=======================Electronic Edition========================
RACHEL’S HAZARDOUS WASTE NEWS #151
—October 17, 1989—
News and resources for environmental justice.
——
Environmental Research Foundation
P.O. Box 5036, Annapolis, MD 21403
Fax (410) 263-8944; Internet: erf@igc.apc.org
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EPA CHIEF WILLIAM REILLY ACCUSED OF
ETHICAL LAPSES AND CRIMINAL CONSPIRACY.
Subordinates of William Reilly, head of U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA), have formally requested that EPA’s
Inspector General investigate ethical misconduct, lying, and
possible criminal violations by the EPA chief. Here’s the
background:
In late 1987 EPA initiated action to punish the State of North
Carolina for a law NC legislators had passed requiring commercial
waste processors to restrict their discharges into rivers.
Specifically, North Carolina passed a law saying discharges into
a river could not exceed 1/1000 of the total natural flow of
water in the river.
This law was passed to protect drinking water, but also at least
partly to discourage construction of a waste treatment plant that
GSX Chemical Services was trying to build near Maxton, NC, on the
Lumber River. Ronald Reagan’s EPA viewed this as a “state’s
rights” (local control) precedent that could endanger the entire
waste industry, and on November 17, 1987, EPA began formal action
to force NC to revoke its law, or to lose the privilege of
licensing waste facilities under the federal Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA). Since the RCRA statute
specifically says states are allowed to establish standards
stricter than those in the federal law, the legal basis for EPA’s
attack on NC was shaky from the start. EPA would almost certainly
lose if the matter went to court.
EPA’s attack on NC got a good deal of press and by March, 1988,
EPA had backed off and decided to “study” the matter further. By
June, 1988, an EPA task force recommended that EPA reverse itself
and, instead, use a different law to try to force NC to allow the
waste industry to grow as needed; the task force recommended the
use of the “capacity assurance” (see RHWN #142) sections of the
Superfund law (also known as CERCLA) instead of threatening to
take away the state’s RCRA licensing privileges. The “capacity
assurance” sections of Superfund allow the EPA to cut off
Superfund money to states that fail to certify by October 17,
1989, that they have sufficient waste processing capacity within
their state to handle wastes generated within their state.
In June, 1988, Lee Thomas (then head of EPA) agreed with his task
force, that the RCRA action against NC should be abandoned and
that such matters should be pursued via CERCLA “capacity
planning.” However, Thomas said the EPA’s role in “capacity
planning” wasn’t yet sufficiently clear, so he set up a second
task force to define the matter. That task force spent $1.2
million on consultants and in December, 1988, issued the same
conclusion that had been reached in June, 1988. So on Dec. 23,
1988, Lee Thomas issued a memo establishing EPA policy: CERCLA,
not RCRA, will be EPA’s official vehicle for forcing states to
allow growth of the waste processing industry. North Carolina’s
right to issue RCRA permits would not be challenged.
This EPA policy never sat well with the waste hauling industry. A
state can meet the “capacity planning” requirements of CERCLA in
either of two ways: (a) licence sufficient waste processing
capacity; or (b) REQUIRE INDUSTRY TO PRODUCE LESS WASTE, SO
PRESENT CAPACITY SUFFICES. This second alternative gives the
waste industry the heebie jeebies. Less waste would mean smaller
profits–or no profits–for waste processors. They definitely
want EPA forcing states to license new waste processors–in
short, the waste haulers strongly prefer the RCRA approach over
the CERCLA approach.
Along comes a new administration in January, 1989; by February we
have a new chief of EPA who comes into office carrying some heavy
baggage in the form of friendships among the nation’s
environmentalists who regularly consort with leaders of the waste
processing industry.
Reilly had only been in office a month when one of his friends,
Jay Hair, director of the National Wildlife Federation (NWF)
convinced Reilly to have breakfast with Dean Buntrock, president
of Waste Management, the nation’s largest and least law-abiding
waste hauler, and the nation’s largest polluter (see RHWN #115).
Buntrock is on the board of directors of NWF; Waste Management is
a big donor to NWF and it has also been a major donor to the
Conservation Foundation, whose presidency Reilly left to come to
EPA. Green for the greens.
March 16 the breakfast occurred and–to Reilly’s surprise–Hair
and Buntrock showed up trailing three other heavies from Waste
Management: Walt Barber, Phil Rooney, and Jim Range. They came
bearing “position papers,” which Reilly received.
A month later, on April 19, without any public discussion or
explanatory memos, William Reilly arbitrarily reversed the North
Carolina policy that Lee Thomas had established Dec. 23, 1988.
The proceeding to punish North Carolina, to take away their RCRA
licensing privileges, will be re-opened. On April 21, 1989, EPA
Region 6 Administrator Greer Tidwell publishes a notice in the
FEDERAL REGISTER and poof!–there goes the carefully-crafted
policy that Lee Thomas took six months (not to mention millions
of dollars) putting together. William Reilly has handed Waste
Management and their pals in the waste hauling industry a major
plum.
Well, thanks to a free press, this all hits the fan in
Washington. The press grabs the story and five environmental
organizations come forward to say publicly that Mr. Reilly should
cease this “assault on [NC’s] hazardous waste program.” They say
this is “a grave misjudgment that will have significant political
and resource ramifications for the [EPA].” (Basically, they mean
that EPA doesn’t have any staff to do the job itself if EPA takes
away NC’s RCRA permitting authority.) The environmentalists said
Reilly had reversed “one of the few correct environmental
decisions made by the Reagan administration.” One of the five
complaining environmentalists is Jay Hair of NWF.
Reilly is stung. Here’s his breakfast arranger blasting him for
the things they arranged at breakfast! Reilly tells Jon Healey, a
reporter for the WINSTON-SALEM (NC) JOURNAL, he’s surprised that
Jay Hair is complaining about his policy flip-flop. “Jay Hair
hosted the breakfast at which I was lobbied to do the very thing
that we are doing,” Reilly told Healey, who printed it in his
paper April 21 (pgs. 11 and 16). Reilly specifically told Healey
that it was Dean Buntrock who lobbied him. “Jay heard all this
and, I thought, agreed with what we were doing,” Reilly said.
“That’s news to me that he’s got a problem with it,” Reilly told
Healey.
May 17, 1989, William Sanjour and Hugh Kaufman, EPA employees not
known for timidity, sent a formal memo to the EPA’s Inspector
General, John Martin, asking him to investigate possible
violations of EPA ethics codes by Reilly and Tidwell.
Significantly, Martin did not initiate an investigation
immediately. Instead, he and two subordinates meet with William
Reilly for nearly an hour on May 19 to discuss the charges;
Martin then waited 41 days before opening a formal investigation
on June 27. Martin then assigned one James Johnson to
investigate. Johnson turned in a 5-page memo Aug. 23, 1989
saying, in summary, no one lobbied Reilly at breakfast that day
in March; everyone he talked to denied any lobbying that day.
As a result of this superficial investigation, on September 28,
1989, Sanjour and Kaufman sent a second memo to Martin, asking
that he excuse himself from the investigation because it looks as
if his May 19 meeting with Reilly occurred for the purpose of
“damage control” which would be a criminal violation. Further it
looks as if all four principals in the matter (Reilly, Hair,
Buntrock, Range, and perhaps others) who were interviewed by
Johnson lied to cover up a wrongdoing and probably conspired to
do so–a serious criminal violation. Significantly, Johnson did
not interview reporter Healey who says he has verbatim notes from
his interview with Reilly, which he will bring forward if
subpoenaed. We’ll keep you posted.
We have 26 pages of documentation for this story, including every
memo mentioned. We will mail you the entire package for $13.00.
–Peter Montague, Ph.D.
Descriptor terms: epa; william reilly; nc; gsx; rcra; cercla;
lee thomas; waste disposal industry; jay hair; dean buntrock;
nwf; wmi; william sanjour; hugh kaufman;