The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) on Monday sent a letter to Congress in support of reinstating the lapsed Superfund “polluter pays” taxes.
Superfund is the federal government’s program that investigates and cleans up the nation’s most complex, uncontrolled or abandoned hazardous waste sites. If reinstated, the Superfund provision would provide a stable, dedicated source of revenue for the program and increase the pace of Superfund cleanup, EPA said.
It would also ensure that parties who benefit from the manufacture or sale of substances that commonly cause environmental problems at hazardous waste sites help bear the cost of cleanup when responsible parties cannot be identified.
“Since the beginning of this administration we have made it clear that we support the reinstatement of the polluter pays system for the Superfund program,” said Mathy Stanislaus, assistant administrator for EPA’s Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response. “Our taxes should be paying for teachers, police officers and infrastructure that is essential for sustainable growth–not footing the bill for polluters.”
The Superfund taxes expired on December 31, 1995. Since the expiration of the taxes, Superfund program funding has been largely financed from General Revenue transfers to the Superfund Trust Fund, thus making taxpayers responsible for the costs of cleaning up abandoned hazardous waste sites.
The Obama administration is proposing to reinstate the taxes as they were last in effect on crude oil, imported petroleum products, hazardous chemicals, and imported substances that use hazardous chemicals as a feedstock, and on corporate modified alternative minimum taxable income. Under the administration’s proposal, the excise taxes and corporate environmental taxes would be reinstated for a period of 10 years beginning in January 2011.
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Public comment is being sought on the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency´s draft strategic plan covering the next five years.
The proposed plan "identifies the measurable environmental and human health benefits the public can expect over the next five years and describes how EPA intends to achieve those results," the agency said.
The comment period runs through July 30. The EPA will release a final plan on September 30. Comments can be submitted at the link below.