue threatens green ambitions the most. Unfunded mandates affect only state and local governments, which may themselves regulate private citizens without paying the costs. And cost-benefit analyses can be fudged. But if the federal government indeed had to appropriate money to pay for all the regulations they hand down, we would certainly see fewer land-use restrictions.

The takings issue moves beyond at-cane calculations of benefits and mandates and, as one environmental analyst says, "hits people in their souls." Environmental groups "have big staffs, lots of money, and smart people," says Myron Ebell of the National Inholders Association, a group that represents Western landowners. "We have fear, pain, and anger on our side."

THE DOLE AND JOHNSTON AMENDMENTS are but two tame examples of environmental reforms before Congress. Rep. Jimmy Hayes (D-La.) has collected 163 co-sponsors for a wetlands bill that incorporates property-rights protections. And consider the takings-compensation bill Rep. Billy Tauzin (D-La.) hopes to take to the House floor later this year.

Tauzin's bill, HR 3875, would specify that any action under the Endangered Species Act or the wetlands provision of the Clean Water Act that reduces the value of a property owner's land by 50 percent or more constitutes a regulatory taking under the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution. The owner would be entitled to compensation from the federal government.

In a "Dear Colleague" letter, Rep. Norman Mineta (D-Calif.), chairman of the House public works committee, suggested that Tauzin's bill would subvert the Constitution and bankrupt the federal treasury. "We should not adopt the idea," wrote Mineta, that "the private interest must be paid to obey the law and not to harm the public."

Tauzin counters that his bill, which has 136 co-sponsors, would in fact enhance constitutional protections. He cites two takings decisions handed down by the U.S. Court of Claims in which Chief Judge Loren Smith asked political officials to clearly define regulatory takings. "Courts," wrote Smith in Bowles v. U.S., "can only interpret the rather precise language of the fifth amendment to our Constitution in very specific circumstances. To the extent that the constitutional protections of the fifth amendment are a bulwark of liberty, they should also be understood to be a social mechanism of the last, not first resort. [Courts] cannot hope to fill in the portrait of wise and just social and economic policy."

Today, notes Tauzin, the courts must decide compensation in takings lawsuits case by case. In addition, anyone wanting to sue the federal government must file suit in the Court of Claims in Washington, often many years after the government enforces its regulations.

"Few people have the resources to sue the government," he says. "We're making sure that every small landowner has the same right to justice as any big landowner who can afford to spend 10 years in court." As for compensation, it "will break the bank," Tauzin says, "unless you change environmental policies. But that's not my problem. The Constitution demands compensation in takings cases."

Green activists recognize that they can no longer steamroll steam·roll·er  
n.
1.
a. A steam-driven machine equipped with a heavy roller for smoothing road surfaces.

b. A similar machine with an internal-combustion engine.

2.
 any bill they want through Congress. As Sierra Club Sierra Club, national organization in the United States dedicated to the preservation and expansion of the world's parks, wildlife, and wilderness areas. Founded (1892) in California by a group led by the Scottish-American conservationist John Muir, the Sierra Club  Executive Director Carl Pope told Congressional Quarterly, "These issues [the unholy trinity] have managed to slow us down and weaken laws and get in the way of the normal process"--that is, passing ever-more-restrictive environmental laws --"of Congress and the administration."

Al Gore and his environmentalist environmentalist

a person with an interest and knowledge about the interaction of humans and animals with the environment.
 buddies are still in the White House, but any administration starts to lose political clout after mid-term congressional elections. And with the impending im·pend  
intr.v. im·pend·ed, im·pend·ing, im·pends
1. To be about to occur: Her retirement is impending.

2.
 retirement of George Mitchell, the most powerful environmentalist in either house of Congress, greens will lose a crucial advocate. "If they can't pass [tough] environmental laws in the first two years of the Clinton administration," asks Ebell, "when the hell can they do it?"
COPYRIGHT 1994 Reason Foundation
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1994, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:environmental legislation
Author:Henderson, Rick
Publication:Reason
Date:Aug 1, 1994
Words:1906
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