Friday, January 13, 2017

EPA says it can't pay economic damages from mine spill

The Environmental Protection Agency announced Friday it will not repay claims totaling more than $1.2 billion for economic damages from a mine waste spill the agency accidentally triggered in Colorado, saying the law prohibits it. The EPA said the claims could be refiled in federal court, or Congress could authorize payments. But attorneys for the EPA and the Justice Department concluded the EPA is barred from paying the claims because of sovereign immunity, which prohibits most lawsuits against the government.The EPA said it has spent more than $31.3 million on the spill, including remediation work, water testing and payments to state, local and tribal agencies. A total of 73 claims were filed, some by farmers who lost crops or had to haul water because rivers polluted by the spill were temporarily unusable for irrigation and livestock. Rafting companies and their employees sought lost income and wages because they couldn't take visitors on river trips. Some homeowners sought damages because they said their wells were affected.The EPA said it has spent more than $31.3 million on the spill, including remediation work, water testing and payments to state, local and tribal agencies...more

 Congress can waive sovereign immunity. Or they could cut EPA's budget by whatever amount it takes to satisfy the claims

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

This just shows the systemic corruption in the US abc agencies, and of the EPA's people that make it up. Human nature is flawed and bureaucracies is their opportunity for corrupt dictator behavior. They amount to the Brown Shirts of the 1930's just following orders, traitors to their country, it's Constitution and Bill of Rights.

GregT said...

Nah, don't cut the budget.

Take it out of their pension fund.

Anonymous said...

This is the grants the EPA gave out in 2015 https://yosemite.epa.gov/oarm/igms_egf.nsf/Reports/Non-Profit%20Grants!OpenView&Start=1