Data Use a Key Element of EPA Clean Water Plan

Yesterday, the Environmental Protection Agency released a "Clean Water Act Enforcement Action Plan." The plan lays out a broad vision for clean water enforcement as well as specific goals the agency will take in the coming months and years to improve enforcement at the state and federal level.

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EPA Releases OMB Comments on Chemical Studies

As promised, the Environmental Protection Agency is releasing White House comments on EPA assessments of potentially toxic chemicals. Yesterday, EPA released the first batch of comments on four ongoing risk assessments.

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USDA Budget Leaves Food Safety Agency Wanting

When Congress finalized on Thursday the Department of Agriculture’s FY 2010 budget, it fulfilled President Obama’s request to give a modest funding boost to the Food Safety Inspection Service (FSIS). Unfortunately, it appears the agency will be unable to close the gap in its inspection force responsible for policing the nation’s supply of meat and poultry.

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First Comes Law, Then Comes Regulation

Yesterday, speaking at the Environmental Law Institute, Judge David S. Tatel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit reminded federal agencies that they need to follow the law when writing regulations. BNA news service (subscription) recorded some of the comments.

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Top Ten Risky Foods under FDA’s Watch

lettuceYesterday, I blogged about a New York Times article that details the myriad flaws in the USDA’s regulation of ground beef. Today, a new report by the Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI) spotlights the Food and Drug Administration’s struggles to ensure the safety of non-meat products.

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Lack of E. Coli Regulation Imperils Consumers

The Sunday New York Times’ exposé on ground beef and E. coli is a must read for anyone concerned about food safety. There is too much good information in the story – which begins by recounting the tale of a young woman who became frighteningly ill after eating a frozen hamburger – to recount here.

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EPA Keeps the Transparency Coming

Two back-to-back announcements by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) this week extend the agency's admirable record on transparency since the beginning of the Obama administration. EPA announced two policy changes that increase the transparency of the agency's pesticides programs: opening up the registration process for pesticides to public scrutiny and moving to require all pesticide ingredients be listed on product labels.

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EPA Authority a Bargaining Chip in Senate Climate Bill

Unlike its House counterpart, a climate change bill introduced in the Senate this week would not prevent the Environmental Protection Agency from writing greenhouse gas emissions regulations.

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Transparency Provisions Wanting in New Chemical Management "Principles"

Yesterday the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) revealed a set of "Essential Principles" for reforming the nation's severely flawed chemicals management policies. The principles are a helpful and welcome addition to the reform efforts, but they say little about the need for greater transparency. The six principles include calls for greater authority for EPA to set standards and the use of "sound science" to regulate chemicals – even in the face of uncertainty about their health risks.

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Business and Anti-Regulatory Lobbyists Divided over Climate Policy

Increasingly, businesses are severing their ties to industry lobbying groups that oppose climate change legislation, according to an article in today’s New York Times by reporters Clifford Krauss and Kate Galbraith.

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