Dust in the Wind: Time for the
EPA to
Go!
by Newt Gingrich
The
key to eliminating our oppressive
regulatory regime is simply to replace the existing bureaucracy rather
than try
to reform it. The current systems are so entrenched that we need to
start over
with new organizations and new people.
Overbearing
bureaucrats are especially
prominent at the Environmental Protection Agency. The arrogance,
economic
ignorance, and dictatorial attitude of the current organization are
well known
throughout much of America.
The
EPA bullies and dictates to
businesses, small towns, and states. It routinely tells states what
they have
to do and then claims not to be at fault when the states tell local
communities
and businesses they must comply.
The
EPA has become a clear example of
“bureaucratic socialism”—an ingenious adaptation of European socialism.
Under
“bureaucratic socialism,” you
get to own your company, but federal bureaucrats tell you how to run it.
Two
recent events surrounding the
rumors of stiffening “dust regulation,” which led to a new height of
anger
against the bureaucrats, highlight the need to replace the EPA with a
brand new
Environmental Solutions Agency.
In
a speech last week, EPA
Administrator Linda Jackson acknowledged the anger when she said people
referred to her officials as “jack-booted thugs.”
What
was amazing about her comments
was her complete inability to ask why people would use terms like
“jack-booted
thugs” to describe the agency’s behavior. She exhibited a total
unwillingness
to listen to her critics or try to understand their frustration.
Similarly,
a Washington Post report on
the dust rules was so infuriatingly one-sided and dishonest that it was
easy to
see why many Americans feel their concerns are trampled by an evasive
bureaucracy.
On
November 3 the Washington Post ran
a story that claimed members of Congress were working to “ban [a]
phantom EPA
dust rule.”
With
great glee, the Post writers
reported:
“Earlier
this year, Republicans found
what they saw as an ideal talking point to illustrate a federal
bureaucracy
gone batty.
“The
Environmental Protection Agency,
they warned, was trying to regulate something only God could control:
the dust
in the wind.
“’Now,
here comes my favorite of the
crazy regulatory acts. The EPA is now proposing rules to regulate
dust,’ Rep.
John Carter (R.-Texas) said on the House floor. He said Texas is full
of dusty
roads: ‘The EPA is now saying you can be fined for driving home every
night on
your gravel road.’
“There
was just one flaw in this
argument: It was not true.
“The
EPA’s new dust rule did not
exist. It never did.”
I
was stunned by this assertion.
Everywhere
I had gone in Iowa, people
had been complaining about the proposed dust rule. Senator Chuck
Grassley (R. -
Iowa), a senior and informed leader in the Senate, had been speaking
out
against the rule aggressively. In fact, he assigned a staff person to
fight the
EPA over the proposed rule.
The
assertion that it was never
considered was plainly dishonest.
Although
there was never a formal
proposal to create the rule, the prospect of stricter dust regulations
had been
on the table for months after EPA panels gave conflicting
recommendations.
Since the EPA makes no distinctions between urban, industrial dust and
dust from
agriculture or rural roads, many rural Americans were justifiably
terrified
that the agency was dragging its feet. It was not until mid-October
that the
EPA finally said it wouldn’t tighten the rules, as its panel had
recommended.
The
Post’s characterization of the
issue as “hubbub over this phantom rule — surely one of the most
controversial
regulations that never was” was both false and insulting to the 112
House
members and 26 Senators who had cosponsored legislation to prevent the
agency
from regulating farm dust.
The
article, obviously based on
one-sided, dishonest EPA description of the fight, suggested all of
these
elected representatives and their staffs were ignorant and cynical,
instead of
acknowledging their legitimate concerns on behalf of rural Americans.
It was
the Washington elite at its most infuriating.
Rep.
Kristi Noem, a freshman
Republican from South Dakota, the author of the bill on farm dust
regulation,
issued a powerful statement of myths and facts demolishing the EPA
argument.
Between
an administrator, who jokes
that Americans perceive her officials as “jack-booted thugs,” and
widespread
dishonesty and evasion about proposed dust regulations, it is clear the
EPA
must be replaced, not reformed.
We
need a true Environmental Solutions
Agency to replace the EPA—an agency that will emphasize innovation,
collaboration, common sense and economic rationality. It can’t be done
with the
same old bureaucrats. It will require new people in a new institution.
Your
Friend,
Newt
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