Broadcast: June 6,
2003
By Caty Weaver
This is the VOA Special English Environment
Report.
The chief of the United States Environmental
Protection Agency has announced her
resignation. Christine Todd Whitman
says she will leave office on June
twenty-seventh.
Missus Whitman was serving as governor
of New Jersey when President Bush
chose her as E-P-A administrator.
The United States Senate confirmed
her nomination in January of two-thousand-one.
Among her major successes was to order
the company, General Electric, to
pay to remove poisonous chemical waste
from an eastern river. Two General
Electric factories along the Hudson
River released the waste into the
water for many years. Missus Whitman
also won approval for new rules to
help cut pollutants created by the
use of diesel fuel.
However, she found herself in a difficult
situation when President Bush rejected
the Kyoto treaty on global warming
in two-thousand-one. She had said
the president would keep a campaign
promise to act on carbon dioxide releases
by power stations. But Mister Bush
said he could not support the treaty
at a time of economic weakness and
an energy crisis.
The E-P-A head faced a lot of criticism
at times. For example, critics say
the E-P-A failed to quickly and fully
deal with the environmental damage
from the terrorist attacks on New
York City on September eleventh, two-thousand-one.
Missus Whitman is leaving without
completing work on a major environmental
proposal by the administration. The
Clear Skies measure is designed to
reduce the release of sulfur dioxide,
nitrogen oxides and mercury from power
production centers.
Still, Missus Whitman says she is
pleased with the record of the Environmental
Protection Agency during her time
there. She says she wants to return
to New Jersey and spend more time
with her husband.
President Bush praised her as a tireless
fighter for new policies for cleaner
air, purer water and better protected
land. And he called her a trusted
friend and adviser.
The Bush administration reportedly
is considering several possible replacements
for Christine Whitman. The possible
nominees are said to include John
Engler, the former governor of Michigan,
and Josephine Cooper. She is the president
and chief executive officer of the
Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers.
This VOA Special English Environment
Report was written by Caty Weaver.
|