Texas relaxed environmental enforcement during the pandemic, state data show
By Naveena Sadasivam, Grist
The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) is one of the largest and most influential environmental protection agencies in the country. With an annual budget of $400 million, it polices about 400,000 polluting businesses and conducts more than 100,000 inspections in a normal year. The agency inspects not only the states many large refineries and chemical plants, but also its neighborhood gas stations, dry cleaners, and public water systems.
Many of the states 29 million residents live in the shadow of heavy industry and in cities with smog levels that rank among the worst in the country. In short, a slowdown in TCEQs enforcement efforts could be deadly. So when the COVID-19 pandemic brought the country to a halt earlier this year, TCEQs chairman penned an open letter reassuring environmental advocates that, even though employees were going to work from home, the agency would continue to be fully engaged in its mission to protect public health and the environment.
But a Grist analysis of the agencys internal data has found that, in the six weeks after the agency asked employees to work from home in response to the pandemic, TCEQ pursued 20 percent fewer violations of environmental laws than it did during the same period in 2019. The agency also initiated 40 percent fewer formal enforcement actions resulting in fines for polluters. Finally, in a move that appears in line with the Environmental Protection Agencys controversial discretionary enforcement policy, TCEQ issued about 40 percent fewer violations to companies for failing to monitor and report pollutants emitted into the air and water.
Even as the agency reduced enforcement, it continued processing permits that allow construction companies, industrial facilities, and other businesses to pollute up to certain limits at about the same rate that it did last year.
Adrian Shelley, director of the consumer advocacy group Public Citizens Texas office, called TCEQs enforcement slowdown disappointing and said that Grists investigation shows that the agency prioritizes permitting over compliance.
Theres been a large period of very little regulatory oversight, he said. The implications for community health and for the workers at the facilities really concern us.
https://grist.org/energy/texas-relaxed-environmental-enforcement-during-the-pandemic-state-data-show/
Don't mess with Texas, pardner. But we'll mess with you any dang time we feel like it!