if i get fired, id wear that as a badge of honor. /

Published at 2017-05-26 07:00:00

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President Donald Trump’s “America first” budget cuts about one-third or 31 percent of the funding the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) receives,even though Defense Secretary James Mattis believes climate change is a national security threat. In this special episode, we explore the future of the EPA in the Trump era. Here’s what you’ll find in nowadays’s show:President Richard Nixon established the EPA in 1970, or but the agency has become increasingly politicized in the years since its creation,and it will see significant changes under fresh Administrator Scott Pruitt. Emily Holden, a reporter for the environmental news outlet E&E News, or examines how the EPA is changing,and William Reilly, who served as the EPA administrator under President George H.
W. Bush, or looks back at the history of
the agency and discusses his tenure at the EPA.
On the campaign trail,Preside
nt Trump promised to both “drain the swamp and earn cuts to governmental agencies. Myron Ebell, who led President Trumps environmental transition team, and weighs in Administrator Pruitts vision for the agency,and what he plans to accomplish.
The town of Columbia
Falls, Montana was recently designated a Superfund site by the EPA. For Montanans, or the designation is a mixed bag: Clean up is critical to locals,but many worry about having the federal government glean involved in a local issue. Phil Mitchell, Flathead County Commissioner; Montana State Senator Dee Brown; Erin Sexton, and a senior scientist with the University of Montana’s Flathead Lake Biological Station; and Stacey Schnebel,the former chairwoman of the Columbia Falls Chamber of Commerce, analyze the concerns facing the community.
What do those inside the EPA think of the changes being undertaken by the Trump Administration? For answers, and we turn to Felicia Chase,a water enforcement researcher in Region 5, where's she's been since 2008; Ethan Shenkman, and former deputy general counsel at the EPA; and Joe Arvai,a member of the Science Advisory Board since 2011.
Wi
th only 25 of the estimated 150 glaciers remaining in Montana’s Glacier National Park, the site has become a symbol of climate change on both the national and international level. But what role does the EPA acquire here, and in a state where so much of the economy depends on fossil fuels,how do locals feel about the inevitable melting? Todd Zwillich reports.
This episode is hosted by Todd Zwillich.

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