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An Expanding Pattern Of Greenwashing And Incompetence

February 19th, 2023 No comments

Governor Murphy, DEP, Legislature And Now “Green Groups” Rebrand The Past

Three Recent Examples Highlight A Disturbing Pattern

“Who controls the past controls the future: who controls the present controls the past,” ~~~ George Orwell, 1984

I’ve criticized multiple examples of how Governor Murphy and his “first openly gay” (Gov. Murphy’s words) corporate lawyer led DEP very cynically simply recycle and rebrand watered-down versions of prior initiatives to create the false and misleading appearance of leadership and advancement of novel and progressive policies. The  Governor and Murphy DEP use slogans very effectively in their public relations and manipulation of the media and faux green groups.

But when one scrutinizes the actual policy, it becomes obvious that just the opposite is the case: we are going backwards, not forwards. Historical laws, regulations, plans and programs are actually being weakened, not strengthened.

That damaging phenomenon is now expanding into the Legislative arena and is being praised by the current crop of NJ “environmental leaders”.

I’d like to offer 3 recent illustrations of this very damaging dynamic.

The first and latest example comes in an email this morning from a friend who urged me to participate in the upcoming “teach in”“Reduce Plastic Pollution And $ave Taxpayers (sic) Money In NJ”.

Well, let me offer a few lessons from history.

First of all, the message is all wrong – it is not the environmental community’s role to focus on saving taxpayers’ money.

That message simply plays into and reinforces the right wing anti-tax – anti-government – anti-regulation – austerity sentiment.

In 1991, the Florio Administration crafted and the legislature passed the NJ Toxic Packaging Reduction Act.

That same year (1991), we worked on and passed the Dry Cell Battery Management Act.

Both laws were the start of holding manufacturers accountable for the environmental and public health impacts and costs of their products’ waste and mandating reductions in volume and toxicity.

(Contrast that with Gov. Murphy, who is running away from regulatory mandates as fast as he can.)

In 1993, we were working on a “source reduction” legislative package with mandates on a far broader array of consumer products sponsored by Assemblywoman Maureen Ogden (R-Essex – A973), but it was killed by Whitman and consumer products industry lobbyists. (I still recall that Tom Johnson wrote a page one Star Ledger story on that bill that had me quoted in direct contradiction to a quote by new Whitman DEP Commissioner Bob Shinn. I sense that Tom got a perverse kick out of that.)

The DEP Solid Waste Plan of 1993 had a source reduction policy that DEP never implemented.

At that time (and earlier in the late 1980’s) we also started policy research on material and energy lifecycle analysis as the technical basis for regulatory policy.

Florio integrated BPU energy planning into DEP, forming DEPE. He created a mercury Taskforce that set a DEP standard for mercury emission from garbage incinerators and had plans for other major sources, like coal plants, smelters, and sludge and medical waste incinerators.

Whitman DEP killed all that too – and she deregulated energy.

But now, 30 years later, the bar is set so low that the Biden EPA gets praise for reinstating a weak mercury rule repealed by the Trump EPA!

The lifecycle and “regulatory bubble” research we did provided the scientific basis for the 1991 Pollution Prevention Act and the facility-wide permitting program. (The FWP program also borrowed heavily from the 1984 RCRA/HSWA law’s “Facility Management Plans”. I drafted 45 FMP’s in 1985-86 under the EPA RCRA Grant).

The Pollution Prevention Act’s first priority was “toxics use reduction”. Mandated by DEP regulation.

Chemical and Pharmaceutical industry lobbyists radically opposed and ultimately gutted  that law too.

DEP never implemented the authority to mandate reductions from pollution prevention plans in DEP’s air, water, and hazardous waste permits. That provision of the law is still on the books, but is not implemented.

Current leaders are clueless. They should petition DEP for rulemaking to mandate lifecycle analysis (the road to carbon footprint) and incorporation of Pollution Prevention plans in all permits.

You have to find this stuff in the state library, because it’s “Down the Memory Hole”.

The current crop of NJ “leaders” are clueless about this history and arrogantly think they are progressive. That attitude also gives DEP and Democrats a HUGE pass.

The DEP head of Solid Waste Planning at the time (Kean – Florio DEP) was Gary Sondermeyer. He was a huge barrier and supported incineration and backed County planning powers. He viewed DEP role to rubber stamp County plans. He suppressed data requested by Gov. Florio’s Office (they drove all the policy). I made them aware of that data because I possessed it. But I had to provide it covertly to them in after hours meetings 3 nights a week in the Governor’s office. I was issued disciplinary actions twice for insubordination for this (got a 1 week suspension). My third strike was leaking Whitman’s mercury fish tissue coverup memo, which got me forced out. Yet today, Sondermeyer is portrayed an “advocate” in NJ Spotlight stories. So pathetic. Total amnesia. Orwell rules.

The second example is perhaps worse.

These faux “green” leaders are so bad that, last week, Ed Potosnak at NJ LCV issued a press release praising the Senate Environment Committee and Senator Greenstein for advancing a bill to mandate consideration of climate in the NJ Hazard Mitigation Plan.

But the NJ Hazard Mitigation Plan ALREADY considers climate and has done so for over 10 YEARS!

Over 10 years ago, myself and Jeff Tittel used to go to County public heatings on the County Plans and we were the only ones in the room! Look at this one from a 2013 post:

During the public comment period on this Ocean County plan, I stopped at the County planning office for maps that were referenced in the Plan. The County planners said they never even heard of the plan!

The flaw with the NJ Hazard Mitigation Plan is not failure to consider climate, it’s that they are NOT implemented in any state or local planning or regulatory program. So they are toothless and essentially meaningless. They are prepared by Sheriffs and police agencies who are out of the policy and planning loop.

When idiots like Ed Potosnak praise cynical fake legislation, they obscure this fundamental  flaw and provide cover for the status quo.

The third example is similar to this fake bill and the Murphy DEP rebranding project.

The NJ Senate Democrats pulled a similar stunt a few months ago, when I called out Bob Smith for sponsoring a bill to require that DEP conduct a study on what DEP called a “treatment based approach”, i.e. mandatory carbon treatment to remove unregulated chemicals from drinking water.

The clueless idiots –  “U-Turn” Anjuli Ramos of Sierra Club and corporate NJ Audubon – praised Smith for that bill. (So, again we must ask: What The Hell Is Going On At NJ Sierra CLub?)

NJ Spotlight drank the Kool-aid too and wrote a puff piece headlined “NJ steps up fight….

But DEP CONDUCTED THE STUDY “Required” by the bill OVER 10 YEARS AGO!

DEP FAILED TO IMPLEMENT THE STUDY’s POSITIVE FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS.

As a result the people of NJ have needlessly and unknowingly been drinking water laced with over 500 unregulated chemicals.

But the current crop of NJ “green” leaders know nothing about any of this – while they cheerlead for fake solutions, some of which actually weaken current policy and regulation and provide cover for DEP abdication and failure to protect public health and the environment. 

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Strange Spy Balloon Spotted Along Mexican Border

February 18th, 2023 No comments

Hey Joe Biden, Shoot This Mother Down!

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Just when you thought the Cold War 2.0 War Fever and the US Propaganda Machine could not get any worse, we have the Chinese Spy balloon Fiasco.

What a great diversion from Sy Hersh’s story that Joe Biden ordered the CIA to blow up the Nordstream pipelines, an illegal act of war. Never mind that pesky Constitution which allocates the war power exclusively to Congress.

And another toxic train derailment that forced evacuation of a small town in Ohio (with a foreign sounding name!). (As the Biden Administration further deregulates the railroad industry).

And how Russia is now on the offense and about to decapitate what’s left of the US/NATO backed proxy Ukrainian military (just as the US and NATO are running out of ammo! Pentagon sure has some great logistics planners and strategists!). It looks like they really will fight to the last Ukrainian (you know, just so we don’t have to fight the Ruskies over here).

Ah, but don’t worry! NJ Governor Murphy, a former Goldman Sachs vulture and Obama Ambassador to Germany, is right on top of things! He just planted the Goldman Sachs Wall Street Flag over Ukraine on behalf of all those orphans!

Or the Pfizer head of R&D who was caught on camera bragging about regulatory capture and how Pfizer was conducting illegal gain of function research in order to anticipate the next COVID strain and thereby maximize multi-billion dollar profits.

And the climate disaster of US fracking LNG exports to Europe.

And the Rage Against The War Machine protest in DC.

US media says there’s nothing to see in any of this, move on.

I spotted these strange spy balloons along the border from Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona. One appears to be permanently tethered over Fort Huachuca in Sierra Vista, Arizona.

For those who may be interested in that curious “spy balloon”, it’s actually an “AeroStat” – for details, we repost this January 17, 2018 post:

Radar blimps, helicopters, drones, cameras, & patrols – Trump’s Wall’s Been Built

Visual Vandalism

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They paved paradise
And put up a parking lot
With a pink hotel, a boutique
And a swinging hot spot
 
Don’t it always seem to go
That you don’t know what you’ve got til its gone
They paved paradise
And put up a parking lot. ~~~ Big Yellow Taxi” (Joni Mitchell, 1970)

Sorry folks, but Trump’s so called “Border Wall” has been built already.

Paraphrasing Joni Mitchell, they didn’t pave paradise – they just built a police state to patrol it.

I’ve driven and hiked the US – Mexican Border region from Texas through southern Arizona and have been appalled by the pervasive border patrols, the roadside checkpoints – even radar blimps, cameras, helicopters, planes, drones, motion detectors – creating an overwhelming police state presence.

This morning was the last straw. True story, you can’t make this stuff up. Bear with me:

Last night, it dipped into the 20’s – a cold night provides incentives to get up and out early. But at 7 am it’s still dark, so I worry about conflicts between the dog and coyotes and other predators, so wait until sunrise.

As the sun rises, we set out on the usual morning hike – from 2-4 miles -and are thrilled with the canyon grasslands and forest landscape:

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We get back and make coffee. As I’m sitting enjoying a hot cup of coffee, basking in the warm sun on my face, I think of the word “mindfulness”.

At exactly that moment, a harsh noise breaks the silence: a police radio. Moments later, a border patrol SUV rolls up.

Fuck that shit. The bastard must have been watching me from the woods.

He’s the 10th border patrol SUV that’s rolled by my remote location in the last 2 days.

I wasn’t there an hour, before I was confronted by and questioned by a border patrol agent.

But it’s not just constant border patrol SUV’s rolling across the landscape.

Take a look at how an “aerostat” blimp poisons the landscape:

aerostat hovers over the Huachuca Mountains in Sierra Vista Arizona, north of the border

DHS radar and cameras in Coronado National Forest, visible from and just west of Coronado National Memorial

DHS rada/camera tower despoils Montezema's Pass at Coronado National Memorial. How do they get away with this?

A National Park Service display at Coronado Memorial highlights the fact that existing low tech fences seriously impede wildlife migration.

US - Mexico border fence runs through the San Pedro Valley - view from Coronado National Monument (look through poor air quality to see the straight line)

And this high tech police state surveillance wall is not limited to the US Mexico border

I saw a border patrol agent on horseback last July in the Pasayten Wilderness area just south of the Canadian border in the northern Cascades in Washington State. What is border patrol doing in this landscape?:

Pasayten Wilderness, view from Hart's Pass, Northern Cascades, Washington State

Ironically,in a rebuke to today’s DHS police state, today I hiked in the spectacular Coronado National Memorial,

US - Mexican Border runs through it - Looking west from Montezuma Pass, in Coronado Point in Coronado National Memorial (Az)

The Memorial was established to:

commemorate Francisco Vasquez de Coronado’s expedition and the cultural influences of Spanish colonial exploration in the America’s in the 1500’s.

It was a journey of conquest filled with exploration, wonder – and cruelty. Inspired by tales of vast cities of gold, 339 European soldiers and over 1000 Aztec allies embarked on an epic journey through arid deserts and rugged mountains. They encountered rich traditions and brought new technologies. The resulting collision and combination of cultures reverberates today. Read More

Sierra Madre mountains, Mexico, on let. US Pantagonia mountains straight ahead. No wall necessary.

Yet the massive border patrol police state in some locations is belied by a total surrender of the border in other locations.

On New Year’s eve, I camped on the Rio Grande river on the border in Lajitas Texas, just north west of Big Bend National Park. Look:

_DSC4753

As I sat there, on the Mexican side, a pickup truck rolled up and a Mexican family of about 10 folks jumped out and began a party – loud folk music and lots of laughter.

Moments later, on the US side, a car rolled up and a man and two women got out, luggage in tow.

Simultaneously, the Mexican family carried a small row boat from the back of their pick up truck, rowed across the river, and took the 3 folks across the border in two trips.

Border patrol was nowhere in sight – I guess the golf resorts at Lajitas need maids, cooks and maintenance men.

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NJ DEP Doesn’t Do That Anymore

February 18th, 2023 No comments

Lack of DEP Water Reports Allows Media And Faux Green Groups To Spin

Available DEP Data Ignored

DEP Scientists’ Recommendations For Stricter Regulations Ignored

I added the below information as an update to my recent post criticizing NJ Spotlight’s coverage of the Highlands and Delaware Watershed, specifically for relying on cherry picked data and broadly spun platitudes of praise by Murphy DEP cheerleaders.

But it really deserves a post of its own, so here it is.

Someone needs. to tell NJ Spotlight reporters that they don’t have to rely on Wm. Penn funded groups for cherry picked data and amateur assessments of current water quality conditions and trends in water quality.

1. The Clean Water Act mandates that DEP publish Statewide Water Quality Reports (known as the Section 305(b)/303(d) integrated Report)

DEP still does that, but probably only because EPA makes them do it.

2. For groundwater pollution data, DEP used to issue Private Well Testing Act reports, but no longer does so.

3. For threats to public drinking water supplies, see DEP’s Source Water Assessment Program – find the needle buried in the DEP website haystack and hit the link to find specific threats to specific water systems. Then wade through to the end of those documents to find the real threats buried at the end. Of course the data are over 20 years old.

Now do that exercise 566 times, once for every town in the State. You must do it now, because DEP doesn’t do that anymore.

4. For enforcement data, don’t even ask about the legislatively mandated annual Clean Water Enforcement Act Report DEP stopped issuing that many years ago (2010) in blatant violation of law, but with no accountability, no media, no environmental group criticism, and no consequences.

5.  For DEP failure to regulate, there are those dirty dozen of so toxic chemicals for which the Drinking Water Quality Institute (DWQI) recommended drinking water standards (MCLs) be set for to protect public health, but DEP ignored those recommendations and never adopted the standards.

Maybe some enterprising environmental groups might help you out, but they don’t do this work anymore either.

6. For the toxic coverup, finally, the real secret: the over 500 unregulated chemicals that DEP knows are present in NJ drinking water.

This includes unregulated pharmaceuticals that the DWQI and DEP KNOW are in your drinking water, see:

Again, DEP scientists recommended that DEP act to impose regulations to require treatment to remove them (see DEP’s April 2010 Report), but DEP never acted on those recommendations either.

Go try to get a Wm. Penn grant to do this work and educate the public and hold DEP accountable.

Oh, I forgot: Wm Penn doesn’t fund any work that might hold Big Pharma and the chemical industry accountable and in NJ, Big Pharma gets a Big Pass from NJ’s lame media.

More on Big Pharma to follow – someone’s got to do it and it might as well be me.

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Ethics Complaint Filed Against Murphy DEP Commissioner LaTourette For Failure To Disclose And Recuse On Legal Work For Toxic Polluter Essex Chemical Corporation

February 17th, 2023 No comments

LaTourette Represented Essex Chemical In Legal Victory On Natural Resource Damages

Appellate Court Dismissal Of $8 Million DEP NRD Claim Set Harmful Precedent

Prior to joining DEP, Murphy DEP Commissioner LaTourette was a corporate lawyer who represented major corporate polluters and developers (For a list of his corporate legal work, see links to disclosure and recusal documents below).

One of LaTourette’s prior clients was Essex Chemical Corporation. His disclosure and recusal documents fail to include Essex Chemical.

The DEP sued Essex Chemical for natural resource damages for polluting groundwater (public water supply), soils, and surface water with a stew of toxic chemicals. DEP sought $8 million in public compensation for the damage to public water supply (groundwater injury).

The NJ Appellate Division issued an opinion that struck down DEP’s NRD claim.

The Court’s decision set a damaging legal precedent that made it more difficult for DEP to recover NRD damages and public compensation. You can read the case in links below – it’s a revealing and disturbing story.

Curiously, LaTourette failed to disclose this legal representation and recuse from any DEP decisions when he joined DEP in 2018.

Even more curiously, when I exposed his prior corporate legal work, he updated his ethics disclosure and recusal documents in 2021, but he again failed to disclose and recuse from the Essex Chemical work.

Why would LaTourette want to conceal his representation of Essex Chemical in an NRD lawsuit?

Could that be because it would contradict Gov. Murphy’s press release that called LaTourette a white hat “Erin Brokovich” public interest lawyer and the sycophantic praise from his faux green cheerleaders?

Could it be that it would undermine his high profile media spin on several NRD lawsuits filed by the Murphy Attorney General?

Could it be that it would be embarrassing in light of DEP’s most recent controversial BASF NRD settlement in Toms River?

On February 9, I filed the below complaint to the State Ethics Commission to force that disclosure and sanction LaTourette’s violation of State ethics code and standards regarding disclosure and recusal.

This complaint is distinct from my February 8 request that the Ethics Commission investigate the broader issues of revolving door and agency capture abuse and issue an Advisory Opinion on how to prevent and reduce those systemic abuses:

Dear Ethics Commission:

I write to file an ethics complaint for what appears to be a violation of State ethics laws and standards regarding disclosure and recusal of potential conflicts of interest.

I request that the Commission investigate this matter and take appropriate enforcement action. This request is related to but independent of my prior request for an Advisory Opinion.

Specifically:

1. Shawn LaTourette is currently the Commissioner of the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP);

2. Prior to joining DEP, LaTourette worked in a private law firm and represented numerous private corporations that are subject to DEP’s regulatory jurisdiction and appear before DEP for regulatory approvals;

3. Prior to joining DEP, among those private corporations, LaTourette represented Essex Chemical Corporation in a lawsuit with DEP, see:

NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION v. ESSEX CHEMICAL CORPORATION

4. Essex Chemical Corporation is currently subject to regulation by and appears before the DEP;

5. LaTourette’s original disclosure and recusal memo (dated 9/25/18) failed to mention his work for Essex Chemical Corporation. (see Attachment A recusal memo (dated 9/25/18)

6. LaTourette followup expanded recusal memo (dated 1/25/21) also failed to mention his work for Essex Chemical Corporation. (see Attachment A recusal memo (dated 1/25/21)

7. LaTourette’s legal work for Essex Chemical Corporation clearly would present a conflict of interest in his current capacity as DEP Commissioner that must be disclosed and subject to recusal – just like the corporate entities listed in his two prior recusal memo’s.

8. LaTourette failed to disclose and recuse from the Essex Chemical Corporation.

9. Failure to disclose and recuse potential conflicts related to Essex Chemical Corporation constitute a violation of the State ethics laws and standards.

I am available to provide information to support the above, at your request. Hit the links provided above for access to LaTourette’s prior recusals.

I appreciate your timely and favorable consideration.

Bill Wolfe

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Jeff Pillets Schools His Colleagues At NJ Spotlight In Pinelands Story

February 16th, 2023 No comments

Corporate Foundation Money And Faux Green Spin Does Not Shape His Tough Reporting

I have been a harsh critic of NJ Spotlight’s Wm. Penn Foundation funded series on the Delaware watershed.

I rarely praise journalists, but today’s NJ Spotlight story on the Pinelands by NJ’s best investigative reporter Jeff Pillets was superb (with just four important omissions).  Read the whole thing:

Pillets schooled his Spotlight colleagues on how to write an environmental story, integrate planning and regulation with political accountability, and not get spun by lame bullshit from compromised sources (but inclusion of Doug O’Malley – who does very little in the Pinelands – was disappointing. Too bad Spotlight editors didn’t give Pillets the Highlands story too, or even the entire series – but that should tell you something. No way Wm. Penn would have allowed that!).

The issues Pillets failed to get fully fleshed out, completely right or omitted were:

1) The Pinelands CMP lacks any standards or requirements or scientific monitoring to address the climate emergency.

The Commission pledged to amend the CMP to address climate almost 9 years ago, but has yet to act on that pledge. They are currently considering a very modest climate policy proposal under the leadership of Commissioner Lohbauer, but it is weak and seems to be going nowhere.

2) The Pinelands Commission recently approved DEP’s logging plan, to cut and remove 90-95% of trees (a virtual clearcut) over 1,400 acres (2.4 million trees) plus an additional 13 road miles of 100 foot wide clearcut for a “firebreak”.

The DEP’s plan was based on a sham “carbon defense” climate strategy (you must log the forest to save the forest) and had no justification in terms of reducing wildfire risks.

That DEP proposal exposed the fact that the Commission lacks adequately scientifically trained staff in forestry, wildfire, and climate and that the CMP lacks adequate standards to protect forests and maximize the sequestration and storage of carbon. Commission staff Chuck Horner openly admitted this on the public record.

Commissioner Lohbauer opposed and criticized the DEP plan and noted that it was rushed to avoid an upcoming CMP plan amendment to establish a new “no net loss” of trees policy. That needs media coverage, public awareness and support as well.

3) The Pinelands Commission (and the Murphy DEP) rejected a petition for rulemaking to amend the CMP to restrict new development in mapped extreme wildfire risks locations and require additional fireproofing for existing development.

It was extremely revealing that the so called “advocates” (i.e. the Pinelands Preservation Alliance, NJ Conservation Foundation, and NJ Chapter of Sierra Club) actively publicly SUPPORTED the DEP logging plan, which was purported to be justified by reducing wildfire risks, but did NOTHING to support the petition to amend the CMP to limit new development to reduce wildfire risks.

4) The story mentioned the risks from toxic waste sites, but failed to mention the recent Pinelands Commission scientific study of the ecological impacts of endocrine disruptors.

That research project was funded, in part, by the Wm. Penn Foundation and it downplayed the impacts of endocrine disruptors and actively masked that class of chemicals by using euphemisms and obscure terms.

I’ve written about all these issues in detail, so if you’re interested, use the word search box in the upper right to read those posts. I’ll backfill with links to this as soon as I can – I have a very slow internet connection right now.

I sent my friend Mr. Pillets this note of praise (which I rarely do):

Pillets – fine job! You got it exactly right. I appreciated stress on the role of regulation and the “Trenton threat”.

Almost bust a gut on reading that PPA “has been” an advocate! Hahahaha! Jason is the real deal, unlike his scumbag boss Carleton.

BTW, I lived in cabin where John McPhee lived and wrote for 17 years – his X, Pryde Brown still lives on the place, a gorgeous farm and forest on a ridge in West Amwell (Hunterdon) – 23 Gulick Road. When I was at DEP, I was sure to get the stream behind the place designated Category One (Alexauken Creek).

Wolfe

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