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- <text id=91TT2443>
- <title>
- Nov. 04, 1991: Need Friends in High Places?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Nov. 04, 1991 The New Age of Alternative Medicine
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 25
- THE ADMINISTRATION
- Need Friends in High Places?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>For industries trying to skirt the law, Dan Quayle's Council on
- Competitiveness is a good place to start
- </p>
- <p>By Michael Duffy/Washington--With reporting by Dick Thompson/
- Washington
- </p>
- <p> William Reilly thought he had a deal. The besieged chief
- of the Environmental Protection Agency was certain Dan Quayle
- had agreed that any piece of land that was flooded or saturated
- with water for 15 consecutive days a year would constitute a
- "wetland" and deserved protection from private development. The
- next day Reilly received a call from Allan Hubbard, who heads
- Quayle's Council on Competitiveness, telling him the deal was
- off. Within days the council hatched a new plan, narrowing the
- definition of "wetness" by six extra days, satisfying a powerful
- coalition of farmers and builders and reducing America's
- wetlands by as much as 30 million acres.
- </p>
- <p> Reilly was privately steamed. If George Bush persuaded
- Congress last year to pass most of his kinder, gentler
- legislation untouched, Quayle's Council on Competitiveness is
- spending much of this year making sure that the new
- environmental and health laws are as beneficial to business as
- possible. California Democrat Henry Waxman calls the council a
- "shadow government." Senator Albert Gore believes that the
- mysterious body allows Bush to pose as an environmentalist long
- enough "to justify a television commercial. Then, behind the
- scenes, the [council] guts the law."
- </p>
- <p> Bush created the panel in 1989 but gave it new powers a
- year later, when he began hearing complaints from friends that
- his government was reregulating industries that the Reagan
- Administration had sought to deregulate. Not long afterward, the
- President appeared before aides one morning waving a newspaper
- clipping about reregulation and asking, "What's going on here?"
- Bush, who headed a task force on regulatory relief as Vice
- President, asked Quayle to review new regulations to make sure
- that costs would not outweigh benefits. Lacking a high-profile
- White House role at the time, Quayle jumped in with both feet.
- </p>
- <p> This is no renegade operation: Bush, chief of staff John
- Sununu and Budget Director Richard Darman are fully apprised of
- the panel's activities. When such agencies as the EPA and the
- White House differ over how aggressively to implement a law, the
- council moves in to referee. Staffed by fewer than a dozen
- officials, who are, even by Bush White House standards,
- unusually conservative, the council regularly sides with
- business against the environment. Even Administration officials
- marvel at how powerful the body has become. "Because Quayle has
- Bush's total confidence," said a former Administration official,
- "nobody can touch those guys."
- </p>
- <p> The council's favorite target is the 1990 Clean Air Act,
- which the White House backed but now fears will cost more than
- $26 billion to implement. Last summer the council asked the EPA
- to make more than 100 changes in proposed regulations for
- carrying out the act, changes that top EPA officials say
- undercut the law. The most controversial proposed change would
- allow polluters to unilaterally increase their emissions if
- states ignore a waiver request for more than seven days. "You
- could drive a big truck through some of those holes," said a top
- EPA official.
- </p>
- <p> The council has also opposed an EPA plan to require liners
- and leachate collection systems at all new solid-waste
- landfills. For nearly a year, the council argued that the plan
- was too costly, though other officials noted that in the past
- five years no city has permitted the construction of a new
- landfill without such equipment. The nation is short on
- landfills, and the rules for creating new sites are already
- three years behind schedule.
- </p>
- <p> Hubbard, a gregarious Indiana entrepreneur who ran Pierre
- du Pont's 1988 presidential bid, points out that those who
- object to the council's rulings are free to mount challenges in
- the courts. Hubbard says the council's goal is to improve the
- nation's competitiveness, not to shelter industry from
- regulation. "The higher the cost of the regulation, the higher
- the cost of the product to the consumer," he explains. "Our
- whole effort is to protect the consumer and the American
- worker."
- </p>
- <p> There's a little more to it than that. The council is
- potentially a political gold mine for Quayle, who often refers
- businesspeople with complaints about government meddling to his
- eager staff of deregulators. The council spearheaded Quayle's
- attack on lawyers and excess litigation last August, and is
- preparing to move beyond reviewing new regulations to tackling
- rules already in place. While Quayle's detractors dismiss the
- Vice President as silly and feckless, his shrewd handling of the
- council's affairs is just another sign that he is taking full
- advantage of his office.
- </p>
- <p> For Bush, who in the midst of a sluggish recovery can
- neither pass out tax cuts nor launch spending programs to
- promote economic growth, the council is "the only game in town,"
- an official said. "The one thing that can cause George Bush
- problems in 1992 is the recession." The council also exemplifies
- Bush's have-half approach to political problems. In 1992 he can
- run as an environmentalist while telling industrialists he's on
- their side too.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-