EnvironmentFight over sludge starts to get dirtyBy Arnold Mann/Washington
September 20, 1999
Web posted at: 3:49 p.m. EDT (1949 GMT)
Environmental Protection Agency chief CAROL BROWNER is in for an
angry letter from some Congressmen this week. At issue:
"serious, perhaps even illegal" behavior on the part of EPA
senior scientist ALAN RUBIN, author of the 503 Sludge Rule,
which declared municipal wastes safe for spreading in forests
and farmlands.
What Representative JOE KNOLLENBERG (R., Mich.), House science
committee chair JAMES SENSENBRENNER (R., Wis.), Senator JAMES
INHOFE (R., Okla.) and others want to know is, Has Rubin been
engaging in "threatening and harassing" telephone calls and
e-mails to the residences of anti-sludge activists Helaine
Shields, Jane Beswick and others? Did Rubin attempt to bribe a
waste- treatment-company executive to get him to "refrain from
raising concerns" about sludge transportation and stop insisting
it be transported as hazardous waste? Has Rubin been distributing
"selected, preliminary" risk data that appeared to discredit
sludge-toxicity findings by EPA scientist David Lewis? The agency
has come under fire for harassing its scientists who question
regulations. Now the intimidation may have spread. "I must be on
to something, or he wouldn't be coming at me like this," says
California dairy farmer and anti-sludger Beswick, who got eight
letters from Rubin, one accompanied by a note: "Jane: Ask not for
whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee!"
Rubin, contacted by TIME, denied all charges. He says he
regularly sends communications to those who oppose EPA policy,
not to harass or threaten but to inform.
--By Arnold
Mann/Washington
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Cover Date: September 27, 1999
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