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  • >>ANNOUNCER: Promoting a healthy environment

  • It's the air we breathe. Clean,

  • safe water...

  • responsible management of our natural resources

  • to protect and restore

  • for a sustainable future...

  • environment matters.

  • >>RANDY HUFFMAN: Our surface mining activities need to be, and our oil and gas extraction

  • activities need to be considerate of

  • of uh...

  • how it impacts the people that that live in those communities

  • but at the same time

  • the people that live in those communities need to have those jobs for

  • or those impacts are not important to them.

  • >>KATHY COSCO: A conversation with the DEP cabinet secretary Randy Huffman

  • Plus...

  • >>GEN> HOYER: This is a great example of how pushing things back down to

  • to the lower state level, to the National Guard

  • level --

  • you can save money and create jobs for men and women who serve

  • the nation or their family members. >>COSCO: A recycling program here in WV

  • is saving taxpayers millions of dollars

  • and helping the environment, too.

  • Hello everyone and welcome to Environment Matters. I'm Kathy Cosco

  • with the west virginia department of environmental protection.

  • Promoting a healthy environment...

  • it's the mission statement here at the DEP.

  • Putting those words into action is the job of cabinet secretary Randy Huffman.

  • He sat down recently with the DEP's Tom Aluise for an extended conversation

  • about the environmental challenges facing the state now

  • and in the coming years.

  • >>NARRATION: Appointed cabinet secretary by governor Joe Manchin in

  • May of 2008,

  • Randy Huffman overseas the eight hundred plus employees of the west

  • virginia department of environmental protection.

  • He says he's seen a lot of changes... >>RANDY HUFFMAN: I came to work in

  • this, the

  • predecessor agency to the DEP

  • in 1988,

  • I believe it was,

  • and the surface mining act was young. The clean water act

  • had been around for a while but still it was in the

  • pretty early stages,

  • but but what I've seen

  • evolve over the past twenty five years is

  • us go from from,

  • as a state,

  • from a rough, crude

  • interpretation and application of the law

  • to a much more refined and sophisticated

  • application of the law and

  • I think the citizenry has really been

  • one of the main drivers behind that, if not the main driver

  • behind it. People are

  • smarter.

  • They're more educated.

  • As our ability to analyze things changes and as technology changes

  • and as the flow of information and access to information is

  • is much easier than it was in those days the expectations greater.

  • >>NARRATION: These days, a lot of those expectations revolve

  • around the state's energy policy.

  • West Virginia has an energy producer since the eighteen hundreds

  • but changes in the resource extraction industry

  • have raised concerns about the environment impacts some of these

  • practices.

  • >>HUFFMAN: A lot of people...

  • a lot of folks on both sides of the energy debate

  • will use, or abuse the agency

  • in order to promote their beliefs or their agendaor their

  • ideology.

  • It is

  • absolutely true to say that the

  • the DEP

  • shapes public policy on energy --

  • maybe not as much as people

  • might think

  • because we're really more of a reactive type organization them we are

  • proactive.

  • How we regulate is really driven by technology

  • and as the technology changes for

  • water treatment, for

  • coal mining or natural gas extraction or chemical processes --

  • manufacturing processes --

  • as is that technology changes

  • we have to change the way we regulate

  • and often change the rules because the tail doesn't wag the

  • dog on these issues so

  • a lot of times we're playing catch up and sometimes that

  • catch up...

  • that lag time is years

  • >>NARRATION: Huffman says one notable exception is the state's recent regulations

  • concerning horizontal drilling for natural gas

  • in the Marcellus shale formation

  • and the extraction practice known as fracking.

  • >>HUFFMAN: Within just...

  • within about three or

  • four years of that industry taking off,

  • we had a very solid regulatory framework in place and you can't say that about

  • coal mining. That took decades. You can't say it about

  • manufacturing or any other water quality issues. Those all took...

  • that took decades

  • to get regulatory controls in place for those processes.

  • >>NARRATION: Huffman says that shows the agency is responsive to the changing

  • economic landscape and finding a balance that encourages development

  • while at the same time protecting the state's land, water and air.

  • >>HUFFMAN: It's very difficult for me to separate

  • what's good for west virginia from what's good for west virginia's

  • environment but because

  • there is overlap there and...

  • you know a lot of people --

  • and I've been told this by some of my critics is that

  • economic development and public policy on energy and things like that are not

  • my concerns -- should not be the concern of the DEP

  • and I just disagree with that. I work for a boss who has to balance a

  • budget.

  • He has to shape energy policy. He has to do these things and

  • I cannot separate myself from something

  • that is so important to the individual that I work for so

  • there is a balance there...

  • >>NARRATION: Defining that balance point is not always easy...

  • >>HUFFMAN: Things are rarely black and white

  • uh... most of what we deal with there is some shade of grey

  • and so we have to make good, logical common sense decisions about where the

  • line is between

  • environment and is environmental protection...

  • You know, there are issues in coal mining that concern me...

  • there are issues in the oil and gas extraction

  • industry that concern me and i think rather then...

  • unfortunately, the debate is always about

  • for it or support for it

  • or an attitude that's against it and

  • I'm not in that place. I'm in a place in the middle and

  • I really wish that people could come to the center on those

  • on those issues and let's do what's right

  • for the economy, for jobs... When you think about what's important to

  • people...

  • clean water and clean air,

  • as important as they are,

  • are only going to be important to people if they're working.

  • If they don't have a job and have no hope

  • then they are not going to be concerned about protecting those things.

  • So that that's really important. That's why that debate needs to take place in

  • the middle somewhere, you know. Our surface mining activities need to be and

  • our oil and gas extraction activities need to be considerate of

  • how it impacts the people that live in those communities,

  • but at the same time

  • the people that live in those communities need to have those jobs for

  • or those impacts are not important to them.

  • >>KATHY COSCO: In the second half of our conversation,

  • secretary Huffman talks about balancing the environment and the economy that's

  • coming up a little later in the program.

  • But first, did you know that warming your car up by letting it idle in the driveway is just a

  • waste of gas?

  • Most cars on the road today have electronic fuel injection

  • and a computer that adjusts the engine to run cold.

  • Letting your car idle is actually the slowest way to bring it up to operating

  • temperature and repeated cold idling, over time, can actually harm your

  • catalytic converter. >>GREG ADOLFSON: I'm Greg Adolfson in Kanawha City...

  • A recycling program is saving more than two million pounds of material from

  • going into landfills,

  • and that's just this year...

  • Why organizers say the project is a big win for taxpayers and the environment.

  • Those stories and more when Environment Matters continues...

>>ANNOUNCER: Promoting a healthy environment

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環境問題 - 2012年12月,第一部分 (Environment Matters - December 2012, Part 1)

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