Last month the Trump administration escalated its fight with
California with a letter to Governor Gavin Newsom accusing the
state of violating clean water laws by failing to properly
prevent human waste from homeless people from entering
waterways.
"No evidence supports targeting the homeless for Clean Water Act
enforcement, given the much greater damage done by the huge
volume of waste discharged from industrial plants, factory
farms, and sewage treatment plants and many other sources,”
wrote the former EPA employees, including Elizabeth Southerland,
a former agency director of science and technology.
"Considering its enthusiasm for de-regulation and reluctance to
enforce the laws still on the books, President Trump's threat to
wield EPA's authority against the most vulnerable members of our
society is shameless and morally repugnant,” they said.
The letter followed a call on Sept. 27 by U.S. Senator Dianne
Feinstein, a California Democrat, for the EPA's inspector
general to probe whether politics instead of pollution was
behind the Trump administration's threat to withhold more than
$4 billion in federal transportation funding from California
over claims of poor air quality.
The letter, signed by nearly 600 EPA former employees, to U.S.
House of Representatives oversight and energy committees also
came as a response to Trump's claim last month that homeless
people are responsible for "tremendous" amounts of ocean
pollution in California.
Spearheaded by the nonprofit Environmental Integrity Project,
the letter noted that six states have had more large pollution
sources in noncompliance with federal environmental laws over
the last three years than California: Ohio, New York, Iowa,
Missouri, Texas and Indiana. The letter cited agency records.
California has waged numerous policy battles and legal
challenges with the Republican president's administration over
environmental protection, immigration, housing and the state's
right to set stricter standards on carbon emissions from
vehicles than federal rules.
Michael Abboud, an EPA spokesman, said there was no abuse of
authority. "California's inability to comply with the Safe
Drinking Water Act has been an ongoing challenge, and the
failure to properly operate and maintain the City’s sewage
collection and treatment facilities creates public health
risks," he said.
"Highlighting that California has the worst air quality in the
nation along with other serious environmental problems is not a
political issue," Abboud added.
(Reporting by Timothy Gardner; Editing by David Gregorio)
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