
Vol. 2 No. 20 October 1, 2001
by Guest Blogger, 7/17/2002
In This Issue
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SUBHEAD
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Comments from the Executive Director
Federal Budget
Economic Stimulus Package
Continuing Resolution Passed
More Revised Surplus Figures
Regulatory Issues
Schregardus Withdraws Nomination to Head EPA Enforcement
Graham Signals Activist Agenda for Regulatory Review
OMB Issues Data Quality Guidelines
Nonprofit Sector
House Bills Would Allow Congregations To Fund Candidates
Bush May Split Faith Initiative, Push Incentives To Donate
FEC Announces Rulemaking On Use of Internet in Campaigns
Lobby Disclosure Reports Now Online
Technology & Information Policy
Anti-Terrorism Legislation Hearings
In Defense of Freedom
City E-Gov Evaluations
Domain Name Dispute Resolution
OMB Watch Upgrades Its Online Options
Reader Responses
Right-to-Know and Terrorists; Nursing Home Regulations
SIDE BAR: Budget: First Things First; Trust in Gov't Up; Poverty Drops in 2000; Recession?; Nondefense Spending
Comments from the Executive Director
Next to the computer monitor in my office is a button that reads "Information is the Currency of Democracy." I'm proud of that button. I'm proud of the fact that in the United States we place a premium on having an informed and educated public. I'm proud that our country was founded on a principle that there should be a free flow of information. And I'm proud that the federal government has encouraged use of the Internet to expand the public's right-to-know, which is this century's newest grand experiment in democracy.
I like to think OMB Watch has played a role in advancing public access to government information. In 1989, for example, OMB Watch helped to start RTK NET, an online service providing access to various government databases, but mostly those dealing with pollution. RTK NET has been praised by Presidents, by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), by community groups across the country, and by many others. We have received many "thank you" notes from families who found RTK NET an easy way to learn about dangers that are present in their communities.
So I was surprised in the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks to receive hostile email about RTK NET. One individual wondered "how much blood will be on your hands for posting" information about environmental dangers. "You are truly proof that sincerity is no guarantee for truth, and that education is no guarantee for wisdom." Many of these comments are not fit to print. However, some are and we have posted one at the end of this newsletter. The person fears that someone will use the information on RTK NET to "create an explosion and chemical release."
These fears warrant careful consideration and thoughtful response. While "information is the currency of democracy," we certainly recognize the necessity to balance our right to access information with the nation's security and with the realization that some information may both create risks and provide needed facts to ensure public safety and security.
In an open society we run enormous risks. Any individual or group of individuals can cause great damage. We try to protect against such damage, but the potential remains. One way is to make ourselves as aware as we can of the risks and take steps to ameliorate them. An alternative is to limit the free flow of information, which is how totalitarian societies operate. While security may improve, the spirit of civil society is lost. We cannot let that happen here.
In the last ten days there has been an understandable, but we believe inappropriate, response to cut back on public access to government information.
We recognize the importance of this debate and believe that all parties are motivated by a hope to protect and serve all Americans. After careful review, we conclude:
- People deserve to know what dangers they are facing in their communities so that they can protect themselves. Thus, the right-to-know must prevail in an open society.
- Strong measures should be developed to protect plants that are using dangerous chemicals from attack. Such measures will require federal funds to study site security and implement changes; it will require mandating safer substitutes for dangerous chemicals where possible; it will also likely call for smaller volumes of chemicals located on-site; and it calls for sharing more information with workers and families who face potential dangers.
- An on-going analysis of the threats faced by our society is needed so that the public can develop a sober, clear-eyed view of the realities and policies that may be necessary to deal with these threats.
- EPA has removed from its web site Risk Management Plans (RMP) that are collected under the Clear Air Act. RMPs created an enormous controversy two years ago when the first round of data was to be posted to the Internet. One section of the RMP provided an Offsite Consequence Analysis (OCA) that required chemical companies to describe what could happen under worst case scenarios. Needless to say, chemical companies did not want to disclose that nearby families were living or working by a place that could seriously injure or kill them. With encouragement from the chemical manufacturers, the FBI noted that posting the OCA data on the Internet would increase the chances of a terrorist attack. Congress quickly followed suit with a law to prohibit government from posting the OCA data unless the President decided otherwise. Accordingly, EPA posted the RMP, minus the OCA, to its web site. With extremely narrow permissions, the law allowed the public to go to designated reading rooms where they could review a select number of the OCAs. Both the FBI and Congress have acknowledged that disclosure through the Internet of the remainder of the RMP information presented no unique increased threats of terrorism. This is why EPA's decision to remove the entire RMP is quite startling.
- Angela Logomasini of The Competitive Enterprise Institute published a piece in the Washington Times on September 27 providing a "wake-up call" to re-evaluate disclosure of RMP information. The article criticizes Greenpeace for collecting the OCA data from 50 plants in Louisiana and producing a report on potential dangers. Rick Hind, the legislative director for the Greenpeace Toxic Campaign responded with a letter that noted that "[the idea that] greater restriction of this information will somehow prevent terrorist attacks is hopelessly naive." He adds, "Any cursory reading of chemical engineering text books will show that facilities making and using large amount of chemicals such as chlorine have the potential for a catastrophic leak of poison gas." He continues by suggesting the "ultra hazardous" chemicals that have safer substitutes be phased out as recommended by the International Joint Commission in 1992. Following on the heels of the CEI article, the American Water Works Association is planning a lobby campaign to stop access to the OCA data through the reading rooms. And at least one treatment plant in the Washington, D.C. area will no longer provide access to its RMP, even without the OCA data.
- A lobby campaign was started by pipeline companies to remove legislative proposals that encourage community right-to-know, using the argument that such information would help terrorists. As anyone who has driven by pipelines knows, they are publicly marked with big signs. One environmentalist posted the following to an email list: "of what possible value to terrorists is public information about a pipeline company's pipeline integrity plans, past performance, spill data, testing results, etc.?" Referring to where he lives, he noted that "We... found that terror does not only come from abroad, and one way of reducing this type of terror [accidents] is by making company pipeline safety plans and performance more transparent to the public."
- The Office of Pipeline Safety within the Department of Transportation has posted a note to its web site saying that they "have discontinued providing open access to the National Pipeline Mapping System." Because of new security concerns about critical infrastructure systems, they will only provide pipeline data to pipeline operators, and federal, state and local government officials.
- The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry dropped from its web site a report that notes "security at chemical plants ranged from fair to very poor"and that "security around chemical transportation assets ranged from poor to non-existent." The report, Industrial Chemicals and Terrorism: Human Health Threat Analysis, Mitigation and Prevention, does not provide information about individual facilities.
- The U.S. Public Interest Research Group (PIRG) removed from its web page information from a recent report on the use of fertilizers in the states. The report listed the top 25 facilities storing extremely hazardous substances. PIRG says it removed the information from the web site after receiving a call from the fertilizer industry complaining that the report invited terrorists to attack those plants.
- Address nationwide unemployment, caused by the economic slump and exacerbated by the September 11 attacks;
- Shore up the safety net by expanding eligibility for Food Stamps, WIC, LIHEAP, and health care benefits, freeing up more resources of low and middle income Americans to boost consumption;
- Assist low-income families by extending the full tax "rebate" to those who received no rebate or by lowering payroll taxes to increase consumption;
- Provide federal funds to hard-pressed states so that state and local services will not be cut;
- Improve the nation's infrastructure -- air travel, better rail service, rebuilding New York City, school construction, and the like.
- The Economic Policy Institute's "Addressing the Nation's Needs: A Plan for Emergency Relief and Economic Stimulus," which sets forth a variety of proposals for a two-year economic stimulus plan.
- The Coalition on Human Needs has drafted a set of principles for an economic stimulus plan which should be on its website shortly
- The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities has also released an analysis showing why corporate tax rate cuts will not provide the necessary immediate benefits to the economy.
