Obama Administration Undoing Bush's Hit-and-Run on the Environment

April 1, 2009 RSS Feed Print

By Bonnie Erbe, Thomas Jefferson Street blog.

I never miss an opportunity to criticize the Obama administration when appropriate, so let me take this opportunity to lavish the president with praise about his young environmental record. The environment is one area in which the president has delivered on his promise of change, and change for the better. Take, for example, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar's decision to delay or cancel oil and gas leases on public lands:

The Interior Department "is moving forward with business as usual with the exception of those areas where we think that the Bush administration overreached," Salazar said. He cited a recent decision to cancel 77 leases to drill for oil and gas in wilderness areas of Utah, leases that were offered in the waning days of the Bush administration.

The Interior Department is reviewing whether to put some or all of the 77 parcels back up for lease, and "I would expect that by the end of May we will have a plan on how we're going to move forward."

EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson is also moving quickly to dismantle the Bush administration policies that laid waste to science and ignored the widely accepted truth of mounting, man-induced climate change:

Nowhere is this change in direction more apparent than in a handful of recent, potentially far-reaching maneuvers related to climate change policy. In January, Jackson directed EPA officials to reconsider California's languishing request to impose stricter greenhouse gas emissions limits on motor vehicles. (The Bush administration denied it in 2007.) More recently, she instructed the agency to review Bush policies that, if changed, could lead to federal regulation of carbon dioxide emissions from coal plants and utilities.

Because these reviews clearly have the White House's backing, Jackson's first few months in office suggest that she will play a critical role in carrying out the administration's climate change policy, even as the details and timing of a carbon dioxide regulation plan remain undecided.

It will take decades of common sense-based environmental policies to roll back the damage done by Bush-Cheney, et al. But at least the Obama administration has launched the roll-back process with great vigor.

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Tags:
Department of the Interior,
environment

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Finally, we have a president who's not out to destroy the planet by the sheer force of his own stupidity. What a relief.

lisa of MD 1:37PM April 03, 2009

The people have the power to demand "green". Anybody who cares does this by purchasing the "green" alternatives that ARE available. Are we all so irresponsible that we must have our Big Brother make us do it?

Americans used to be self-reliant, now all they can do is whine and stick their hand out. Oh yes, and blame saying "not my fault". There's what you say and then what you do.

Chris Petty of GA 5:06PM April 02, 2009

To say that the Bush years were a time to encourage a "green" economy is simply absurd. His administration blocked solid, scientifically backed environmental policies at almost every turn - the Endangered Species Act was completely ignored, Appalachian mountaintops were blown apart to get to coal. This is from a recent LA Times op/ed: "During the eight years Bush was in office, the amount of public land leased to gas and oil companies increased several-fold, bringing the total number of acres leased to 44 million of the 258 million acres the BLM (Bureau of Land Management) manages, including 5 million acres designated as wild mustang habitat."

Bush did virtually nothing to push the auto industry with regard to CAFE standards and developing alternative fueled vehicles. And as for those alternative energy credits, they really don't represent the whole of the Bush administration's attitude toward green vehicles. It took a court ruling to get the Bush administration's Department of Energy to impose an alternative fuel vehicle purchasing requirement on private and municipal fleets.

There's what you say - and then there's what you do.

J Golden of MI 10:02AM April 02, 2009

Bonnie Erbe

Bonnie Erbe

Bonnie Erbe is a contributing editor at U.S. News & World Report and hosts PBS's weekly news analysis program, To the Contrary with Bonnie Erbe. She also writes a weekly syndicated newspaper column for Scripps Howard News Service.

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