Formal debate began Wednesday on House Republicans’ spending bill that would cripple many of our nation’s cornerstone laws protecting air, water, wildlife, public lands and public health. The continuing resolution would, among other things, halt the reduction of dangerous carbon dioxide pollution and remove Endangered Species Act protections for the iconic gray wolf and other imperiled species. It would loosen restrictions on toxic mercury pollution and mountaintop mining; open up public lands to harmful activities; and slow progress to curb climate change and protect U.S. citizens from dirty air and water.
“This bill isn’t mere tinkering with policy, it’s carpet-bombing some of our nation’s most important environmental laws,” said Kierán Suckling, executive director of the Center for Biological Diversity. “In crafting this bill, Republicans have created a feeding frenzy for those intent on dismantling laws that for decades have protected our air, water, climate and wildlife.”
The 2010 budget resolution expires March 4. The continuing resolution is supposed to simply provide stop-gap funding to keep the government from shutting down. Debate on the bill began Wednesday; a vote is expected in the House later this week.
“Many of these amendments don’t have anything to do with reducing the budget. They’re about satisfying the wish-lists of polluters and others who prize big profit margins over vital protections for America’s wildlife, clean air and water,” Suckling said.
Among the hundreds of amendments to the bill are proposals that would stop the Environmental Protection Agency from regulating greenhouse gases that contribute to global warming. Just weeks ago, the EPA began enforcing the Clean Air Act to reduce dangerous CO2 pollution from new sources like coal-fired power plants and oil refineries.
“The EPA is rightly doing its job to clean our air and protect its citizens from the worst effects of climate change. Some in Congress, though, would rather give polluters free rein to continue to dump greenhouse gases without any limit at all,” said Suckling.
The bill also attempts to make end runs around some of the nation’s bedrock environmental laws, including the Endangered Species Act, which provides vital protections for the gray wolf.
“I’m not sure I’ve ever seen a Congress so openly hostile to science and protecting the environment,” Suckling said. “Wolves exist in less than 5 percent of their historic habitat, and yet these members of Congress are determined to strip protections and open them up to widespread killing.”
The House Republicans’ continuing resolution and amendments :
Contact Info: Bill Snape, (202) 536-9351
Website : Center for Biological Diversity