False alert on smog
By Kay Jones and Joel Bucher
Copyright 1998 Washington Times
September 30, 1998
Yet another billion-dollar EPA regulation based on 
junk science has just been enacted with little public furor.  The Environmental Protection 
Agency now is trying to stop what Sen.  Alfonse D'Amato, New York Republican, 
calls 
"airborne terrorism."
 However, this new breed of terrorist isn't from another 
continent or even part of a militia group.  No, these attackers are allegedly 
bombing the skylines of Northeastern cities with smog, hurled hundreds of miles 
over Ohio and Pennsylvania from the smokestacks of utilities and industry in 
the Midwest.  
 Unfortunately for Sen.  
"Al," there is no scientific 
"smoking gun" to back up his claim.
 EPA's own research shows there's little terror in Midwestern ozone, which 
leaves its effort to clamp down on utilities without merit.  Such policies are 
nothing more than a thinly veiled political 
attack on Northeast states' economic competitors.
 Scare tactics aside, Northeasterners should breath easy knowing they are 
exposed to less ozone smog today than in the past several decades.  In New York 
City, for example, regulatory efforts were so successful that that area's 
smoggiest county, 
Fairfield, now exceeds national standards fewer than five days a year - down 
from 30 days a year in 1980. For comparison, Los Angeles' smoggiest county 
exceeds the legal limit by 70 days a year - Houston's 12-15 days 
a year.
 Cleaner air would normally be a cause celebre.  But just when America was 
making so much headway, the EPA tightened the standard for ozone smog in July 
1997.
 Unfortunately, reaching the new standard won't make the Northeast's air any 
cleaner.  Attaining this 
arbitrary standard would cut New York City's hospital admissions from asthma a 
mere one one-hundredth of 1 percent, while costing that state millions of 
dollars that won't be spent on more pressing public health problems.
 The EPA knew the tighter ozone standard was a 
tough sell to an overregulated Northeast, (EPA economists said it would cost 
the nation more than $9.6 billion annually.) So, the EPA's plan uses a new 
"regional" regulatory scheme that cleverly shifts the economic burden to the Midwest and 
Southeast.  With this, the agency sold the Northeast on the new 
standard, claiming it: 
"should be enough to allow most of the new [noncompliant] counties in states . . 
. to be able to comply with the new standard." However, the agency later reneged, stating 
"At no time has the agency maintained that the ozone transport proposal and 
corresponding NOx trading program is designed to bring specific areas into 
attainment with the ozone standard."
 The EPA even assured the Northeast it could avoid the dreaded 
"non-attainment status" (a term used by regulators to identify non-compliant areas in need of more 
regulation and by investors to signal an economic kiss of death.) Instead, a 
new quasi-legal 
"transitional" status was created, which allowed the Northeast to avoid increasingly 
expensive emissions controls on local car and truck owners and industry.
 Convinced they could export the costs of compliance, the Northeast states have 
added to the EPA's regulatory threat to the Midwest, petitioning the agency to 
require pollution controls 
on specific coal-burning power plants.  Conveniently, the EPA is now using the 
petition to threaten a federal takeover of the implementation process to 
recalcitrant states in the Midwest.
 But EPA scientists never believed the 
"regional" plan would produce cleaner air in the Northeast, because very little Midwest 
ozone travels that far.  According to a recent article in Environmental 
Management, the EPA's plan would bring only two of 25 urban areas in the 
Northeast into compliance with the new standard.
 Ultimately, the real terrorists are EPA officials who foist $1.7 billion worth 
of regulation onto unsuspecting 
citizens, knowing full well that the impact on Northeastern smog will be 
negligible.  Inevitably, crushing regulations on cars and trucks in the 
Northeast will be the real result of the EPA's tighter air quality standard for 
ozone.
 Kay Jones, Ph.D., is head of Zephyr Consulting 
in Seattle.  Dr.  Jones also served at President Carter's Council on 
Environmental Quality as senior adviser on Air Quality.  Joel Bucher is senior 
environmental policy analyst at Citizens for a Sound Economy Foundation.  
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