Federal court gives EPA final go-ahead to
issue stricter air quality health standards
By H. JOSEF HEBERT
The Associated Press
3/26/02 6:40 PM
WASHINGTON (AP) -- A federal appeals court gave the Environmental Protection
Agency the final go-ahead Tuesday to issue more stringent air quality health
standards after a five-year legal fight that went all the way to the Supreme
Court.
The appeals court rejected several remaining challenges to the new standards
first issued by the EPA in 1997 and quickly protested by industry groups.
The standards will require states and local authorities to impose tougher
controls on smog-causing chemicals and microscopic soot.
“EPA now has a clear path to move forward to ensure that all Americans can
breathe cleaner air,” EPA Administrator Christie Whitman said in a statement.
She said the agency is working with states and local governments to develop
pollution control programs to meet the new air quality requirements.
The changes have been in limbo because of the court challenges waged by industry
groups and several states that argued that the EPA had exceeded its authority in
issuing standards that had no definitive scientific basis and would be
exceedingly expensive to business.
The Supreme Court ruled a year ago that the EPA under the Clean Air Act had no
requirement to take into account costs when issuing health standards and had
acted reasonably in trying to protect certain population groups including small
children, the elderly and people with respiratory problems.
In the latest court decision, a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals
rejected claims the EPA had acted arbitrarily in determining the level of the
new standards. While technically, the decision could be appealed, lawyers
expected no such action since the Supreme Court already had decided on the
broader issues of the case.
“We are gratified that after more than four years of litigation, the court has
affirmed these standards, implementation of which will improve the lives of
millions of Americans who suffer asthma, bronchitis and other respiratory
illnesses,” said Tom Sansonetti, the Justice Department’s assistant attorney
general for environment and natural resource.
The American Lung Association has estimated that together the tougher
requirements on smog-causing ozone and microscopic soot will prevent 15,000
premature deaths, 350,000 cases of aggravated asthma and perhaps as many as a
million cases of children having decreased lung functions.
Whitman has embraced the new rules, which had been a top priority of her
predecessor, Carol Browner, who headed the EPA during the Clinton
administration.
After the Supreme Court upheld the rules in February, 2001, Whitman called them
key to the EPA’s “efforts to protect the health of millions of Americans from
the dangers of pollution.
Environmentalists said they hoped the EPA will move swiftly to determine where
state and local officials will have to take additional measures to assure their
air meets the new federal standards.
Scores of counties that have been in compliance with the old standard will no
longer meet the new federal air quality requirements, federal officials and
environmentalists acknowledge. The EPA has waited for the court challenges to be
resolved, before assessing where additional pollution control measures will be
needed.
“This puts to rest finally any claim that the standards are not based on sound
science and sound law,” said Vickie Patton, an attorney for Environmental
Defense. “The legal wrangling by industry lawyers has delayed critical progress
in delivering cleaner, healthier air.”
The long legal fight shows “how industry can throw everything it has against a
public health standard and in the course of doing so they managed to delay this
process for many years,” added Howard Fox, an attorney for Earthjustice Legal
Defense Fund, who represented the American Lung Association in the litigation.
The 1997 standards limited ozone, a major component of smog, to 0.08 parts per
million instead of 0.12 parts per million under the old requirement. It also
changed the monitoring period from 12 hours to eight hours to better reflect
actual air quality.
States and local authorities also were required to limit microscopic soot from
power plants, cars and other sources down to 2.5 microns in diameter, or 28
times smaller than the width of a human hair.
The standards had been challenged by the American Trucking Associations, the
U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the National Association of Manufacturers and the
states of Michigan, Ohio and West Virginia.
Copyright 2002 Associated Press
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