Reinventing the Environmental Protection
Agency
and EPA's Water Programs
Claudia Copeland
Specialist in Environmental Policy
Environment and Natural Resources Policy Division
March 22, 1996
96-283 ENR
SUMMARY
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has been at the
center of many of the Administration's recent efforts to reinvent
government, to create a government that works better and costs
less. Some of EPA's projects are intended to fix problem areas in
the implementation of current law; others are intended to set
future directions. Many of the reforms and program initiatives
underway at EPA will directly affect EPA's other governmental
partners, especially states.
This report highlights a number of the ongoing activities that
are having impacts on this partnership and groups such activities
in three categories:
- - a new Performance Partnership System between EPA and
states,
- - agencywide initiatives that focus on industry but which
will necessarily affect states, and
- - activities in the water quality program that involve
federal-state issues, as well as overall policy
direction. These include working with stakeholders to
develop recommendations towards implementing urban,
municipal wet weather pollution control programs with a
minimum of regulatory burden, and revised guidance for
the nonpoint source management program to give states
more flexibility.
EPA's initiatives are, in part, a response to budgetary
pressures and the need to be more efficient. The agency also is
responding to pressures from the Congress to reform the way it
does business and the realization that Congress may change the
agency, if it fails to change itself. Some say that the types of
changes are logical next steps in the evolution of environmental
programs and the Administration's government reinvention efforts.
Others say that what is occurring is a sea change in policy
without clear prospects that environmental benefits will result.
Whether the direction and pace of EPA's administrative reforms
will satisfy critics of environmental laws and of the agency's
implementation remains to be seen.
The significance of many of these activities, whether one
considers agencywide initiatives such as the Performance
Partnership System or program-specific reforms, is difficult to
assess in these early stages. Most participants are enthusiastic
about the changes in process affecting the EPA-state partnership.
That view is not universally held, however. There are concerns
about how some of the broad initiatives will be implemented and
about if, in EPA's enthusiasm for state flexibility and reduced
federal oversight, support for core elements of environmental
protection programs will disappear.
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
-- Background - Reinventing Government and EPA
NATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL PERFORMANCE PARTNERSHIP SYSTEM
-- Performance Partnership Grants
REGULATORY PARTNERSHIPS
-- Common Sense Initiative
-- Project XL
-- Industry Sector Assistance and Small Business
-- Compliance
-- Improving Permitting Programs
WATER QUALITY PROGRAM ACTIVITIES
DISCUSSION AND VIEWS OF STAKEHOLDERS
CONCLUSION
INTRODUCTION
For more than three years, the federal government, its
agencies and departments, has been proposing and pursuing a great
many initiatives intended to reinvent government, to create a
government that works better and costs less, as Vice President
Gore's National Performance Review report declared in 1993. (1)
The initiatives embody several themes: eliminating regulatory
overkill, using market mechanisms to solve problems, encouraging
efficiency and innovation, and empowering state and local
governments. As much as any other, the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) has engaged itself in these efforts which began
before the changes in Congress that occurred when Republicans
gained the majority in both chambers following the 1994
elections. At the same time, the impetus for EPA to change itself
was further encouraged by those election results, which many
interpreted as a signal by voters for Congress to roll back
federal environmental and other regulatory laws.
Environmental programs rely on a functioning partnership
between levels of government. One writer refers to this as a
"single stream of governance" in which "each level
is related to the other, each needs the other." (2) Thus,
both purposefully and inevitably, the reforms and program
initiatives underway at EPA will directly affect EPA's other
governmental partners, especially states.
This report highlights a number of the ongoing activities that
are having impacts on this partnership and groups such activities
in three categories:
- - a new Performance Partnership System between EPA and
states,
- - agencywide initiatives that focus on industry but which
will necessarily affect states, and
- - activities in the clean water program that involve
federal-state issues and reflect a devolution to states
(transfer of powers and authorities from the federal
government to states) and regulatory reform initiatives
in specific terms.
The report discusses the water quality program because it is
representative of the agency's overall changes in approach. Many
of the water program initiatives reflect EPA's emphasis on
addressing environmental problems from a holistic,
ecosystem-based perspective, focusing on priority problems within
watersheds. Further, these activities are taking place within the
framework of implementing the Clean Water Act, last amended in
1987 and currently being implemented by EPA, states and cities,
and industry. Although the House passed legislation in May to
revise the Act, to make it more flexible and less prescriptive,
it is uncertain whether the 104th Congress will pass that
measure, which is opposed by the Administration, or even a less
comprehensive bill. (3) Legislative activity has not advanced in
the Senate, leading many to wonder if and when Congress will
reauthorize the Act. Nonetheless, implementation of current law
continues, and the report describes a number of water program
reforms being pursued independent of possible legislative action
this year. Some are intended to fix problem areas in the
implementation of current law; others are intended to set future
directions.
Background - Reinventing Government and EPA
In recent years there have been increasing numbers of calls to
fundamentally reform the Nation's environmental policies, coming
especially from the Administration itself.
- - In 1993 the Administration's first report of the
National Performance Review addressed some of its
recommendations for reinventing government to EPA,
including a recommendation to consolidate categorical
environmental management grants into a block grant,
streamline permit programs, emphasize pollution
prevention, and encourage market-based mechanisms such as
pollution trading systems or fees on pollution. (4)
- - Following the 1993 government-wide proposals, the
Administration developed detailed regulatory reform
recommendations for specific agencies. In March 1995 the
President, Vice President and EPA Administrator announced
a set of 25 reforms for EPA to improve current programs
and serve as building blocks for the future. (5) The
reforms identified two action tracks: those targeted to
fixing problems with today's regulatory programs, and
those designed to develop innovative alternatives to the
current regulatory system. They include a 25% reduction
in paperwork, compliance incentives for small businesses
and communities, incentives for auditing, flexible
funding for states and tribes, multimedia permitting, and
refocusing regulation on highest risks. EPA said that
most could be accomplished administratively, without
legislative authorization.
- - A February 1996 draft report of the President's Council
on Sustainable Development concerns integrating flexible
environmental protection policies with economic growth.
(6) The draft report says that the current environmental
regulatory structure should be changed to provide greater
flexibility to achieve environmental goals, while
considering costs and social factors. The council
consists of representatives of industry, environmental
and citizen groups, and labor and was established by a
1993 executive order to advise the President on issues of
sustainable development.
Reform proposals have come from outside the executive branch,
as well. In 1995 the National Academy of Public Administration
issued a report requested by congressional appropriators
suggesting that the agency needs a more flexible, integrated
statutory structure, should make better use of risk and cost
information to rank priorities, and should give states more
decisionmaking authority. (7) Building on the NSPA report and
other ideas, the Center for Strategic and International Studies
has recently initiated a project called Enterprise for the
Environment (E4E). It seeks to build a consensus for systemic
environmental management reform, to be implemented by Congress
and the Administration in 1997. (8) And in Congress, various
aspects of legislative and regulatory reinvention have been
highlighted in authorization and appropriation bills affecting
EPA, especially in the 104th Congress, which has sought to cut
back both the agency's budget and its regulatory activities.
In response, since 1992 EPA has been pursuing a great many
initiatives intended to change the way that environmental
programs are managed in this country. The initiatives embody
several themes apparent in the regulatory reform recommendations:
pollution prevention, sound science, environmental
accountability, incorporation of environmental justice, ecosystem
approaches, partnerships with states and other stakeholders, and
internal organizational reinvention. The organizing principle of
many of the initiatives is ecosystem-based environmental
protection which focuses on geographically-targeted or
community-based approaches to solving environmental problems. The
goal of EPA's ecosystem protection efforts is to protect.
maintain, and restore the ecological integrity of the nation's
lands and waters by moving toward a "place-driven"
focus. Places, according to EPA, can be defined on a species or
community basis, on a hydrologic/geophysical basis (e.g.,
watersheds), or on a climatological basis (e.g., airsheds). EPA
describes these efforts as part of the government's efforts to
reinvent the agency by building a consensus among stakeholders,
with community involvement and more flexibility, while addressing
entire ecosystems.
In developing these initiatives, EPA clearly is responding to
pressures and signals of several other types, as well. These
include budgetary pressures on EPA and all parts of the federal
government to be more efficient and do more with less. They also
include pressures from the Congress to reform the way EPA does
business and realization that Congress may change the agency, if
EPA fails to change itself. To the extent that EPA demonstrates
that it can voluntarily change its programs, it may forestall
more severe legislative reforms that agency officials consider
damaging to environmental protection efforts.
NATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL PERFORMANCE PARTNERSHIP SYSTEM
National environmental programs have traditionally been based
on a partnership arrangement between EPA and states under which
the federal government establishes national goals and standards,
oversees state plans and provides technical guidance, and
maintains a strong role in enforcement; states may be delegated
all or part of the responsibility for day-to-day implementation,
including standard setting, permit issuance, and enforcement.
From time to time the intergovernmental arrangements have been
viewed by one or another of the participants as more of a burden
than a partnership of shared responsibilities. For more than a
decade, state and local governments have sought relief from
costly, inflexible federal regulations and relief from what they
consider burdensome detailed oversight by federal authorities. At
the same time, the capacity and commitment of states to
vigorously implement environmental programs -- which varied
widely 25 years ago -- has increased greatly, to the point that
both EPA and states have sought changes in the partnership.
In May 1995, after 2 years of discussion, EPA and states
entered into a formal agreement intended to fundamentally
redesign that relationship and to improve the federal-state
partnership on environmental protection.(9) The agreement
envisions a new system of gauging environmental performance by
measuring environmental improvement according to new
environmental and business performance indicators and moving away
from traditional accounting of the number of permits issued or
enforcement actions taken. Both states and EPA reportedly view
this program as the primary vehicle for achieving devolution of
environmental protection programs from the federal government to
states. Hence, much effort and prestige are being invested by the
participants to ensure its success.
The performance partnership system will be embodied in
individual agreements negotiated between states and EPA regional
offices. This new direction is intended to allow states more
authority to set priorities and tailor implementation. At the
same time, EPA agrees to allow states greater flexibility to
achieve results and reduce oversight of those state environmental
programs that demonstrate exceptional performance. The new system
would replace annual workplans negotiated between EPA and states
with partnership agreements that reflect state priorities and
eliminate much of the bureaucracy of the traditional agreement
process. States will have freer rein to pick their own goals and
shift resources to priority problems.
EPA has signed partnership agreements with five states
(Colorado, Illinois, Delaware, Utah, and New Jersey). At least 12
others are likely to sign up during 1996. During FY1997, all
states will participate.
A new General Accounting Office (GAO) report(10) reviews
experimental programs in Massachusetts, New Jersey, and New York
to coordinate implementation of media-specific programs. As GAO
notes, environmental programs have traditionally been designed to
control pollution discharged to a specific medium -- air, water,
or land. The experimental programs described by GAO are
alternative environmental management approaches intended --
within the limits of current laws -- to encourage pollution
prevention, reduce compliance costs to industry, and make
environmental programs more efficient. Massachusetts is using
multimedia, facility-wide inspections. New Jersey is using
facility-wide permits. New York is coordinating the state's own
regulatory activities and targeting this coordination at 400 of
the most polluting facilities in the state. GAO says it is too
early to assess the effectiveness of these three efforts to
integrate environmental management, but that there have been some
successes along with troubles working with a media-specific
regulatory structure and the constraints of EPA's current
media-specific grants program.
Performance Partnership Grants
One element of the partnership program is a more flexible
approach to state environmental grants, through block grants to
be called Performance Partnership Grants, in lieu of traditional
categorical grants for air, water, hazardous waste, etc.
Consolidated grants are intended to reduce administrative burdens
and improve environmental performance by allowing states and
tribes to target funds to meet their specific needs. The
objective of partnership grants is to focus on results which are
oriented to community needs, rather than on regulatory inputs and
micromanagement. EPA believes that the major benefit will be to
improve the ability of states and tribes to integrate their
environmental programs.
The Administration's 1993 National Performance Review
recommended consolidating environmental management grants, and
subsequently President Clinton's FY1996 budget request proposed a
block grant to consolidate up to 12 existing media-specific
grants. It was one of several performance partnership grant
consolidations proposed in the FY1996 budget specifically to
implement the Administration's reinventing government initiative.
Initially, the Administration believed that environmental
grant consolidation could be accomplished administratively and
that action by Congress was not required. However, EPA officials
subsequently concluded that authorizing legislation would be
required, because the partnership grants would redistribute funds
currently obligated to a variety of environmental programs. Draft
legislation was expected to be transmitted to Congress, but this
has not occurred. The Administration renewed its request for
consolidated environmental grants in the FY1997 budget and also
proposed to give states more flexibility to move funds between
clean water and drinking water infrastructure projects, if
Congress enacts legislation setting up a drinking water state
assistance program.
Through the appropriations process, Congress has endorsed
environmental performance partnership grants: the conference
report on H.R. 2099, providing funding for EPA for FY1996
(H.Rept. 104-253), approved the Administration's request and
created a new account titled State and Tribal Assistance Grants
which includes $658 million for state environmental block grants.
However, President Clinton vetoed this legislation in December
1995, and EPA operated under a series of continuing resolutions
which did not specifically authorize the agency to distribute
grants to states under a consolidated approach. EPA and states
believe it is likely that, if Congress enacts a full-year
appropriations bill for the remainder of FY1996 which succeeds
the short-term continuing resolutions, that bill will contain
authorization for performance partnership grants.
Anticipating congressional approval of the performance
partnership grant request, in late 1995 EPA issued guidance for
states and tribes on how the consolidated grant program will be
implemented.(11) EPA attempted to respond to states' criticism
that an earlier draft version of the guidance was overly complex.
EPA also is evaluating agency and federal grant regulations which
might impose undue burdens on state participants in the
performance partnership system, including, for example, detailed
program planning and reporting requirements that traditionally
accompany federal grants. EPA is considering issuing a waiver or
class-deviation rule for some of its own rules which might be
identified as impediments to the partnership system. The agency
is likely to face greater difficulty in securing revision of
government-wide grant rules, where they are determined to be a
problem.
Most states are very enthusiastic about the new direction for
federal-state environmental protection, both in the general term
of performance partnership agreements and consolidated grants.
Among environmental groups, however, there is concern. Some
perceive that the partnerships will mean a shift away from tough
enforcement towards cooperative compliance which could result in
relaxed controls on polluters. Concern has been expressed, too,
about how environmental improvements will be measured and
evaluated in order to judge whether improvements continue. They
also seek assurance that EPA will keep a backup regulatory stick
sufficient to ensure that states will not backslide.
REGULATORY PARTNERSHIPS
Agencywide, EPA is developing reinvention and regulatory
reforms intended to apply more common sense and economical
approaches to environmental regulation of industry. The
Administration characterizes these activities as regulatory
partnerships, equivalent to the federal-state performance
partnerships, and they have a similar objective of focusing on
environmental results rather than on complying with regulatory
red tape. These evolving activities will affect states, which
have responsibility for day-to-day implementation of national
environmental programs, as much as they will affect individual
businesses.
Common Sense Initiative
The Common Sense Initiative (CSI) is the centerpiece of EPA's
reinvention activities. Its goal is to create solutions to
environmental problems that are cleaner for the environment and
cheaper for industry and taxpayers. Six industry sectors have
been identified (automobile manufacturing, computers and
electronics, iron and steel, metal finishing, petroleum refining,
and printing) and corresponding task groups established to debate
and restructure environmental requirements based on industry
sectors, rather than pollutant by pollutant or media by media.
The task groups, or subcommittees, are dealing with six broad
topics: reviewing regulations, encouraging pollution prevention,
streamlining reporting, improving compliance, streamlining
permitting, and examining environmental technology (especially
incentives for innovation). Begun in 1993, it is a long term
effort with no specific schedule or goal, but represents a
fundamental change in the direction of the Agency's efforts to
protect the environment and public health. (12)
CSI has links to specific regulatory projects. In December
1993 EPA proposed a multimedia "cluster rule" for the
pulp and paper industry, the first effort to simultaneously place
limits on an industry's air emissions and wastewater discharges.
Controversies about details of the proposal and its cost have
delayed issuance of a final rule, which is not expected before
mid-1996.
The CSI process has encountered criticism from some
environmental and community groups. They have complained that the
multistakeholder discussions are government dominated and
industry driven. Because of disputes over who should participate,
these groups complain of being underrepresented and unable to
impact the discussions. Early this year the groups began working
on an alternative to CSI, one focusing on grassroots,
community-based approaches to achieving pollution prevention, and
in February environmental justice representatives resigned from
CSI in order to focus on alternatives. EPA Officials believe that
the groups' concerns are misplaced, and they are attempting to
regain the support of environmental justice groups. (13) Approval
and implementation of CSI projects will depend partly on
community-based endorsement of specifics yet to emerge. Some
participants believe it will be difficult to demonstrate broad
consensus on CSI projects if groups are excluded or choose to not
participate, so that resulting discussions are perceived to be
too narrowly focused.
Project XL
Related to CSI is Project XL ("Excellence and
Leadership") which will give selected entities the
opportunity to demonstrate innovations to meet environmental
goals outside of the current command-and-control regulatory
framework. Where CSI is organized by industrial sector, Project
XL takes a facility-specific approach to reform. Project XL
builds on an earlier agency-industry innovation study of an Amoco
oil refinery at Yorktown, Virginia, which also evaluated
alternative pollution prevention and compliance strategies to
achieve better overall environmental performance.(14)
EPA's goal for Project XL is to have about 50 projects
underway in 4 program areas: facilities, industry sectors,
government agencies, and communities. As of mid-February, 12
projects have been tentatively approved, meaning the participants
and EPA are negotiating enforceable project agreements, a process
expected to result in agreements for the first group of
participants by April or May. Nine of the 12 chosen projects are
from companies; 3 are from state or local environmental agencies.
Among them, one company plans to achieve better-than-mandated
control of air, land, and water pollution at a facility now under
construction. Another has pledged to exceed required pollution
reduction goals through a comprehensive permit for air, water,
and waste which will simplify the company's reporting and
paperwork burden. A local government environmental agency
proposes to work with area companies to reduce air pollution from
commuting trips. About a dozen other proposals are being
evaluated, and EPA expects to receive more Project XL proposals
in the future.
Industry Sector Assistance and Small Business Compliance
In another industry-focused project, EPA has issued
comprehensive technical and environmental profiles (sector
notebooks) of 18 industries to help develop industry-based
assistance strategies for improving overall compliance at less
cost. The 18 include, for example, dry cleaning, pulp and paper,
inorganic chemicals, and transportation equipment cleaning and
were chosen on the basis of such factors as overall economic and
environmental impact and similarity of manufacturing processes
across facilities nationwide. Further, EPA has created four
compliance assistance centers (for printing, metal finishing,
auto repair, and small farms) to provide businesses with
"one-stop shopping" for information they need about
applicable regulations, as well as about pollution prevention
opportunities.
Recently EPA established a Common Sense Compliance Program of
incentives for small businesses to help them correct
environmental problems without fear of a penalty, provide a
six-month grace period to correct problems, and waive fines for
first-time violators that make a good faith effort to comply.
This program expands on an earlier EPA policy under the Clean Air
Act to provide compliance incentives for small businesses. (15)
Improving Permitting Programs
EPA created a Permits Improvement Team in July 1994 to examine
all of the Agency's permitting programs (air, water, and
hazardous waste) and identify how they can be improved. The team
consists of EPA, state, tribal, and local government officials
and is co-chaired by the EPA Assistant Administrator for Solid
Waste & Emergency Response and the Region II Administrator.
One output of the team is an inventory of EPA/state permit
improvement initiatives.
Early in 1996 the group completed an extensive set of
recommendations concerning EPA's overall permitting approach and
program-specific issues. (16) Overall, the team recommends a
revised permitting approach called "public performance-based
permitting, or P3." It would consist of two elements:
establishing a defined level of performance to be achieved by
permittees, and giving the public necessary information to
monitor both the permitting process and ongoing compliance of
permitted facilities. For the water program, the team recommends
items such as expanding use of general permits for industrial
dischargers where feasible and including language in stormwater
permits that emphasizes pollution prevention. The full set of
recommendations is expected to undergo wide public review and
comment by state and local governments, environmental groups, and
the regulated community.
The Permits Improvement Team also identified several proposed
projects for FY1996, such as preparing as a pilot project a
permit-by-rule for de minimis water discharges that would
not require individual facility permits or any reporting. This
project responds to concerns of many states that they lack
resources to write and enforce permits for all dischargers and
interest in minimizing permit burdens on small sources. The
outcome of final FY1996 budget decisions for EPA, still being
considered by Congress, will determine if the agency has enough
resources to go forward with the proposed projects.
WATER QUALITY PROGRAM ACTIVITIES
Beyond agencywide activities intended to redefine and reinvent
environmental protection efforts, most of the individual EPA
program offices are pursuing reinvention projects and
initiatives. Many are either in response to state concerns about
redefining the federal-state partnership or will significantly
involve states, as primary day-to-day implementors of national
environmental programs.
EPA's water quality program is representative of efforts to
foster devolution and reinvention of government. Agency officials
and interest groups recognize that, after 25 years of
implementing national environmental programs, much progress
towards environmental goals has been achieved, primarily through
control of large industrial sources, with the result that
nonpoint sources now dominate water quality problems in most
areas. Many believe that remaining problems are better addressed
through new approaches in place of traditional "command and
control" regulation focused on large industrial pollution
sources. In the water quality program, recent initiatives start
from a watershed approach which acknowledges that water quality
goals in many areas of the country will not be achieved if water
quality managers focus solely on controlling pollution from
discrete point sources, as in the past. Rather, remaining water
quality problems require attention to diffuse as well as discrete
pollution sources managed on the basis of specific geographic
areas defined by natural or hydrologic features, instead of
political boundaries.
The watershed or ecosystem approach endorsed by EPA examines
all of the environmental issues and aspects of the ecosystem and
involves key government, citizen and other local stakeholders in
developing solutions. In contrast with past areawide planning
efforts (such as the "208 program" which attempted to
prioritize watershed waste management projects), the current
approach is more community-based than top-down in emphasis and is
intended to be a process for addressing problems by involving key
government, citizen and other user groups as full partners in
developing solution. Some of the earlier planning efforts also
examined watershed areas. They tended to focus primarily on
producing a plan but yielded little implementation.
During the 103rd Congress, the Administration proposed a Clean
Water Initiative which embodied elements of watershed or
ecosystem management: geographic targeting, priority setting,
focus on wet weather/diffuse sources of pollution, and
stakeholder involvement in decisionmaking. Congress has not acted
on legislative changes to reflect the Administration's specific
Clean Water Initiative, but the Agency is now pursuing many of
the concepts administratively using existing authority to achieve
regulatory reform and flexibility. In January, Assistant
Administrator Robert Perciasepe released a national water program
agenda for 1996-1997 built on a framework of common sense,
place-based water programs, improved wet weather flow controls,
and improved involvement with tribal water quality programs. (17)
Traditional regulatory programs that focused on industrial and
municipal dischargers have achieved measurable progress in
controlling pollution from those sources. Now, however, the
largest remaining threats to water quality are believed to be
diffuse, wet weather flows, including agricultural runoff,
combined sewer overflows, urban stormwater, and sanitary sewer
overflows. The major focus of EPA's water program is to address
wet weather pollution, using existing Clean Water Act tools and
new initiatives, as well.
Using a Federal Advisory Committee, EPA is working with
stakeholders to develop recommendations to coordinate
implementation of urban, municipal wet weather water pollution
control programs with a minimum of regulatory burden. One
subcommittee is assisting EPA in developing Phase II of the
national stormwater program for small sources, as required by the
Clean Water Act. The 1987 amendments to the Act directed EPA to
implement a permit program for stormwater discharges from
industries and municipalities. Phase I focused on larger
stormwater discharges. The advisory committee is helping EPA
identify options to manage stormwater discharges in small cities,
which are not yet covered by regulations.
Another subcommittee is evaluating options to deal with
sanitary sewer overflows (SSOs) in urban areas. SSOs are
discharges of raw sewage that occur when a sewer system is
overwhelmed, generally due to increased water flows or
structural, operational, or maintenance problems. This
subcommittee is helping EPA refine an enforcement policy and
develop a national approach for controlling SSOs. Previously, EPA
used a similar stakeholder group to develop a national policy on
combined sewer overflows (CSOs) issued in April 1994. CSOs differ
from SSOs in that they are overflows from sewers designed to
carry both sanitary wastes and rainwater. State and local
governments are involved in all of these activities.
EPA revised guidance for the nonpoint source program and Clean
Water Act section 319 grants for FY1997 and future years to
eliminate the competitive grant program and give states more
flexibility to implement these programs under a more streamlined
framework. The guidance outlines nine key elements to be
reflected in state programs (e.g., strong partnerships with
stakeholders, explicit short and long terms goals for protecting
surface and ground waters). States that meet the nine criteria
can be designated as leadership or Tier I states, making them
eligible for incentives such as multi-year grants, reduced amount
and frequency of reporting, and self-assessment by states
themselves. These incentives contrast with the previous program
approach, in which states which did not meet particular
requirements received less EPA grant money.
EPA recently released a policy statement to encourage effluent
trading in watersheds. (18) Effluent trading is intended by EPA
to be an innovative way for stakeholders to develop more common
sense, market-based solutions to water quality problems in
watersheds. A discharger that can reduce pollution below the
minimum required to meet water quality standards can trade or
sell its excess reductions to others in the watershed. This
creates an economic incentive for dischargers to go beyond
minimum pollution reduction and encourages pollution prevention.
The guidance identifies a range of trading alternatives,
including intra-plant trades, point source/point source trades,
point/nonpoint source trades, and trades between nonpoint
sources. Watershed-based trading will be implemented on a
voluntary basis under existing CWA authorities. States,
responsible for water quality standards in all states and for
permit issuance in the majority of jurisdictions, will be greatly
involved if effluent trading moves beyond the 17 experimental
projects discussed or underway so far. The Administration's Clean
Water Initiative and recent legislative proposals offer some
incentives for effluent trading, which is allowable under current
law, but no program or grant incentives are authorized in the
CWA.
More generally, EPA is developing or pursuing other
administrative reforms that would affect state management of
water quality programs, such as reducing reporting imposed on
regulatory agencies and permittees based on good performance, an
upcoming review of the water quality standards program to enhance
water quality management on a watershed basis, and developing
guidance for assessing risks at a watershed ecosystem level.
DISCUSSION AND VIEWS OF STAKEHOLDERS
It is apparent that a great many program initiatives are
occurring at EPA and in the water program specifically, so that,
even if Congress does not pass Clean Water Act amendments soon,
change is underway. Some say that the types of changes are
logical next steps in the evolution of environmental programs and
the Administration's efforts to reinvent government. Others say
that what is occurring is a sea change in policy without clear
prospects that environmental benefits will result. Whether the
direction and pace of EPA's administrative reforms will satisfy
critics of the environmental laws and of the agency's
implementation remains to be seen. Likewise, it is possible that
some reform initiatives supported by EPA and stakeholder groups
could be stalled by a lack of legislative endorsement from the
Congress.
The significance of many of these activities, whether one
considers agencywide initiatives such as the Performance
Partnership System or program-specific reforms, is difficult to
assess in these early stages. Most participants are enthusiastic
about the changes in process affecting the EPA-state partnership.
That view is not universally held, however. There are concerns
about how some of the broad initiatives will be implemented and
about if, in EPA's enthusiasm for state flexibility and reduced
federal oversight, support for core elements of environmental
protection programs will disappear.
States' Views. States for the most part endorse the
general direction and concepts behind the reinvention and
performance partnership initiatives. Some, however, have concerns
about implementation. Virtually all states worry about having
adequate resources from federal or their own sources to fund
their activities, particularly as they assume enhanced day-to-day
responsibilities. State-collected permit fees generally cover
only a portion of states' administrative costs and in most cases
would have to be raised to politically unacceptable levels in
order to cover additional management tasks. Along with more
responsibility and more work, states would like to see more
financial support, but prospects for additional federal funding
are dim. Many seek assurance that EPA's commitment to a changed
federal-state relationship is sincere and lasting and will not
return to past practice of detailed federal oversight, either as
a result of the passage of time or differential implementation by
separate EPA regional offices. At the program level in many
states, there also is concern over the potential for intensified
competition between environmental programs (water versus air
quality, for example) and the potential that some will be
defunded and eliminated as a result of block grants.
While many states are eager and capable of assuming
responsibilities previously managed at the federal level, this is
not true of all. The 1995 NAPA report discusses this point.(19)
All state governments have developed substantially greater
capacity to address their own environmental problems and to
manage EPA programs over the past two decades. A few states
have as much technical capacity as EPA's regional office, or
more, and have developed programs that are more effective
than those required by federal law. Some states, however,
have been slower to build their capacity and have shown
little interest in assuming greater responsibilities.
One challenge for EPA, then, is to encourage state flexibility
and devolution, rewarding high-performing states, but also to be
prepared to enforce against, or assume day-to-day implementation
responsibilities in, states that fail to meet national standards.
Environmentalists' Views. Other interest groups are
more cautionary at this point, including some in the
environmental community who wonder about the impact of shifting
away from traditional measures of program performance and
environmental improvement. Some say that, in the drive to pursue
local priorities and goals, national standards and objectives
could disappear. While federal priorities are on developing
place-based initiatives, they are quite resource-intensive, and
environmentalists are concerned that the baseline national water
program elements such as water quality standards and industrial
effluent guidelines will be shortchanged and underfunded.
Environmentalists support many of the EPA initiatives, either
conceptually or specifically (they are especially supportive of
the stakeholder discussions on wet weather pollution problems),
but note that the resource-intensive nature of CSI, Project XL
and others appears to be drawing resources away from core program
needs. If resources are limited, they say, EPA's list of priority
projects should be shortened to focus on those with the most
environmental benefit, such as streamlining the stormwater
regulatory program.
Many in the environmental community are also concerned about
the combined effects of budget cutting at federal and state
levels. Program responsibilities are being turned over to the
states, in the name of efficiency and reinvention at the federal
level, but state budgets also are shrinking. These comments echo
the states' own concerns about adequate resources, but
environmentalists worry that the result at the state level could
be no enforcement in some areas or inadequate implementation in
others.
Environmentalists also have concerns with the performance
partnership arrangements between EPA and states, particularly
that citizen input is lacking. They argue that if federal
oversight is to be reduced, along with decreased reporting by
permittees and states, that flexibility should be balanced by
more public scrutiny through enhanced citizen participation.
Business and Industry's Views. Industry is supporting
and actively participating in the wide range of projects and
initiatives at EPA. At the same time, industry groups are
independently and voluntarily pursuing a number of nonregulatory
initiatives, or private codes of practice, concerning
environmental management systems and self-auditing. These private
codes call upon firms to adopt broad new forms of environmental
behavior, both to reflect public concerns about corporate
environmental conduct and protect the environment more
effectively. (20) Each requires companies to adopt environmental
management systems, audit progress towards goals they set for
themselves, and, to varying degrees, communicate to outside
groups. None includes specific environmental performance
standards that firms must meet, however. Examples of these
voluntary practices include:
- - the Chemical Manufacturers Association's Responsible
Care program, consisting of guiding principles and codes
for member companies developed in response to public
distrust of the chemical industry following accidents in
Bhopal, India, and West Virginia in the mid-1980s;
- - the international environmental management standard,
ISO 14000, to build consensus on environmental management
standards among major manufacturing countries to
facilitate international trade; and
- - the Coalition for Environmentally Responsible
Economies' principles (CERES), intended to link corporate
environmental practices with information provided to
outsiders, particularly potential investors.
Private codes attempt to foster long-term changes in the way
firms integrate environmental aims with other business
objectives, in contrast with government regulation which focuses
on standards to limit pollution, define technology performance,
and specify waste management practices. Some see these industry
initiatives as companions to EPA-administered voluntary
pollution prevention programs, such as Project XL, and policies
that promote voluntary activities by the regulated community,
such as a 1995 policy to encourage corporate environmental
self-audits and improve compliance while providing some
protection against enforcement for violations reported as a
result of audits. (21)
Some in industry express a degree of hesitation about
regulatory reform and program devolution. Some industries, like
states, fear that EPA will not fully shift responsibilities to
states under the Performance Partnership System agreements but
instead will retain enforcement and other authorities at the
federal level, thus denying states the flexibility such
agreements envision.
While most businesses applaud less regulation, more
flexibility and site-specific decisionmaking, some also recognize
that giving more discretion to states can result in industry
facing a larger patchwork of laws which complicate a corporate
environmental manager's agenda. It is interesting to recall that
in the early 1970s many industrial interests (such as automobile
manufacturers and chemical producers) favored a strong federal
role in environmental policy, administered consistently, in
preference to the administrative inefficiency of different
requirements set separately by states. This concern was
influential in Congress' deliberations on the 1970 Clean Air Act
amendments and 1972 Clean Water Act amendments, when a strong
federal role in environmental protection was clearly established.
CONCLUSION
What is far from clear is how environmental results will be
measured and evaluated under these new systems of partnership and
regulatory flexibility. Nor is it clear whether questions about
assessing these initiatives are being asked while the activities
are still being developed.
It remains to be seen how policymakers will judge success or
failure of the initiatives. Without articulation of how EPA and
others will evaluate the efforts, there is little way of knowing
if cost savings and efficiency will be valued more highly than
environmental improvements, for example. If traditional
performance measures such as stream miles that attain water
quality standards give way to alternative measures such as number
of innovative pilot programs begun by states, it is not clear how
information will be generated to assess compliance with existing
statutory requirements or environmental quality overall. Even
today, monitoring systems and our ability to evaluate long term
trends in environmental quality are poor. Unless agreement can be
reached on outcome measurements as these initiatives are being
developed, and unless such measurements are clearly understood by
all, questions about their success in achieving environmental
goals will continue. A related issue for policymakers may be
whether there will be such flexibility and individual
priority-setting among states that concerns develop, as they did
in earlier times, about inconsistencies and uneven standards
leading states, regions, or localities into economic competition
based on the environmental rules they enforce.
One result of these activities, if they are fully implemented,
may be less friction in the governmental system (between
intergovernmental partners, between regulators and industry). Few
would doubt that such a result is desirable, particularly if it
proves to be compatible with continued pursuit of the goals and
objectives of environmental laws.
Endnotes
1. Vice President Al Gore. From Red Tape to Results,
Creating a Government that Works Better & Costs Less. Report
of the National Performance Review. Washington, 1993. 168 p.
2. Lepkowski, Will. "Government seeks new balance
in environmental protection." Chemical & Engineering
News, Oct. 30, 1995. p. 44.
3. H.R. 961, the Clean Water Amendments of 1995. For further
information, see Clean Water: Summary of H.R. 961, As Passed, CRS
Report 95-427 ENR.
4. The three reports of the National Performance Review,
issued in 1993, 1994, and 1995, are available on the Internet at http://www.npr.gov/homepage/viewl.html.
5. 'Reinventing Environmental Regulation' Clinton
Administration Regulatory Reform Initiatives released Mar. 16,
1995 in Daily Environment Reporter, Mar.17, 1995, E 1
-E23.
6. Presidential panel recommends framework for reforming
environmental regulations." Daily Environment Report, Feb.
13, 1996, AA1-AA2.
7. National Academy of Public Administrators. Setting
Priorities, Getting Results, A New Direction for EPA. April
1995. 221 p.
8. Statement by William D. Ruckelshaus before the Senate
Appropriations Committee Subcommittee on VA-HUD-Independent
Agencies, Feb. 29, 1996.
9. "State-EPA accord dramatically scales back federal
oversight." Inside E P.A. Special Report, June 5, 1995. 4 p.
The text of the partnership agreement is provided.
10. U.S. General Accounting of fine. An Integrated Approach
Could Reduce Pollution and Increase Regulatory Efficiency. GAO/RCED-96-41.
January 1996. 18 p.
11. The text of this guidance is available online at this EPA
Internet site:
http://earthl.epa.gov/docs/OWOW/PPG/ppgguide.html.
12. Further information is available at this EPA Internet
site: http://www.epa.gov/CSI/CSI/.
13. Environmental justice stems from concern that minority
populations and/or low-income populations bear a disproportionate
amount of adverse health and environmental effects from
pollution. For further information, see CRS Report 92-646 ENR,
Environmental Equity.
14. Ginsberg, Beth S. and Cynthia Cummis. "EPA's Project
XL: A Paradigm for Promising Regulatory Reform." Environmental
Law Reporter, February 1996, 26 ELR 10059-10064. Further
information is available at this EPA Internet site: http://www.epa.gov/ProjectXL/.
15. EPA has a similar small community environmental compliance
assistance program which includes flexible enforcement policies.
Information on the compliance assistance centers, compliance
incentives for small businesses, and small community compliance
programs is available on the Internet at http://www.epa.gov/docs/OECA/oedtrm.html.
16. "EPA 'Permits Improvement Team' floats sweeping new
recommendations." Inside E.P.A. Weekly Report, vol. 17,
no. 7, Feb. 16, 1996. pp. 1, 8-11.
17. Perciasepe, Robert. "National Water Program Agenda
for the Future: 1996-1997." Memorandum to Employees of the
National Water Program, Jan. 16, 1996. In Daily Environment
Report, Jan. 17, 1996, E1-E12.
18. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. "Effluent
trading in watersheds policy statement." Federal
Register, vol. 61, no. 28, Feb. 9, 1996, 4994-4996.
19. National Academy of Public Administrators, supra note
7, at 86.
20. Nash, Jennifer and John Ehrenfeld. "Code Green,
Business Adopts Voluntary Environmental Standards." Environment,
vol. 38, Jan./Feb. 1996. pp. 16-20, 36-45.
21. For further information, see CRS Report 95-817 ENR, Voluntary
Programs to Reduce Pollution.
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