Senators trade barbs over funding bill directing DEQ to spend $2.4 million on "busy work"
At a public forum earlier this month, a man from Bladen County asked state environmental and health officials a direct and desperate question: Are we guinea pigs? he pleaded. I dont want to die from GenX.
One could not blame him, his neighbors and the thousands of residents downstream in Brunswick and New Hanover counties for wondering if they are also subjects of a political experiment.
Many lawmakers have underscored the urgency of dealing with an aptly described public health crisis. However, in terms of concrete legislation, the intent behind and effectiveness of the bills to address the crisis are more akin to extinguishing a five-alarm fire, one glass of water at a time.
The latest glass of water arrived in the form of a Senate bill, publicly unveiled at 10:45 Tuesday evening and discussed at yesterdays Agriculture and Natural Resources Committee meeting. It is a proposed substitute for the House version, which appropriated $2.3 million to the NC Department of Environmental Quality in part, to buy a high-resolution mass spectrometer to specifically sample and analyze drinking and surface water for emerging contaminants. There were other bureaucratic requirements, too, but the guts of the House bill was the directive that DEQ use the money and the machine to figure out whats in the water and how to remove it.
Read more: http://pulse.ncpolicywatch.org/2018/02/08/senators-trade-barbs-funding-bill-directing-deq-spend-2-4-million-busy-work/#sthash.fN5ZHtRR.dpbs