A lot of people are going to feel very very betrayed.

MG



EPA Watchdog Rips White House on NYC Air 

2 hours, 37 minutes ago  Add U.S. Government - AP to My Yahoo! 
 

By JOHN HEILPRIN, Associated Press Writer 

WASHINGTON - At the White House's direction, the Environmental
Protection Agency (news - web sites) gave New Yorkers misleading
assurances that there was no health risk from the debris-laden air after
the World Trade Center collapse, according to an internal inquiry. 

   

President Bush (news - web sites)'s senior environmental adviser on
Friday defended the White House involvement, saying it was justified by
national security. 


The White House "convinced EPA to add reassuring statements and delete
cautionary ones" by having the National Security Council control EPA
communications in the wake of the Sept. 11 terror attacks, according to
a report issued late Thursday by EPA Inspector General Nikki L. Tinsley.



"When EPA made a Sept. 18 announcement that the air was 'safe' to
breathe, the agency did not have sufficient data and analyses to make
the statement," the report says, adding that the EPA had yet to
adequately monitor air quality for contaminants such as PCBs, soot and
dioxin. 


In all, the EPA issued five press releases within 10 days of the attacks
and four more by the end of 2001 reassuring the public about air
quality. But it wasn't until June 2002 that the EPA determined that air
quality had returned to pre-Sept. 11 levels - well after respiratory
ailments and other problems began to surface in hundreds of workers
cleaning dusty offices and apartments. 


The day after the attacks, former EPA Deputy Administrator Linda
Fisher's chief of staff e-mailed senior EPA officials to say that "all
statements to the media should be cleared" first by the National
Security Council, which is Bush's main forum for discussing national
security and foreign policy matters with his senior aides and Cabinet,
the inspector general's report says. 


Approval from the NSC, the report says, was arranged through the White
House Council on Environmental Quality, which "influenced, through the
collaboration process, the information that EPA communicated to the
public through its early press releases when it convinced EPA to add
reassuring statements and delete cautionary ones." 


For example, the inspector general found, EPA was convinced to omit
guidance for cleaning indoor spaces and tips on potential health effects
from airborne dust containing asbestos, lead, glass fibers and concrete.



James Connaughton, chairman of the environmental council, which
coordinates federal environmental efforts, said the White House directed
the EPA to add and delete information based on how it should be released
publicly. He said the EPA did "an incredible job" with the World Trade
Center cleanup. 


"The White House was involved in making sure that we were getting the
most accurate information that was real, on a wide range of activities.
That included the NSC - this was a major terrorist incident,"
Connaughton said. 


"In the back and forth during that very intense period of time," he
added, "we were making decisions about where the information should be
released, what the best way to communicate the information was, so that
people could respond responsibly and so that people had a good relative
sense of potential risk." 


Andy Darrell, New York regional director of Environmental Defense, an
advocacy group, said the report is indicative of a pattern of White
House interference in EPA affairs. "For EPA to do its job well, it needs
to be allowed to make decisions based on the science and the facts," he
said. 


Marianne L. Horinko, EPA's acting administrator, said the White House's
role was mainly to help the EPA sift through an enormous amount of
information. 


"We put out the best information we had, based on just the best data
that we had available at the time," said Horinko, who headed the
agency's Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response, which oversaw the
World Trade Center environmental monitoring and cleanup. 


"And it was using our best professional judgment; it was not as a result
of pressure from the White House," she said. "The White House's role was
basically to say, 'Look, we've got data coming in from everywhere. What
benchmarks are we going to use, how are we going to communicate this
data? We can't have this Tower of Babel on the data.'" 


The EPA inspector general recommended that EPA adopt new procedures so
its public statements on health risks and environmental quality are
supported by data and analysis. Other recommendations include developing
better procedures for indoor air cleanups and asbestos handling in
large-scale disasters. 


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