50 PROGRAMS SCRAPPED AT THE ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
President Trump proposes a $54 billion increase in military spending, offset by slashing domestic programs. The Environmental Protection Agency would take the biggest hit, a 31 percent cut that would eliminate a quarter of the staff and save $2.6 billion, returning the agency’s budget to 1970s-era levels. Congress dictates spending, however, and some cuts face bipartisan pushback. The agency has begun offering buyouts to workers.
Here is a sample of programs that would be eliminated:
Wetlands restoration for San Francisco Bay, the Great Lakes, Chesapeake Bay, Puget Sound and South Florida. (saving $427 million)
Science to Achieve Results grants for university research on environmental problems. ($10.6 million)
Climate Protection Program, including the voluntary Energy Star efficiency label for appliances. ($70 million)
Climate change research conducted in coordination with the U.S. Global Change Research program. ($19.4 million)
Marine Pollution Program, which prevents dumping of harmful material into the ocean. ($4.2 million)
National Estuary Program, which helps Morro Bay and San Francisco Bay address declines in ecosystem health. ($20.5 million)
Water Sense Program, a voluntary labeling program for products such as shower heads and toilets that conserve water. ($3 million)
Non-Point Source Pollution grants to address farm runoff. ($165 million)
Underground Storage Tank grants. EPA says 561,000 of these tanks store petroleum or other hazardous substances, posing their biggest threat to contamination of drinking water. ($1.5 million)
Endocrine Disruptor Program, which screens and tests chemicals that harm wildlife and disrupt children’s growth. ($6 million)
Does not eliminate but slashes by 80 percent, or $542 million, the agency’s Science Advisory Board “to reflect an anticipated lower number of peer reviews.”
Online resources: Read more at http://bit.ly/2oDjijc
Climate science at other agencies
Trump’s budget request would terminate four key Earth science missions at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration:
PACE, an ocean monitoring program.
Orbiting Carbon Observatory-3, a satellite under development to study distribution of carbon dioxide on Earth.
The Deep Space Climate Observatory
The CLARREO Pathfinder that measures heat in the atmosphere.
Note: Trump’s plan would also zero out $250 million in programs at the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration that support coastal and marine management and research, including the Sea Grants program.