Big Oil, Bad Air

Published — July 24, 2014 Updated — January 7, 2015 at 11:41 am ET

EPA: No comment on fracking air pollution

Introduction

Editor’s note: On Aug. 11, Ron Curry, EPA regional administrator in Dallas, did an on-the-record interview with the Center for Public Integrity about environmental issues associated with oil and gas production. Some material from that interview may be used in a future article or articles.

For more than a year, InsideClimate News and the Center for Public Integrity have been reporting on air pollution caused by the fracking boom in the Eagle Ford Shale of South Texas. Despite hundreds of complaints from residents, many of them about noxious air emissions, we discovered that the state knows almost nothing about the extent of the pollution and rarely fines companies for breaking emission laws.

Fracking activity takes place near a rural home in Dewitt County, Texas. Lance Rosenfield



On our 11 trips to Texas we encountered many residents who asked what seemed to be a reasonable question: If a state regulatory agency — in this case the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality — isn’t doing much to curb the industry’s air pollution, why isn’t the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency stepping in? The EPA, after all, is ultimately responsible for enforcing the federal Clean Air Act.

In February, after we published our first stories on the Eagle Ford, we began trying to answer that question by seeking on-the-record interviews with EPA officials in Washington, D.C., and Texas. Five months later, no such interviews have been granted.


Instead, EPA press officers have told us to put our questions in writing, an increasingly common response from federal agencies under the Obama administration. The process usually goes like this: A journalist calls the press office to schedule an interview but instead is told to submit written questions. Once these are in, a press officer gets answers from scientists or other officials and then crafts a written response. In most cases, nobody involved in the process — not even the EPA press officers — will agree to be quoted by name.

Journalists object to this policy because clarity and accuracy are easily compromised when they’re forced to discuss complex issues through intermediaries who aren’t subject-matter experts. To ask follow-up questions, the laborious process must begin all over again, with no opportunity for the natural give-and-take of a conversation.

The EPA’s non-responsiveness in the Texas air pollution story is especially troubling because it keeps taxpayers in the dark about the agency’s handling of a critical environmental issue. Concerns about the oil and gas industry’s air pollution — which contains benzene, toluene and other chemicals known to damage human health — extend far beyond Texas. Similar problems exist in the Bakken Shale of North Dakota, the Upper Green River Basin of Wyoming and the Marcellus Shale of Pennsylvania.

Our first attempt at an on-the-record interview was with Ron Curry, the administrator of EPA Region 6, which includes Texas. We discussed our request with David Gray, the region’s director of external and government affairs, by phone. Gray suggested we start with an initial interview on background, which meant we couldn’t quote or identify any EPA officials on the call. He then handed off our request to Cathy Milbourn, a press officer at EPA headquarters.

Milbourn set up an interview, but the only EPA participants were herself and a senior public affairs advisor in the EPA’s Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards in North Carolina.

The two officials answered a few of our questions and provided some general information on EPA rules, most of which we already knew through our reporting. Neither had the expertise to give us what we really needed: answers to our complex questions about enforcement and regulations.

In early April we asked for an on-the-record interview with the EPA official we believed could best address these questions: Janet McCabe, acting assistant administrator for the EPA’s Office of Air and Radiation. As the agency’s highest-ranking air official, McCabe — perhaps with an assist from technical staff — seemed a logical candidate for a frank discussion about what the EPA can and can’t do under the Clean Air Act.

At first, the EPA seemed to be considering our request. Spokeswoman Julia Valentine emailed back, saying she would respond “shortly.” After three weeks, we’d heard nothing. So we checked in with Valentine again, and she again promised to get back to us. Another four weeks passed. After further prompting, we learned that our request had been sent to Milbourn, the spokeswoman we talked with in March.

“An interview on this issue isn’t possible. You can cite the information that we provided to you to as an agency technical expert. ”

Cathy Milbourn, EPA spokesperson

In subsequent emails with Milbourn, we described the topics we wanted to cover, provided links to our Eagle Ford Shale stories and answered all of Milbourn’s questions. We repeatedly explained the need for an on-the-record discussion with McCabe. To accommodate McCabe’s busy schedule, we listed July 15 as our deadline — six weeks from our first email to Milbourn, and three months after our initial interview request.

The emails continued until Milbourn wrote on July 12, “An interview on this issue isn’t possible.”

The Center for Public Integrity and InsideClimate News have decided to publish all of the emails that accumulated during our failed attempt to get an interview with McCabe because we believe the nation’s top environmental agency should talk directly about a problem that is of increasing concern to millions of Americans.

Our problems with the EPA are not unusual. Earlier this month, 38 journalism and communications organizations wrote a joint letter to President Obama urging him to put “an end to this restraint on communication in federal agencies.” The letter came shortly after the Society of Environmental Journalists protested the EPA’s refusal to release the names of the technical experts who participated in a media conference call to discuss new carbon regulations.

When the EPA dismisses members of the media, it is dismissing the public — the people the agency is supposed to serve, said Michael Nelson, a professor of environmental ethics at Oregon State University.

“They are charged with protecting the public good, and the public is who they ultimately answer to,” he said. “There’s no way they’re acting on behalf of the public good unless there’s transparency and communication.”

Nelson called our email exchange with the EPA “quite stunning.”

“This is a great example where you have a lot of communication, but at the end of the correspondence there’s no evidence that anybody’s working on behalf of the public good,” he said.

InsideClimate News and CPI will continue asking the EPA for interviews with officials and scientists who have the information we need to make our stories as clear, complete and accurate as possible. We remain hopeful that the Obama administration will come to realize the public deserves at least that much, not just from journalists but from the federal government itself.

Lisa Song is a reporter with InsideClimate News.

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