Wishing to meet with President Obama’s White House energy and
environment adviser Carol Browner, Sen. John Barrasso (R-Wyo.) has
delayed the nomination of Lisa Jackson to be Obama’s Environmental
Protection Agency administrator. He placed an anonymous objection to the
unanimous consent resolution to move the nomination without a roll call
vote on Tuesday, and raised his concerns with Sen. Barbara Boxer
(D-Cal.), chair of the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works,
on Wednesday.
Barrasso spokesman Gregory Keeley tells E&E
News:
The bottom line is Senator Barrasso is concerned about this new
structure with an appointed energy czar in the White House with no
accountability in the White House. Just about how that will operate.
He wants to know that. He wants to ensure sufficient transparency and
oversight. He wants to be convinced Congress will have the ability to
get answers from the appointed czar, Carol Browner. At this stage,
he’s not convinced that’s the case.
Yesterday, Browner participated in President Obama’s economic briefing,
with National Economic Director Lawrence Summers, Office of Management
and Budget Director Peter Orszag and White House Policy Council Director
Melody Barnes.
Granta Nakayama, a Bush administration appointee, is the interim
EPA administrator. According to E&E News,
Nakayama “has been a noncontroversial figure since joining
EPA as its top enforcement official in July
2005.”
UPDATE: E&E News reports that Granta Nakayama has resigned, with
Mike Shapiro replacing him as interim EPA
administrator.
Shapiro, 60, has previously been a senior official in the Office of
Water, director of EPA’s Office of Solid
Waste, and deputy assistant administrator in
EPA’s Office of Air and Radiation, where he
helped implement the 1990 Clean Air Act amendments. He also has held
positions in EPA’s Office of Prevention,
Pesticides and Toxic Substances.