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Study Ranks Bush Plan to Cut Air Pollution as Weakest of 3

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papau Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-10-04 12:03 PM
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Study Ranks Bush Plan to Cut Air Pollution as Weakest of 3
Reauthorization of the Clean Air Act is overdue -and after spending the last 3.5 years trying to prevent the Bush administration from weakening clean air standards, the Jeffords bill would be a nice start - or a nice campaign issue for Nov 2004.



http://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/10/politics/10air.html

Study Ranks Bush Plan to Cut Air Pollution as Weakest of 3
By MICHAEL JANOFSKY Published: June 10, 2004


WASHINGTON, June 9 - A research firm that the Bush administration commissioned to analyze its plan to lower emissions from coal-fired power plants compared the plan with two competing legislative proposals and concluded in a report released Wednesday that the administration's plan was the weakest.

At the invitation of the environmental coalition Clear the Air, the international research firm Abt Associates, which often conducts studies for the Environmental Protection Agency, used the same methodology in assessing all three. It found that the administration's plan, called the Clear Skies Act, would save as many as 14,000 lives but that the other bills would save more - 16,000 in one case and 22,000 in the other.

The findings, included in a report, "Dirty Air, Dirty Power," were immediately attacked by industry groups as a "repackaged" argument that focused on only one source of emissions. The administration's chief environmental policy adviser echoed the criticism, saying that the administration plan provided benefits as part of an overall strategy to meet air quality standards that were more stringent than ever.<snip>

But officials from Clear the Air said the report provided evidence that the administration's approach to curbing emissions from power plants did not do enough soon enough, and in the process, saved power companies from spending huge sums on technologies that would reduce emissions.

They predicted that the analysis could become part of the presidential campaign. The report said that under current policies, nearly 24,000 people died each year as a result of power plant emissions, with the largest numbers in three closely contested states, Pennsylvania, Ohio and Florida.
"<snip>

great movie at
http://www.envirovictory.org/bushd/index.cfm?MS=Insider
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