Release Date: 12/17/2012
WASHINGTON - The
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) today released its annual
enforcement results, showing significant environmental and public health
protections achieved – a reduction of 2.2 billion pounds of air, water
and land pollution, as well as 4.4 billion pounds of hazardous waste,
and $252 million in civil and criminal penalties levied – while also
focusing on enforcement efforts that reduce smaller amounts of pollution
but have substantial health impacts in communities.
“Enforcement plays a vital role in protecting communities from harmful
pollution,” said Cynthia Giles, assistant administrator for EPA’s Office
of Enforcement and Compliance Assurance. “We are using vigorous
enforcement, as well as innovations in monitoring and transparency, to
reduce pollution violations, protect and empower communities and focus
on the environmental problems that matter most.”
FY 2012 results include:
- Sustained and focused enforcement attention on serious violators of
clean drinking water standards has resulted in improvements in
compliance. The number of systems with serious violations has declined
by more than 60 percent in the past three years as a result of combined
federal and state enforcement work, protecting people’s health through
safer drinking water.
- More than 67 percent of large combined sewer systems
serving people across the country are implementing clean water
solutions to reduce raw sewage and contaminated stormwater and more are
underway. EPA is working with communities to design integrated solutions
to these water quality problems, and incorporating innovative and cost
effective green infrastructure to save money and achieve multiple community benefits.
- EPA is bringing criminal prosecutions where criminal activity
threatens public health, like failing to use required pollution control
equipment or knowingly violating pollution rules resulting in death or
serious harm or falsifying pollution information. See a case example in Louisiana.
- EPA is advancing environmental justice by incorporating fenceline
monitoring, which requires companies to monitor their air emissions and
make that data available public, into settlements, ensuring that local
residents have access to critical information about pollution that may
be affecting their community. EPA also secured $44 million in additional
investments through settlements for supplemental environmental projects
that benefit impacted communities. See an oil refinery case example.
- EPA is increasing transparency to use the power of public accountability to help improve environmental compliance. EPA’s 2012 enforcement actions map provides information about violators in communities. EPA’s state dashboards and Clean Water Act pollutant loading tool
provides the public with information about local pollution that may
affect them and allows the public to take a closer look at how
government is responding to pollution problems.
I'm surprised this didn't get any comments yet! It seems like good news is just hard to come by these days, and its good to know that the EPA isn't completely useless like they are presented in most documentaries. That being said, throwing more money their way would never be a bad idea. That being said, I think the penalties levied against corporations in the form of fines is a little small compared to most big polluters' profits. I'd personally like to see legislation penalizing big polluters by taking away ALL of their profits over a year unless they invest in clean technology.
ReplyDelete