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Everything You Need to Know About the EPA

Background

What is the EPA?

The Environmental Protection Agency, or EPA, is a federal agency charged with monitoring and  maintaining a healthy environment in America.  Many credit U.S. Senator Gaylord Nelson with spurring interest in the environmental movement, he created Earth Day in the spring of 1970 which led to the creation of the EPA in December of that year.
The EPA monitors a huge array of environmental issues in America. The agency scrutinizes everything from the fuel standards to mercury levels in lakes and landfill regulations.

Clean Air Act

The EPA monitors air quality under the Clean Air Act, this includes ambient air as well as emissions from cars, factories and power plants.  Everyday the EPA releases air quality standards for the entire United States. A major focus of the EPA’s fight against air pollution is the reduction of greenhouse gases: carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide and fluorinated gases.  Tackling greenhouse gas emissions

Clean Water Act

Under the Clean Water Act of 1972, the EPA monitors the quality of American surface waters and pollution of both fresh and saltwater resources. The Clean Water Act is a revised and improved form of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act of 1948. The EPA announced it will give $10 million for beach cleanups around the nation, according to the EPA’s website.

Climate Change and the EPA

Through regulation of pollutants the EPA hopes to slow climate change, which the EPA defines as, “any significant change in measures of climate (such as temperature, precipitation, or wind) lasting for an extended period (decades or longer),” according to the agency’s website.  The EPA monitors weather patterns, sea level changes and greenhouse gas levels in the air.

Waste, Toxic Chemicals, Disposal and the EPA

Waste reduction and proper disposal of toxic materials is a major focus of the EPA. The Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, passed in 1976, was a landmark piece of legislation in terms of allowing the EPA to regulate disposal of waste. Subtitle-D legislation, passed in 1976, regulates the methods of disposal of non-hazardous solid waste.

Latest Posts

‘Why Do You Hate Jobs?’ Stephen Colbert Grills the EPA

The Colbert Report Mon – Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c Lisa Jackson www.colbertnation.com Colbert Report Full Episodes Political Humor & Satire Blog Video Archive It was a line of questioning straight out of the Barry Smitherman for Railroad Commission of Texas campaign last night on the faux news show ‘Colbert Report.’ Lisa Jackson, Administrator of the […]

Why a Bunch of Kids Are Suing the TCEQ

Last week, a Travis County district judge ruled in favor of a bunch of kids suing the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. Three environmentally-minded minors and a young adult argued that Texas’ air should be protected under the public trust doctrine much like Texas’ water, and the Judge agreed. In 2011, the youths drafted a […]

At House Hearing, Water Issues Dominate

When water became scarce in Texas last year, scrutiny quickly fell on the state’s burgeoning energy industry. Proposed new coal plants had trouble getting water permits. And hydraulic fracturing drillers faced accusations of groundwater contamination and excessive water use. But at the House joint hearing on energy and natural resources held last Wednesday, industry leaders gave representatives […]

Court Upholds EPA’s Greenhouse Gas Regulations

Today a federal appeals court upheld the first ever federal regulations aimed at reducing emissions of gases blamed for global warming. The unanimous ruling came over challenges from industry groups and around a dozen states, including Texas. Environmental groups lauded the decision. In a statement released early this afternoon, the Environmental Defense Fund singled out […]

Why an Environmental Group is Going After Austin’s Coal Plant

One environmental group believes that the Lower Colorado River Authority (LCRA) needs something more than just a chimney sweep to clean up its act. LCRA was served with a notice of intent to sue last week by the Environmental Integrity Project (EIP), representing the Texas Campaign for the Environment. The environmental group’s notice of intent […]

After Skipping Hearing, Armendariz Went to Sierra Club

Earlier this week, Al Aremendariz was back in the news. The former Region 6 administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) had been scheduled to appear at a House subcommittee hearing on the EPA, but canceled at the last minute. Texas regulators and other energy industry figures spent much of the hearing blasting him and the EPA anyway. […]

Looking at EPA Enforcement, Beyond the Rhetoric

The saying goes, “Don’t Mess With Texas,” and that was certainly the attitude on display today when a group of Texas regulators testified before a Congressional committee in Washington. At a the hearing of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce’s Subcommittee on Energy and Power entitled “EPA Enforcement Priorities and Practices,” the head of the Railroad Commission of Texas, Barry Smitherman, […]

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