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November
4, 1999
Environmental
Panel's New Look
Source: Los Angeles Times
Senator
John H Chafee (R-RI) was a Republican environmentalist in the tradition
of Teddy Roosevelt. As chairman of the Senate Environment and Public
Works Committee, he was instrumental in achieving bipartisan support
for a strong Safe Drinking Water Act and other effective regulatory
efforts. His death last week was a loss to many causes.
Today,
the committee has a new chairman with a decidedly different record
on the environment. He is conservative Republican Bob Smith of New
Hampshire, who just gave up a quixotic run for the presidency as
an independent and now is back in the GOP fold. One environmentalist
groaned that Smith's appointment would bring jubilation to oil,
chemical and power companies.
Indeed,
Smith has worked to make federal environmental regulation friendlier
to business or, as he puts it, less confrontational. That's not
necessarily bad in terms of how laws and regulations are enforced,
but it's important that standards not be sacrificed in the process.
Smith has a special interest in rewriting the Superfund law to ease
the burden on some businesses in cleaning up toxic waste sites.
On the other hand, he has a fairly good record on fish and wildlife
issues.
A Senate
source calls smith "a decent fellow" and hopes the senator will
respond to the challenge of his new responsibility in a way that
does not sacrifice the quality of the environment. That is a hope
that most Americans, who do want clean air and water, would share.
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