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Ten Questions the Senate Should Ask Lisa Jackson

January 8th, 2009 Leave a comment Go to comments
Lisa Jackson, former Commissioner of the NJ Department of Environmental Protection.

The US Senate Environment and Public Works Committee will hold a confirmation hearing on Lisa Jackson as US EPA Administrator next week.

Below are 10 questions Senators should ask about Jackson’s record in NJ, prepared by our Washington DC friends at Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER). Full documentation to support the facts in the questions can be found as links to this press release – scroll down to read the questions. PEER is making the named DEP employee sources available to media for interviews):

TEN QUESTIONS THE SENATE SHOULD ASK LISA JACKSON — Committee Urged to Scrutinize Jackson’s Actions and Decisions in New Jersey
http://www.peer.org/news/news_id.php?row_id=1147


1. Whistleblower Retaliation

In January 2007, the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) reassigned its top nuclear engineer for the past 15 years, Dennis Zannoni, to a cubicle without a phone or internet access. The basis for the action was a verbal complaint by an unnamed U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission staff member. The basis of the complaint was that Zannoni questioned the expertise and objectivity of a panel assembled by the NRC to advise on the re-licensing application for the troubled Oyster Creek nuclear power plant – which has been operating more than 37 years, longer than any other commercial plant.

DEP Commissioner Lisa Jackson authorized the reassignment. Zannoni was ultimately allowed to remain at DEP but may no longer work on nuclear issues.

Question:

Should EPA employees who blow the whistle on problems that trigger complaints expect handling by Ms. Jackson similar to that which Dennis Zannoni received?

2. Respect for Science and Scientists Delivering Unwelcome News

One of the first controversies Ms. Jackson confronted at DEP as Commissioner was a scandal about scientific fraud in setting state chromium cleanup standards, including a dissenting report filed by one of DEP’s own scientists, Zoe Kelman, showing that individual cancer risks from continued presence of airborne exposure to chromium may be as high as 1 in 10 at some sites the state has declared to be clean.

In response, under Commissioner Jackson –

  • Her top deputy issued a gag order directing employees to keep any “potentially sensitive information confidential” and refrain from disclosing agency data to any outside parties “until it is ready for public distribution”;
  • Ms. Kelman was removed from chromium-related issues and denied meaningful work. Commissioner Jackson would not respond to a PEER request for clarification of Ms. Kelman’s status. Ms. Kelman, a supervisory-level engineer at DEP for almost 20 years before leaving last August, said “I could no longer work under those conditions”; and
  • After the DEP Division of Science, Research and Technology completed a health assessment confirming Ms. Kelman’s work, finding heightened risks of lung cancer from exposure to airborne chromium in the Jersey suburbs of the New York metropolitan area linked to scores of contaminated sites which DEP had declared clean, Ms. Jackson dismantled the Division, thus precluding any future scientific assessments of toxic clean-up effectiveness.

Question:

How can you assure scientists at EPA that they will not also be marginalized or punished for reporting conclusions that are at odds with your official agenda?

3. Untimely Public Heath Warnings

In the infamous Kiddie Kollege case, in which a day care center was operating in a mercury-contaminated former thermometer factory, the DEP did not immediately warn the parents and workers about possible dangers for some period of time.

In an August 3, 2006 press release, Lisa Jackson stated:

As soon as the DEP discovered that the formerly abandoned site was housing a day care center, inspectors moved in, took samples and shut it down…A day care center should be a safe haven — not a room full of toxic mercury.”
http://www.nj.gov/oag/newsreleases06/pr20060803b.html

But, as the New York Times reported, Jackson knew that DEP failed to enforce a 1995 Clean-up Order and that DEP “discovered” the problem at the day-care center during the first week of April 2006.

Instead of acting immediately upon discovery of the problem, DEP quietly negotiated a voluntary cleanup agreement with the owner and waited more than 14 weeks before they sampled and notified parents on July 28, 2006. According to the New York Times of 9/1/06:

“…the site remained contaminated, and as far as the department knew, unoccupied, until inspectors visited it in April and found that Kiddie Kollege, a day care center serving children as young as 8 months old, was operating in the building. Yet the center, which is in Franklin Township, was allowed to remain open for more than three months, until state environmental investigators determined in late July that the site was still contaminated.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/01/nyregion/01mercury.html?scp=5&sq=Kiddie%20Kollege&st=cse

Question:

Were you telling the whole truth when you stated that DEP acted “as soon as” it “discovered that the formerly abandoned site was housing a day care center” – or did the Times misreport the facts?

In the New York Times of August 19, 2006, you were quoted as saying: “I won’t run from the fact that D.E.P. played a role in this, but lots of other people did too. And lots of people are running to point fingers who need to be looked at really closely.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/19/nyregion/19mercury.html?scp=1&sq=Kiddie%20Kollege&st=cse

What in your judgment did DEP under your watch do wrong; was it corrected; who else was to blame and were they held to account?

4. Inaction on Greenhouse Gases

On the very day that President-elect Obama officially named your selection to head EPA, New Jersey released its overdue “Draft Global Warming Response Act Recommendation Report” which contains the following statement:

In November 2005, New Jersey adopted a new regulation under the authority of New Jersey’s Air Pollution Control Act to classify CO2 as an air contaminant. This rule enables the State…to enact additional rules to reduce CO2 emissions from other sectors as necessary. It also sends a powerful message in light of the federal government’s failure to regulate CO2 under its existing Clean Air Act Authority. New Jersey also added CO2 as an air pollutant in its emission statement program requirements. The emission statement program require the annual reporting of actual emissions of about 50 air contaminants by approximately 700 of the largest stationary sources of air pollution in New Jersey.” ([sic] Page 100)

Although New Jersey has had the legal authority since 2005 (several months before you were appointed) to directly regulate C02 and other GHG, it has used that authority solely for the purpose of compiling an inventory – rather than taking direct actions such as imposing fees or limiting new major emission sources.

Question:

Despite having the authority to act, why did you fail to take any regulatory action to directly control greenhouse gas emissions during your entire tenure at DEP?

5. Crippling Pollution Enforcement

In a June 2007 press release, DEP touted the filing of 120 lawsuits to recover “natural resources damages” (NRD) which “could result in hundreds of millions of dollars in compensation from polluters who have harmed New Jersey’s natural resources, including numerous manufacturers and marketers of the gasoline additive MTBE”.
http://www.nj.gov/dep/newsrel/2007/07_0037.htm

On August 24, 2007, a state Superior Court dismissed with prejudice an attempt by DEP to recover a natural resource damage claim involving benzene and toluene contamination of private wells in the Hillwood Lakes area of Ewing Township. (N.J. Dept. of Envtl. Prot. v. Exxon Mobil Corp., Docket No. MER-L-2933-02 (N.J. Superior Ct. Law Div. Aug. 24, 2007)). The Court found that DEP did not follow the rule-making process to establish, by regulation, a reliable formula for calculating natural resources damages. In the absence of regulations, the Court also found DEP lacked adequate scientific support to proceed on a case-by-case basis.

As a consequence of this regulatory breakdown, not only are all the 120 NRD suits in jeopardy but so are all future litigation and ongoing NRD settlement negotiations in an unknown number of groundwater pollution cases. Legal casualties include possible recovery from as many as 4,600 contaminated sites prioritized by DEP which may be forever foreclosed due to an inexplicable related lapse by the Corzine Administration in allowing the statute of limitations on these cases to expire on June 30, 2007, after it had been twice extended under previous administrations.

This regulatory train wreck appears to have been completely preventable, but DEP ignored repeated acknowledgements by state officials of the need to act:

  • In 2002 “Vulnerability Assessments,” DEP estimated that as many as 4,600 cases may require NRD litigation which would necessitate both rule making and extending the statute of limitations. This data prompted former DEP Commissioner Bradley Campbell to say he was “astounded to find on taking office in [2002] that the [DEP] had not pursued, or left unsettled, thousands of cases against polluters responsible for a wide range of damages to New Jersey’s natural resources,” pledging to put the program “back on track”;
  • In a 2004 settlement agreement of the case New Jersey Society of Environmental & Economic Development v. Campbell (N.J. Super. Law Div., Mercer County) DEP legally committed to propose formal natural resource damage regulations (but never did); and
  • At a May 24, 2005 seminar at Rutgers’ Cook College, John Sacco, Chief of the DEP Office of Natural Resource Restoration pledged that natural resource damage regulations will “hopefully” be proposed in fall 2005. But since then, there has been no apparent activity to move rules forward.

Question:

What did you do to address the natural resource damages issue when you were at DEP? Why were these legal commitments to adopt NRD regulations not honored?

6. Retreat on Flood Hazard Controls

Ms. Jackson has referenced growing up in New Orleans Ninth Ward as a seminal experience. When New Jersey first proposed strict Flood Hazard regulations to prevent development in stream buffers and other vulnerable zones, she was a staunch defender, saying in March 24, 2008 statement:

“Building affordable housing there [in flood zones] would be morally wrong.”

Yet something happened between the proposal and the final product. This past June, DEP quietly admitted that it created large loopholes in the recently adopted Flood Hazard regulations and the highly touted buffer requirements for exceptional water quality streams. As a result, hundreds of projects are grandfathered from the protections of the new Flood Hazard rules and “Category One” or C1 requirements of 300-foot stream buffers around sensitive rivers and lakes. Loopholes exempt hundreds of projects that had previously obtained DEP permits or local land use approvals, as well as pending projects. Moreover, the Flood Hazard grandfather loophole is far larger in scope because these rules apply statewide to all streams including urbanized watersheds, while the C1 buffers only apply to a very small subset of waterways.

In addition, new legislation called the Permit Extension Act, sponsored and negotiated by Jackson, also increased flood risks because it exempted permits granted under prior rules (which were weaker in some respects) from new Flood Hazard requirements. In the “compromise” final bill crafted by Ms. Jackson only environmentally sensitive Pinelands, Highlands and agricultural lands were left outside the Permit Extension Act but urban areas got no such consideration.

All told, these concessions will undoubtedly greatly worsen flooding and water quality problems that both Governor Corzine and DEP Commissioner Jackson pledged to combat.

Question:

Was this reversal of flood hazard protections your decision or were you following orders? If the latter, did you consider resigning rather than reversing on a matter of principle?

7. Failure to Protect Drinking Water – The Case of Perchlorate

In a November 10, 2008 comment letter to the U.S. EPA, Jeanne Herb, the New Jersey DEP Director of the Office of Policy and Planning criticized proposed EPA standards for perchlorate in drinking water:

On October 7, 2005 the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (NJDEP) received from the New Jersey Drinking Water Quality Institute (NJDWQI), a legislatively created public advisory body, a recommendation to establish an MCL for perchlorate of 5 ug/L. The Department plans to propose such an MCL including monitoring and compliance determination requirements before the end of 2008 with adoption later in 2009. The NJDEP believes that having an MCL for perchlorate is good public health policy for both New Jersey and for the country as a whole.”

Despite having the scientific justification for imposing a perchlorate standard of 5 ug/L since 2005 (before your tenure at DEP began) DEP has still yet to propose any perchlorate standard.

Question:

Given your track record in New Jersey why would one reasonably expect timely promulgation of “good public health” regulations at EPA if you are confirmed?

8. Dereliction on Wildlife Protections

For more than 10 years, the U.S. EPA has consistently and repeatedly advised New Jersey of its failure to promulgate water quality standards which pass legal muster. In 2007, DEP proposed new Surface Water Quality Standards which were still deficient because they would leave bald eagle, peregrine falcon, freshwater mussels and other aquatic life vulnerable to the effects of mercury, the pesticide DDT and the toxic effects of PCB’s.

In a July 23, 2007 letter to DEP, the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service stated that –

  • The “existing numeric State of New Jersey Quality Standards remain unprotective for mercury and DDT”;
  • For “wildlife protection, attainment of New Jersey’s numeric PCB standard is stalled due to implementation issues that need clear and decisive resolution…”; and
  • “The USEPA [Environmental Protection Agency] and the State continue to be in noncompliance with the Service’s [1996] Biological Opinion and may be vulnerable to legal challenges.”

Question:

Should EPA take enforcement action against New Jersey DEP for these violations? If not, how much longer should EPA wait? Would you recuse yourself from EPA regulatory oversight decisions directed against New Jersey?

Given the performance of New Jersey DEP under your leadership, why would one expect you to enforce compliance with the Clean Water Act and the Endangered Species Act against other states?

9. Contracting Out Toxic Cleanup oversght

In a breakfast roundtable with a real estate group on April 3, 2008, DEP Commissioner Lisa Jackson said:

“Sometimes I feel our department is so overworked that we are not getting results, we’re just pushing paper. Therefore, I feel outsourcing the consultant program to the private sector will ease the workload and lower the wait time for all those involved in site remediation.”

In legislative testimony she called the privatization plan “transformational change“.
Less than six months earlier, however, Commissioner Jackson admitted “We realize that the state’s system that allows self-reporting for monitoring of these contaminated properties is broken.”

Question:

Can we expect you to embrace contracting out EPA functions, as well?

If relying on industry self-policing in New Jersey was such a disaster, why do you want to expand it?

How would contracting out toxic oversight duties to industry have prevented the long series of well publicized fiascos such as Encap, Kiddie Kollege and the Ford plant PCB clean-up that occurred just during your watch?

10. Massive Salary Inflation amid Attrition

During your tenure, state budget shortfalls reportedly prevented the DEP from replacing departing staff. DEP lost an estimated 300 positions during this period, nearly 10% of the entire agency workforce.
Yet the Asbury Park Press reported on August 10, 2008 that, based upon state records, DEP experienced among the highest growth in grade and salary inflation among high-level employees. During the period from April 2006 to April 2008 (while you served as Commissioner), the number of DEP employees earning more than $100,000 jumped from 38 to 253.

Question:

Why, in the face of staff shortages, did you allow the ranks of top-paid six-figure employees to grow more than six-fold on your watch?

Would not this sharp growth of hyper-salaried positions help preclude filling line anti-pollution slots?

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  1. unprovincial
    January 8th, 2009 at 21:12 | #1

    Great article. And the “hyper-salaried” positions were not even the most deserving candidates. Not only that, they occurred during a supposed promotional freeze that didn’t seem to apply to those with friends in high places. There has been a change in titles too, with large numbers of staff being “walked” to new titles that may not sufficiently protect them during any bumping that might occur during a Reduction In Force (RIF), such as formerly Hazardous Materials (Hazma) titles now being Environmental Specialists. And, to add insult to injury, the entire BEERA staff now has the higher paying Research Scientist title while they do not do research and don’t all have the prerequisite Masters of Science degree. The scientists that did, those in DSRT, were dissolved as you point out above. Most of them are being jerked around by mgmt now, waiting to find out where they will be exiled to. And there is at least one engineer, a Site Manager in the Publicly Funded Site Remediation program, that went from a Hazma title to a Research Scientist title after a desk audit. His masters degree is a Masters of Business Administration! So the inequality of treatment continues. Read John Bury’s NJVoices series on Dirt on DEP for more insight.

  2. JerseyOpine
    January 8th, 2009 at 21:45 | #2

    I thought Obama was supposed to have a rigorous vetting process. Lisa Jackson seems to be flying under that radar, how has she made it to confirmation hearings?
    Was Corzine the only source they looked at for her NJ DEP record?

  3. 14yrbumpkin
    January 9th, 2009 at 01:03 | #3

    I just hope it doesn’t mean that Obama’s developer friend (the one that helped him buy the house in Chicago) is the one who suggested that Jackson was the one to pick!

  4. Joseph Zannoni
    May 10th, 2010 at 14:55 | #4

    Continued Vindication of Dennis Zannoni

    Contaminated Oyster Creek Nuclear Plant Water Reaches NJ Aquifer
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    Paul Napoli
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    Posted by Paul NapoliMay 10, 2010 1:39 AM
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    Contaminated water from a leak last year at the Oyster Creek Nuclear Power Plant has reached the aquifer beneath New Jersey that supplies most of the drinking water for southern part of the state.

    The discovery that radioactive tritium has seeped into The Kirkwood–Cohansey Aquifer prompted the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (NJDEP) to announce that the state is opening a new investigation into the 2009 leak at the power plant in Lacey Township, NJ. The NJDEP has evidence that the contamination level is 50 times higher than the allowable standards.

    Tritium occurs naturally in the environment in tiny amounts and is a by-product of nuclear power plant operations. Tritium can increase a person’s risk of cancer if they inhale, ingest or absorb it through the skin.

    NJDEP says 180,000 gallons of contaminated water flowed from two small holes in separate pipes at the plant on April 9, 2009. The agency has issued a Spill Act directive to the Exelon Corporation, the owner of the power plant, requiring the company to cooperate with investigators and take action to stop the radioactive substance from reaching drinking water supplies.

    The NJDEP told The Washington Post that if the state must step in and stop the spread of the contamination, it would bill Exelon Corp. three times the cleanup cost as a penalty.

    “There is a problem here,’’ DEP Commissioner Bob Martin said in a press release. “I am worried about the continuing spread of the tritium into the groundwater and its gradual moving towards wells in the area. The DEP must identify the risk and determine how to deal with the problem. This is not something that can wait. That would be unacceptable.”

    According to the New Jersey Geological Survey, the Kirkwood–Cohansey Water-table Aquifer is especially vulnerable to contamination because it lacks protective confining layers that prevent contaminants from vertically draining into the aquifer from the surface above. Once a contaminant reaches the aquifer, high permeability allows the substance to spread quickly throughout the aquifer.

    The NJDEP says there is no immediate threat to private or public drinking water supplies. The flow of the radioactive tritium water has been monitored and moving at a rate of one to three feet per day. They estimate it would take about 14 years for the contaminated water to reach the closest residential well nearly two miles away.

    “As a result, I am calling for a new investigation and am planning to put an action plan together with Exelon for a long-term solution,” said Commissioner Martin. “We have an obligation to protect the groundwater for residents of this state. While there is no imminent public health threat, we must act to ensure such a threat does not occur.”

    At the time of the spill in 2009, the federal government’s Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) who oversees nuclear power plant operation did not order a cleanup.

    In the press release, NJDEP criticized the actions of Exelon Corporation, not believing them “timely or extensive enough.”

    “We have determined there is a need for more immediate action to compel Exelon to act,’’ said Commissioner Martin.

    Tags: New Jersey, NJ, Oyster Creek, Nuclear Power Plant, Leak, Contaminated, Exelon, Tritium, Kirkwood–Cohansey, Aquifer, Drinking Water, Department, Environmental, Protection, Bob Martin

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