EPA Chief, a.k.a. Acceleratti Incredibilis
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Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Stephen L. Johnson is doing his best Road Runner impersonation as he is pursued relentlessly by the Senate Environment and Public Works chairman, Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.). Boxer has been after Johnson since March to come to the Hill to answer a few friendly questions about his policies on the Clean Air Act and global warming.
Each time the wily chairwoman thought she had Johnson in her grasp, his schedule was absolutely jammed, he couldn't make it, busy, busy, on the road, even wandering about in Australia.
This week, the committee was again holding hearings on matters environmental and wanted Johnson to appear. But the initial word the committee got from EPA was that Johnson was out of pocket, maybe touring Hurricane Ike damage. That could take a while.
So how about Deputy Administrator Marcus Peacock?
Alas, Peacock was going to be at the annual meeting of the nonprofit Environmental Council of the States, a respected nonpartisan group of state environmental agency heads. The ECOS meeting was at the lovely Chateau on the Lake Resort Spa & Convention Center in Branson, Mo. In fact, Peacock was the scheduled keynote speaker Sunday at the organization's 15th anniversary lunch. No doubt other commitments made it impossible to get back on time.
The ECOS agenda included the usual long, numbing discussions of environmental issues such as the Interstate Oil and Gas Compact Commission forum. But then there's the Monday evening dinner cruise aboard the paddle-wheeler Showboat Branson Belle. The brochure says "your heart will soar as you journey past lush Ozark mountains surrounded by the pristine beauty of Lake Table Rock," as "talented singers and dancers" offer "showstopping productions. . . . It's Broadway on the water.'"
The EPA offered the Senate committee a couple of low-level folks as sacrificial lambs, instead. But where in the world was the busy Johnson? The committee checked the Internet. And what do you know? Turns out he, too, was in Branson yesterday at the ECOS "Plated Breakfast." And then he was off for a meeting in Bentonville, Ark. He's then to be briefed on EPA efforts in the Gulf of Mexico region and maybe do a little touring before he's off to Philadelphia for what's surely a critical regional office meeting.
So how could he possibly make time to see angry senators? He's out there hustling so hard, we're told, he may have gotten in too late on Monday and missed the cruise.
At this point in the race, the smart money has to be on Road Runner Johnson to permanently escape capture. The Senate calendar is about done, as is Johnson's tenure at the EPA. Why, there's barely time to squeeze in that rumored EPA trip to Israel and Jordan next month.
Anticipation
With the presidential polls generally close -- though Sen. John McCain appears to have had a tough week or so -- Loop Fans are playing with those interactive electronic state electoral maps ( http:/
The odds favor Sen. Barack Obama in that event. In the current Congress, the Democrats are in the majority in 27 state delegations and the GOP in 21, with two are split evenly, according to the American Enterprise Institute's Norman Ornstein. And the Democratic numbers may improve a bit, because Democrats are expected to pick up some seats even if the presidential balloting is effectively a draw.
Those numbers contrast with the situation in the bitterly contested 2000 election -- the last time people talked about the possibility of the House deciding the outcome. The 2000 House lineup showed the GOP controlling 28 of the 50 state delegations, not to mention the House itself.


