December 5, 2019

Report: Cuts To IDEM, State Environmental Agencies Put Public Health At Risk

Original story from   IPBS-RJC

Article origination IPBS-RJC
Rebecca Thiele/IPB News

Rebecca Thiele/IPB News

Budget cuts at the Indiana Department of Environmental Management and other state environmental agencies around the country are threatening public health. That’s according to a new report by the Environmental Integrity Project. 

The group, which advocates for better enforcement of environmental laws, looked at Indiana’s budget over the past decade. Its analysis shows that while overall state spending grew by 17 percent, IDEM’s budget was cut by 20 percent.

Executive director Eric Schaeffer says this matters because every year funding for the federal Environmental Protection Agency is on the chopping block.

“Those attacks are sometimes sugar coated by the argument that much of what EPA does can be handed off to states,” he says.

Indra Frank with the Hoosier Environmental Council says IDEM programs like drinking water safety and hazardous waste cleanup were hit especially hard.

“The agency has compensated by assigning its low and medium priority [hazardous waste] sites to a quote ‘independent cleanup process’ which means a process that has no direct agency oversight,” she says.

The report says Indiana faces a lot of challenges that require strong state environmental enforcement — like leaking coal ash ponds and spills at industrial plants and wastewater facilities.

Contact Rebecca at rthiele@iu.edu or follow her on Twitter at @beckythiele

Indiana Environmental reporting is supported by the Environmental Resilience Institute, an Indiana University Grand Challenge project developing Indiana-specific projections and informed responses to problems of environmental change.

Support independent journalism today. You rely on WFYI to stay informed, and we depend on you to make our work possible. Donate to power our nonprofit reporting today. Give now.

 

Related News

Early voting has started in Indiana. Here's how to do it
Faith leaders, Gov. Holcomb gather for anniversary of Oct. 7 attack on Israel
2024 Election Coverage