The AP and other media outlets reported earlier this week that emails
sent internally to EPA staff mandated a temporary blackout on media releases
and social media activity, as well as a freeze on contract approvals and grant
awards. Ericksen said Tuesday that the
agency was preparing to greenlight nearly all of the $3.9 billion in pending
contracts that were under review. Ericksen said he could not immediately
provide details about roughly $100 million in distributions that will remain
frozen. The uncertainty about the
contract and grant freeze coupled with the lack of information flowing from the
agency since Trump took office have raised fears that states and other
recipients could lose essential funding for drinking water protection,
hazardous waste oversight and a host of other programs. The agency also took a
potential first step Tuesday toward killing environmental rules completed as
President Barack Obama's term wound down. At least 30 were targeted in the
Federal Register for delayed implementation, including updated pollution
rulings for several states, renewable fuel standards and limits on the amount
of formaldehyde that can leach from wood products. Jared Blumenfeld, who served until last year
as EPA's regional administrator for California and the Pacific Northwest,
compared what is happening to a "hostile takeover" in the corporate
world. "Ericksen and these other
folks that have been brought in ... have basically put a hold on
everything," said Blumenfeld, who regularly speaks with former colleagues
still at the agency. "The level of mismanagement being exercised during this
transition is startling and the impact on the public is alarming." For example, he said EPA employees aren't
clear whether they can direct contractors who handle all of California's
Superfund sites. Some EPA employees have taken to their own social media
accounts to say what's happening inside the agency, despite fears of
retaliation. "There's a strong
sense of resistance," Blumenfeld said.
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