
Mar 24th, 2004, 01:59 PM
Q. What does the Admin. do when it can't get the EPA to lie?
A. Just pretend there is no EPA.
Excerpts of the GOP memo on environment
Gannett News Service
March 23, 2004
Excerpts of a memo e-mailed last month to press secretaries of all Republican House members by the Republican Conference leadership office. The points made in the memo are compared with information from the Environmental Protection Agency Web site on the same topics.
AIR QUALITY AND ASTHMA
Memo: Links between air quality and asthma in children remain cloudy. The California Air Resources Board conducted a study examining children living in "high ozone" areas who actively participated in three or more sports.
Results showed that the chance of developing asthma was 3.3 times greater for those children engaging in three sports than for those not playing sports at all.
The study also said, "the risk of developing asthma was not greater overall in children living in the six high pollution communities than in the six low pollution communities." (Source: Pacific Research Institute).
EPA: Environmental factors may increase the severity or frequency of asthma attacks in children who have the disease. Children with asthma are particularly sensitive to outdoor air pollutants, including ozone, particulate matter and sulfur dioxide. These pollutants can exacerbate asthma, leading to difficulty in breathing, an increased use of medication, visits to doctors’ offices, trips to emergency rooms and admissions to the hospital. One study reported a relationship between exposure to hazardous air pollutants and increased chronic respiratory symptoms characteristic of asthma.
GLOBAL WARMING
Memo: Global warming is not a fact. "There is no convincing scientific evidence that human release of carbon dioxide, methane or other greenhouse gasses is causing or will, in the foreseeable future, cause catastrophic heating of the Earth’s atmosphere and disruption of the Earth’s climate." (Source: Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor Richard Lindzen)
EPA: According to the National Academy of Sciences, the Earth’s surface temperature has risen by about 1 degree Fahrenheit in the past century, with accelerated warming during the past two decades. There is new and stronger evidence that most of the warming over the last 50 years is attributable to human activities.
(Over the next 50 to 100 years), evaporation will increase as the climate warms, which will increase average global precipitation. Soil moisture is likely to decline in many regions, and intense rainstorms are likely to become more frequent. Sea level is likely to rise two feet along most of the U.S. coast.
WATER QUALITY
Memo: The EPA reports that 40 percent of U.S. streams, 45 percent of lakes and 14 percent of ocean shoreline miles are "impaired," meaning "the water body does not support one or more of its intended uses." However, the EPA also notes that only a small portion of these waters were even assessed: 19 percent of rivers and streams, 43 percent of lakes and ponds and 6 percent of ocean shorelines.
So the percent "impaired" should actually be: 7.6 percent of streams, 19.3 percent of lakes and 0.84 percent of ocean shoreline.
EPA: Despite impressive progress, many of the nation’s rivers, lakes and coastal waters do not meet water quality goals. Some waters face the threat of degradation from diverse pollution sources which affect citizens’ quality of life by reducing recreational opportunities, undermining local economic prosperity and threatening drinking water supplies and impairing public health. States report that close to 40 percent of the waters they surveyed are too polluted for basic uses like fishing or swimming. The number of fish-consumption advisories and beach closings is rising each year, and new threats, such as the toxic microorganism pfiesteria, demand effective responses.
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