Click here or on the image above to watch Senator Capito’s questions.
WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senator Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.),
Ranking Member of the Senate Environment and Public Works (EPW) Committee,
today participated in the nomination hearing of Brenda Mallory to be chair of
the Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) and Janet McCabe to be deputy
administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
Watch Ranking Member Capito’s
opening statement here and
questions for both witnesses here.
HIGHLIGHTS:
EPA BUREAUCRATS NOT
COMFORTABLE IN WEST VIRGINIA: “You
might recall, Ms. McCabe, that you testified before the committee in 2015 when you were at EPA, and I asked you then why—with
such a far reaching agenda as the Clean Power Plan—why you were not holding a
public hearing in my state of West Virginia which is deeply impacted by this.
And you said at the time ‘We wanted to have those meetings in locations
where people were comfortable coming.’”
ROUGH AND TUMBLE WEST
VIRGINIANS: “Ms. Mallory, you gave an
example from your private federal service in a webinar in 2019.
And the quote you have was, ‘The question was whether I should be sent to a
meeting in West Virginia because you know how the boys are in West Virginia.’
And then you talked about a perception among higher levels of government
leadership that the people in West Virginia were ‘rough and tumble.’ You
stated, ‘This was coming from two levels above me and my direct supervisor was
like “I’m not comfortable with those people.”’ You can image how that
hits you being a native West Virginian myself, and also these policies that you
all are going to be putting forward and coordinating are going to have deep
impacts on the 1.8 million people living in my state.”
THE DEFINITION OF
ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE: “But I also
think with joblessness comes an expanded environmental hazard. When you
have people who have depression or opioid addictions or joblessness or
hopelessness, the environment surrounding those folks, those homes, those
communities, I think can be just as damaging to our environment in some ways as
maybe a factory or a power plant… There’s a great emphasis in this
administration on environmental justice and equity. And that’s a lot of the
words that are used…I think [the definition] does matter because we’ll be
putting a lot of resources into this, meaning federal dollars. I know there
have been some promises in the some of the Executive Orders that 40% of
whatever the benefits would be from green energy would go back into the
communities. But you can hear the skepticism of the states that have been
impacted before.”
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