How’s this for “the most transparent administration in history”?
After returning from travel I thumb through my emails for some
indication that the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA) has decided to stop violating the law, giving up its
stonewall of access to what they originally said were 8,000 pages
of responsive documents to a “climate”-related FOIA (think Hockey
Stick, Michael Mann, and IPCC). I’m not sure what the holdup is —
maybe it has something to do with some “climate” litigation, early
November, or possibly a lame-duck push on related issues, I just
don’t know — but NOAA first told me that they were sorting through
them to determine “which are agency records and which are IPCC
records”.
Yes, you read that correctly; and you are right as well that
there are no such thing as “IPCC records”, sitting on
taxpayer-funded computers produced by taxpayer servants in their
official time in officially assigned roles, as a not overly clever
way to get around FOIA. It should come as no surprise that after I
confirmed this statement in writing, three days later and
presumably after speaking with their lawyers, they wrote back to
say they never said that. It’s come to this.
So, anyway, I don’t see anything from NOAA but I do encounter a
copy of another FOIA request, this one from the West Virginia
Department of Environmental Protection to the US EPA’s regional
office in Philadelphia. The long and the short of it is that Barack
Obama vowed to “bankrupt” coal, and is proceeding down that path,
in several ways. With cap-and-tax stalled, these ways include
trying to use the regulatory process to strangle surface coal
mining. And the administration is trying to keep their formal steps
toward this end under wraps even in violation of the law.
Specifically, West Virginia would like to see a copy of an EPA
recommended determination about continued surface mining in that
state. Distilled, they want to know if the Obama administration has
decided to essentially shut down that state’s economy. And some of
Ohio’s. And other neighboring states. This was, as you might
imagine, a very high profile decision when the
strategy first emerged, but is being treated as top secret now;
sort of like apparently sensitive records at NOAA.
As WV DEP notes, according to the law and rumor EPA did indeed
make its recommendation about the Spruce Fork mine two weeks ago.
It’s just that EPA is not complying with the law by refusing to let
anyone see it in the form of Federal Register publication.
I understand from
the Campaign Spot that WV Gov. and Senate candidate Joe Manchin
has decided to not wait for an answer but to sue, an announcement
of which is being made today. It’s bad enough when politicians
preen, worse when they do so to boast of behavior that is precisely
the opposite of how they behave. This is further worse when an
administration declares war on an industry and, inescapably, a
region. Even worse still is when they violate their legal
obligations in order to keep this from the public, even telling a
state regulator that they’ll have to guess at the answer about
their fate, or pry it out of them.
The only good news, for many of you, is that you’re not an
Appalachian miner. Or living in a town dependent on those miners
producing abundant, reliable, politically assailed energy
resources. Or, maybe not a farmer or rancher or living in such a
community
out West. Your livelihood isn’t under assault by the full force
of the federal government. Yet. You just depend on what these
fellow Americans do to make you richer, freer and safer. Unlike our
political class.
Had enough yet?