FEBRUARY 1975
VOL. ONE, NO. TWO
             THE JOY RIDE IS OVER, BY JOHN R. QUARLES JR.
           DOES THE MERIT SYSTEM HAVE A FUTURE AT EPA ?
                A  INTERVIEW WITH ALVIN L. ALM
                   U.S. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY

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      SALUTE TO  BIKERS

  Incredible as it may seem to many of us, some of our associates still
bicycle to work at EPA headquarters daily despite the bite of winter
weather.
  Their willingness to battle through icy winds is all the more remark-
able when you realize the bicyclists have to thread their way through
hazardous city  traffic, outwit thieves eager  to steal their vehicles
and tolerate what many of them characterize as "inadequate" parking
racks and wash-up facilities at EPA headquarters.
  For comments by the bike riders, see page 18.
  Most of the rest of us  shuffle papers, hold meetings,  talk  on  the
phone, write memos and  then drive home  in a polluting  car or bus.
Reflecting later on the day's events, we may occasionally have some
misgivings about whether we made any progress in protecting the envi-
ronment.
  The biker at least has the comforting knowledge that he did some-
thing tangible to avoid increasing the load  of pollutants in the air. In
addition,  the silent bicycle has not  added to the  cacophony  of traffic
noise.
  Riding a bike may not be possible for all of us. Reasons  of health or
long commuting distances may preclude biking to work.
  Yet some bicyclists drive their cars to the city outskirts, park their
autos and then lift their bikes from trunk racks and pedal the rest of the
way to work.
  In addition to environmental gains and the obvious health  advan-
tages, bicycling offers esthetic benefits. The traveler on a bicycle sees
a different world than the auto driver or passenger.
  The pace is slower and perceptions of your surroundings keener. The
scarlet sunrise over the Potomac, which was largely ignored in  the car
or bus, can now be recognized as a glorious work of Nature, surpassing
any scenic painting at the National  Gallery  of Art. And each day Na-
ture, in her changing moods, will provide a new and stunning portrait
in the sky,  free to all who will simply take the time to observe.
  If winter biking is too rugged for you, remember that the days al-
ready are getting longer as we move toward Spring once again. Making
plans for what you will be doing when May  buds blossom is one of the
secrets for surviving grim winter.
  You might  consider  reading or  re-reading  that minor classic,
"Spring in Washington," by Louis  Halle, an ardent bicyclist. It offers
vivid descriptions of the natural world which Halle often explored on a
bicycle and which we are trying to'protect through our efforts at EPA.
  While  we wait impatiently for Spring, our winter bike riders  can
serve  us  all  as a symbol of the old-fashioned grit and gumption that
from our earliest days as a Nation have enabled Americans to cope with
such small and large sorrows as broken plows,  droughts and Indian
raids.
  As the environmental movement  is  squeezed by mounting economic
and energy pressures, environmentalists need more than ever the self-
discipline and patient determination to master adversity which served
our forebears so well.
  Meanwhile, to EPA's intrepid bikers and  to bicylists everywhere we
wish, in the words of the old Irish prayer, "May the wind always be at
your back."

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United States
Environmental
Protection Agency
Russell E. Train
Administrator
Patricia L. Cahn
Director of Public Affairs
Charles D. Pierce
Editor
Staff:
Van Trumbull
Ruth Hussey
PHOTO CREDITS
Cover, Dick Swanson*
Page 2, Arthur Greenberg*
Page 3, Don Moran
Page 4, Howard Stein
Page 5, Paul Conklin*
Page 6 and 7, Don Moran
Page 13, Gene Daniels*
Page 14, Dick Swanson*
Ken Heyman*
James H. Pickerell*
Page 15, Marc St. Gil*
Leroy Woodson*
Dick Swanson*
Page 16, Don Moran
Page 18 and 19, Don Moran
*DOCUMER1CA Photos
Cover: Heavy traffic on Walt
Whitman Bridge connecting
Philadelphia and New Jersey.
Contents
Page 2
Page 6 ^
Page 8
m
Page 10 Jm^^
Page 13
Page 16 ^T
The Joy Ride Is Over
by John R. Quarles Jr.
Does The Merit System Have a
Future at EPA?
Interview with Alvin L. Aim
Honors Awards
r
Around the Nation
Photo Essay
Profile
,, , A ,*
Page 20
Page 21
Arrivals and Departures
News Briefs


'P'he EPA Journal will be published monthly, with combined issues for July-August and November-
December, for employees of the U.S. Enviromental Protection Agency. It does not alter or supersede
regulations, operating procedures or manual instructions. Contributions and inquiries should be addressed to the
Editor, (A- 107) Room 209, West Tower, Waterside Mall, 401 M St., S.W. Washington. D.C. 20460. No
permission necessary to reproduce contents except copyrighted photos and other materials.

PAGE

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IVUH-. 2

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                  THE  JOY  RIDE
                              IS OVER
  We are entering an era which will
perhaps be  characterized in Charles
Dickens' phrase, "It was the best  ot
times, it was the worst of times."
  It may seem like harsh times now that
the long American joy ride on limitless
supplies of  gasoline, other fuels, and
electricity is coming to an end. It hits us
as bad news that the economy has
slowed down and booming growth rates
in the national economy probably can
no longer be maintained.
  The good  news is that we have lots of
energy to save, a fundamentally strong
economy that can adapt to a more sensi-
ble rate of growth, an enlightened pub-
lic that strongly supports our environ-
mental programs and a President who
showed in his State of the Union mes-
sage that he is placing strong emphasis
on environmental protection and energy
conservation.
  I think it  is fair to say that the White
House has made a substantial shift  to-
ward the views  advocated by EPA and
is placing tremendous  importance  on
energy  conservation.  The   basic
Administration position  now also
clearly reflects that environmental pro-
tection is a  pre-condition to energy ex-
pansion.
  Despite the urging of the automobile
industry, union leaders in this industry,
and a considerable part of the Federal
establishment for a freeze on existing
automobile emission controls, the Pres-
BY JOHN R. QUARLES JR.
      Deputy Administrator
         United States
  Environmental Protection Agency
ident decided to propose tightening the
existing standards.
  Under the  President's  proposal the
emission levels per mile would be tight-
ened in 1977 from  1.5 grams of hy-
drocarbons to .9 and from 15 grams of
carbon monoxide to 9 grains— stand-
ards now in effect in California. This is
half the distance from the present in-
terim auto  standards to the final stand-
ards provided by Congress under exist-
ing law. For nitrogen oxides, the pres-
ent Federal interim  standard of 3.1
grams a mile, would be continued for
every State except  California  which
now has a standard of 2 grams per mile.
  On strip  mining, there is clear recog-
nition by the Administration that the
public will  not tolerate full throttle coal
production  unless adequate controls can
be set up  to prevent environmental
abuse.  The President supports  enact-
ment of strip mining legislation. The
Administration  will offer several
amendments to cure specific objections
to the strip mining bill recently vetoed,
but it will avoid opening up a vast range
of questions that were resolved by the
Congress in that bill. The Administra-
tion will work to achieve speedy enact-
ment of strip mining legislation  in  an
acceptable  form.
  The  third area of conflict between
energy and environmental needs is the
expanded use of coal to generate elec-
tricity. The Administration has solidly
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endorsed EPA's position that all new
power  plants must  meet the  strict re-
quirements of our  new-source stand-
ards. It has also endorsed EPA's posi-
tion  that tall  stacks and intermittent
control systems are  not acceptable as a
permanent method of control.
  The Administration will offer limited
amendments to the Clean  Air Act to
provide more flexibility in  allowing
power plants to convert from the use of
oil to coal and to establish more realistic
deadlines  for  power plants to install
scrubbers. The Administration's  pro-
posals would insist, however,  that pri-
mary  air quality  standards  to  protect
health must not be violated in any case.
  In the development of the Adminis-
tration's overall program.
the EPA leadership held a
round of discussions with
representatives of Federal
agencies representing all
the interests and concerns
important to  the public
welfare. In contrast to
our  disagreements  of a
year ago,  this year we
reached genuine agree-
ment that these positions
arc in the public interest.
  The  approach outlined
in the President's  State of
the Union  message does
involve significant  mod-
ification of  several re-
quirements  under the
Clean Air Act. More im-
portantly,  however, the
President  has  committed
his full support  to con-
tinuing the progress  in
the environmental  field. Despite  the
agony  of current  economic difficulties
and the intense need for greater energy
supply, the President has declared  that
this  Country  must  continue to move
forward in the national  effort  for en-
vironmental  protection.  He  placed
greater emphasis on environmental  val-
ues  and energy conservation  than we
have seen before.
  In addition  to  the support from the
White  House anu  many of the executive
agencies we have been  encouraged by
the  recent  findings   of  the  Joint
Economic Committee of Congress:
  •'There should  be no general relaxa-
tion of environmental standards for the
sake of reducing  inflationary pressures
because: (I) the benefits of this invest-
ment clearly exceed the costs, (2) their
contribution to inflation has been  and
will continue to be minimal, (3) delays
will only  increase the ultimate cost of
environmental cleanup, and  (4)  the
stimulative effect  of these expenditures
on employment in the near future  will
be beneficial to the economy."
  Reviewing the  recent history of the
environmental movement, we  can see
that we have  made sweeping gains in
the past feu1  years.  Congress has re-
sponded  to  the  will of  an aroused
American public.  First  came  the  Na-
tional Environmental Policy Act, then
the Clean Air Act and the significant
updating of the Federal Water Pollution
 Act,  as well as acts  to  control noise,
 pesticides, and ocean  dumping.
   As a result, in many areas plagued by
 our most severe pollution problems, the
 air today  is getting  cleaner and the
 water is getting cleaner.
   We know that curbing  pollution  is
 costly. We  have  undertaken  to correct
 past mistakes. We know we have to pay
 now  for  the "free" air  and  water de-
 spoiled in the past and to include in fu-
 ture industrial and social costs the con-
 trol of pollution.
   This should not come as a surprise  to
 the people  of EPA. Environmentalists
 have  been telling  us for years — and we
 have  helped to spread the word—that
 the American way of waste is economi-
cally  profligate and ecologically peril-
ous. From  Aldo Leopold in the I940's
to Barry Commoner in recent years, we
have learned that the whole earth  is fi-
nite. Land, air, and water and the  web
of plant and animal life  were  not made
to be exploited by us. We don't own the
biosphere in fee simple, but only as
joint  tenants.  And  we  hope  the  deed
says "with right of survival."
   As  workers in EPA.  the  leading
agency  in  America  for  restoring  and
maintaining the quality of the environ-
ment, we know, better than most, how
closely environmental   protection is
connected to energy  uses  and to the
economy. There is  scarcely an  EPA
program, laboratory study, or enforce-
             ment action that is not af-
             fected  by  the  energy
             policies  of the  Federal
             Government   and  the
             energy-use habits of the
             public.  And every   EPA
             program or action affects
             the national economy, di-
             rectly  or  indirectly. We
             are  required by  law to
             consider  economic ef-
             fects  of pollution control
             regulations  and enforce-
             ment actions,  to weigh
             the  costs  and  seek the
             best    cost-to-benefit
             ratios.
                In   reviewing   the
             economic   impact of our
             environmental  efforts,
             we must  remember that
             making the most econom-
              ical  use of our resources
              is an  environmental as
 well as an economic goal. Pollution is
 waste  and when  we put that  waste  to
 productive  use we are serving both
 economic and environmental ends.
  The need  to pursue environmental
 protection goals continues to be critical.
 The benefits of pollution control expen-
 ditures are well worth their costs.
  Real progress has been made in  re-
 cent years in environmental protection
 but now  we are facing  rising resistance
 in  achieving the  legislative goals and
 funding  needed  to continue  our ad-
 vance.
  As the  Environmental Protection
 Agency  enters its  fifth  year,  we are
 aware   that   misconceptions  over
 conflicts—both real and  imaginary—
1'ACI  4

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among  environmental  goals,  energy
needs, and the health of our economy
have slowed the momentum ot" the en-
vironmental movement.
  But this  is clearly no  time  to reduce
our environmental  commitments.  We
continue to accumulate information  in-
dicating  that the severity of environ-
mental problems is far greater than orig-
inally believed.
  For  example,  recently  a  research
team, working as part of EPA's CHESS
Program (Community Health and  En-
vironmental Surveillance System) dis-
closed evidence that  exposure  to par-
ticulate  pollution can adversely affect
children's breathing  capacity.  Another
study showed that as many as 20 percent
of children in  a city like
New  York can develop
severe and chronic  res-
piratory diseases.
  Another exampie of
the  severity of environ-
mental  problems  is the
Reserve Mining case. As
you know,  we discovered
the probability  that the
discharges  by Reserve
Mining of iron ore wastes
into  Lake Superior were
posing a threat of cancer
to the people of Duluth,
Minn.,  whose drinking
water  comes  from the
lake.  While the disposi-
tion of this case is yet to
be finally decided by the
courts,  the frightening
public health questions it
raises remain.
  In addition  to our  re-
sponsibility  for  protecting  public
health,  we also have an obligation to
save the beauty of our natural world and
the resources needed to  sustain life on
this planet.
  Most reasonable  men  and  women
have long arrived at the  realization that
a healthy environment is as necessary
for our society as a strong economy and
sufficient energy.  But where conflicts
arise  among  these three  factors,  ba-
lances must be struck and compromises
made. While most of us  accept this, we
continue to hear the voices of some who
regard environmental concern and pro-
tection as frivolous. For  these individu-
als, the only issues that  matter  are the
well-being  of the economy and the res-
toration of energy without end. The en-
vironment be damned.
   It would be unfortunate enough if the
cause of environmentalist!] had to con-
tend only with  those  who did not love
the environment enough, but the cause
is  also ill served by those  who love it
too much. We have all met or know of
individuals who in their zeal for a cause
or ideal do more harm than good to that
goal. Such is the case of those environ-
mentalists who, like the know-nothings
of anti- environmentalism, grant legit-
imacy and primacy only to their cause.
That man does not live by clean air and
water alone  is of no concern to them.
  It is  my  hope that both of these
groups will  respond  to reason, but of
one thing I am certain: our role and the
role of this Agency remain unchanged.
We will continue  to  work for the  en-
vironmental protection that  the  Con-
gress  has commanded and the people
deserve.  Where  other considerations
besides  the  environment  must  he
weighed, they will  be  weighed and
compromises  will  be  made where
necessary. This should not be construed
by  anyone as either  a weakness or a
sell-out, for it will be neither. It will
simply be our way of meeting the new
realities  that we all must face.
  One of the realities that all programs
of the magnitude of environmental pro-
tection  must  face  is  cost-benefit
analysis. Recently, the Council on En-
 vironmental  Quality announced its
 latest clean-up estimate for the decade
 ending  in 1983: the cost of cleaning up
 the Nation's air, water, and land is now
 put  at  nearly $195  billion,  up  nearly
 one-third from last  year's  estimate.
 Many have asked whether such expendi-
 tures of money are  justified in  these
 times. We feel that they are, but what
 about the citizens? A decrease in illness
 and  death due to environmental pollu-
 tion control is  often difficult to  ap-
 preciate when the benefits are not  im-
 mediately visible but the bills are.  En-
 vironmental protection may not provide
 instant  satisfaction the way spending
 money or pressing down the accelerator
 does. But in the long  run we  know that
             the return on environmen-
             tal protection is life pres-
             ervation, and  that  fact
             alone justifies the cost.
               I  believe,  and opinion
             polls support my belief,
             that this is also clear to
             most Americans. It  is for
             this reason that environ-
             mental  protection must be
             ranked  among  the  most
             important considerations
             when the crucial  deci-
             sions that will  shape  the
             future of our Nation  are
             made.
               In  the individual hard-
             Iship of employee layoffs.
             the national  economic
             difficulties  of  inflation
       ^^   and recession,  the tieht-
lLnn.«.wa   cuing squcc/c of energy
             shortages, and  the  con-
             flicts which require  some
 modification  of our environmental
 goals — in all  these respects these seem
 to be the worst of limes. But  from a
 longer view  we can see that the country
 is making a basic and essential transi-
 tion. We are shifting  from  attitudes and
 patterns of unlimited  material growth,
 consumption,  and environmental abuse
 toward a new  national way of life that
seeks to balance the  activities of man
with the resources of our natural world.
Only by finding that balance is  there
hope for our future. Even though we are
now  bearing the full cost and  wracking
burdens of seeking that balance, we are
continuing to move ahead, and in this
sense these are the best of times.
                                         I :

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   Does EPA's leadership really support the Civil Service
 system? How do you get promoted? Will there be mass
 layoffs in 1975? Has the security crackdown in EPA paid
 off? Mr. Aim answers these and other questions of in-
 terest  to employees in this interview with EPA Journal.
           does the
   merit  system
   have   a  future
             at  epa?
 Q  I would  like to start off by asking you  what is your
impression of employee morale in EPA at the present time?
 A  I believe that for a number of reasons employee morale at
EPA is not as high as it should be. These  reasons are varied,
but include the mixture of new people with those of our pred-
ecessor agencies, an impatience by many in the progress made
in accomplishing our goals, uncertainty about budgets, reor-
ganization, and certainly the aftermath of Watergate.
 The Agency's morale is of real concern to  management.
Some of the actions  we are taking to stabilize constant reor-
ganizations, to improve communications between top man-
agement and the employees, and to push forward on our execu-
tive development program and upward mobility  program
should all lead to improvements  in morale. Most important,
however, is management's  commitment to fair treatment of
employees and encouragement of their further development
and advancement.
 Q  What are EPA's priorities in personnel management?
 A  Let me cover three  or four items.  First,  executive  de-
velopment is certainly a key priority. Historically, many of the
top management positions in this Agency have been filled by
outsiders.  We now  have a large cadre  of experienced  and
highly capable people within EPA, and it is very important  that
our executive development program identify those with skills
and talents and assure that most of our top management posi-
tions are filled from  within.
 Second, we need to tighten up on personnel management in
general, and specifically position management. We have  just
published an order on position management. Last month we
started evaluating all headquarters jobs. We must tighten up
and improve our personnel management operations, and I be-
lieve a great deal of progress is being made.
 Third, we need to give major emphasis to our upward mobil-
ity program. I am working very closely with the Office of  Ad-
ministration on this, and we hope to have some initiatives  that
will greatly strengthen our upward mobility efforts in the near
future.
 Fourth, our efforts to be sure that the merit system works  and
that no bias occurs in filling jobs have a very high priority.  We
need to  assure that all EPA employees are given a fuJ! oppor-
tunity, and that includes  women, our older employees,  and
minority groups.
 It is not only important that we put these reforms into effect,
but also that we effectively communicate to all employees  that
the merit system is working and that they should take advan-
tage of the opportunities available.
 Q  In view of the decline in the economy and widespread un-
employment,  and the retrenchment by some  industries  and
governmental bodies, do you foresee any employment cut-
backs or reductions in force in the corning year?
 A The only reduction in force now in effect is at the Cincin-
nati National Field Investigations Center. Overall, the 1976
budget will see a small increase over the current level. Other
than the Cincinnati NFIC, 1 do not foresee any reductions in
force.
 Q Will there be transfers from headquarters to the regions
and laboratories to reduce the number of people at headquar-
ters?
 A Although we look toward increases in  the regions and the
National Environmental Research Centers, we are not going to
make changes merely to be making changes. As new programs
develop or priorities and workloads change, activities and posi-
tions would be transferred to the regions and the NERCs from
headquarters.
 But we want  to move cautiously, keeping uppermost in  our
PAGK 6

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mind the impact of any moves on EPA employees.
 Q Are reductions in grade generally being proposed for the
Agency?
 A No.
 Q What future do you see ahead for EPA? Has it stopped
growing? Are we over the hill now in terms of employment and
promotion possibilities?
 A Programmetically, EPA is merely beginning now to reach
its zenith. We have gone from enactment of very comprehen-
sive legislation through the development of most of the imple-
menting regulations. We are engaged in the very difficult job
of implementing some of the  most complex and far-reaching
laws in the Nation. Because of the substantive requirements. !
do not, in any way, see the responsibilities of EPA declining. I
see them growing. As such. I see increased opportunities for
EPA employees. I believe that our ability to implement these
very complex programs in the next few years will be the real
basis for EPA's long-term contribution to our society.
 Q A Washington newspaper reported that the United States
Civil  Service  Commission  has prepared a report which
criticizes EPA for violations of the merit system. Is that true?
 A The Civil Service Commission report set forth a number of
technical deficiencies and we  are making concerted efforts to
correct them. The Commission report in no way criticized EPA
for political influence in its hiring practices.
 Q How many Schedule C jobs are there in EPA?
 A EPA has ! 7 Schedule C jobs. This represents two-tenths of
one percent  of our total  employment force.  Each of these
Schedule C jobs has been reviewed by the Civil Service Com-
mission and is  acceptable to the  Commission.
 Q We heard the Civil Service Commission is going to send a
team to EPA to start checking  on jobs and grade levels. Is that
true'.'
 A That is incorrect.  As I indicated earlier, our Personnel
Management Division began a review in January.  We will be
reviewing all Washington positions. About  25 percent of our
total Washington complement  will be interviewed by the
EPA team.
 Q Will EPA  ever settle down and stop this constant  reor-
ganizing?
 A I think we  must put a stop to constant reorganization. As
you may be aware, we have  recently put  out an  order that
would require approval of all branch level reorganization. We
believe this action would have  the effect of greatly diminishing
reorganization.  However, as new programs are created or cur-
rent operations become obsolete, we must  evaluate whether
reorganization is desirable. The burden of proof should be on
whether reorganization is needed for meeting program objec-
tives.  If a compelling case cannot be made, we should avoid
the morale and  operational problems caused by constant reor-
ganization.
 Q When will  all the EPA offices in the Washington area be
consolidated in Waterside Mall?
 A We had originally hoped to do that by now. Unfortunately,
our original estimate was somewhat optimistic. We hope by
mid-1975  to have most of our employees  in Waterside  Mall
and all employees will be located there by 1976.
 Q Why was the women's program office in EPA  abolished'.'
 A The women's program was  not abolished. A  task force
looked at the whole area of civil rights and urban affairs and
concluded there was a need to separate the policy functions
from the operating functions.  In doing so, the previous posi-
tion of women's coordinator was kept as part of the policymak-
ing operation. The operational part of the program  is handled
in  the Office of  Administration and we are now recruiting
someone to handle the women's programs from the operational
point of view.
 Q  How can blacks, Chicanos and women get higher paying
jobs in EPA?
 A  I think that  employees should first  consult with  their
supervisor and with the Personnel Management Division to de-
termine what career ladders are available, what their training
needs are, and then set goals for themselves in terms of the
kinds of positions they would like to fill. 1 would urge that
headquarters employees visit our Training Center  in the Mall
                                  Continued on page 17
       interview
                with
    alvin  1.  aim
    assistant  administrator
                      for
planning  and management
                                                                                                 PAtil. 7

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  The Gold Medal for Exceptional
Service is (he highest award granted by
EPA. The three Gold Medalists for
1974. together with their individual ci-
tations are:
EPA'S
                                   DR. THOMAS W. DUKE—
                                   Director, Gulf Breeze Environ-
                                   mental Research Laboratory, Na-
                                   tional Environmental Research
                                   Center, Corvallis,  Oregon.

                                   For selfless dedication and sus-
                                   tained outstanding performance as
                                   an administrator, as a scientist, and
                                   as a leader of scientists, contribut-
                                   ing to the successful accomplish-
                                   ment of EPA's pesticide, estuarine
                                   and marine water quality pro-
                                   grams.
                                   ALFRED C. SMITH—District Oil and
                                   Hazardous Materials Coordinator, EPA
                                   Region V , Chicago,  Illinois.

                                   For outstanding and heroic service to Re-
                                   gion V communities and State govern-
                                   ments  in implementing an effective
                                   emergency response program to cope with
                                   the problems of oil and hazardous  mate-
                                   rials spills.
                                    SEYMOUR D. GREENSTONE—
                                    Director, Management and Organization
                                    Division. Office of Administration.

                                    In recognition of his unique and outstand-
                                    ing contributions to the organizational and
                                    procedural design  of critical components
                                    and  systems within EPA.
                                         T
                                          J-hr
   -hree officials were awarded the
Gold Medal for Exceptional Service
and nine others the Silver Medal for
Superior Service in EPA's Fourth
Honor Awards Ceremony Jan. 9.
  In making these awards for superior
achievement and dedicated service
during the past year. Administrator
Train said, "The employees honored
here today are truly representative of
all of us. They reflect the highest
standards and goals to which we all are
pledged. The record of achievement of
these men and women in serving the
high purpose  of confronting and
resolving the  environmental problems
of our Nation is testimony to their de-
dication and commitment."
  Annually,  EPA gives special rec-
ognition to those employees under 3 I
years of age  who have made excep-
tional  contributions to the Agency's
mission. This year Awards for Out-
standing Youth Achievement went to
Fred T. Arnold, Office of Pesticides
Programs; Oddvar K. Aurdul. Re-
t'.Uil  S

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x^"~X-	

      The individual
    recipients of the
    Silver Medal for
    Superior Service
    are:
                  FOURTH   /JVARDS   CEREMONY
                  Dr. Kenneth Brid-
                  bord. Research Medieal
                  Officer. National En-
                  vironmental Research
                  Center, N.C.
                  Dale S. Bryson, Dep-
                  uty Director. Enforce-
                  ment Division, Region
                  V. Chicago
Rebecca Ward
Hanmer. Assistant Di-
rector, Resource De-
velopment Liaison Staff,
Office of Federal Ac-
tivities
                                            £-    I
                                             -     f
                                                            Victor J. Kimm. As-
                                                            sociate Deputy Assistant
                                                            Administrator for Plan-
                                                            nine and Evaluation
                                                            Ray E. McDevitt,
                                                            Attorney-Advisor, Water
                                                            Quality Division. Office
                                                            of Deputy General Coun-
                                                            sel
                                                        Albert C. Print/, Jr..
                                                        Director. Field Opera-
                                                        tions, Office of Water
                                                        Enforcement
                                                                           Jean J. Schueneman,
                                                                           Director. Control Pro-
                                                                           grams Development Di-
                                                                           vision. Office of Air
                                                                           Quality Planning and
                                                                           Standards
                                                                           Sarah M. Thomas,
                                                                           Chief. Library Systems
                                                                           Branch. Office of Ad-
                                                                           ministration
                                                                                                 Richard D. Wilson.
                                                                                                 Director. Stationary
                                                                                                 Source Enforcement Di-
                                                                                                 vision. Office of General
                                                                                                 Enforcement
gion X, Seattle; Theodore R. Breton.
Office of Noise Abatement and Con-
trol; Timothy Fields. Office of Solid
Waste Management Programs; Deb-
orah J. Humphrey, Region X, Seat-
tle; Dr. Michael J. Prival, Office of
Toxic Substances; Doris J. Ruopp.
Office of Toxic  Substances; Deanna
Wieman, Region IX, San Francisco;
and Beverly Sharon Williams,  Office
of Water Enforcement.
  Roger D. Lee, a commissioned
Public Health Service Officer and
chief. Surveillance and  Technical
                                         Assistance Section, Office of Water
                                         Program Operations, received the
                                         PHS Meritorious Service Medal in
                                         recognition of his leadership in water
                                         supply programs at home and
                                         abroad.
                                           A Special Commendation was
                                         awarded to William H. Mansfield
                                         111, a Department of State Foreign
                                         Service Officer on detail to this
                                         Agency, in recognition of his out-
                                         standing contributions as Director of
                                         Bilateral Programs, Office of Inter-
                                         national Activities.
                                                          In addition. Group AuauK
                                                         of the Silver Medal were
                                                         made to the Minority Institutions
                                                         Research Program. Office
                                                         of Research and Development;
                                                         and the F-ffluent Guidelines
                                                         Division. Office of
                                                         Water and Hazardous Materials;
                                                         and the Effluent Guidelines
                                                         Economic Task Force,
                                                         Office of Planning
                                                         and Management.
                                                                                                        PAGE 9

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dirty pictures
  More than 500 "dirty pictures"  were
submitted in the "Dirty Picture Pro-
gram." The program was sponsored re-
cently by Region I Public Affairs for
amateur photographers in New England.
Its purpose was to document on film
ecological eyesores in the region, to
stimulate improvements to the environ-
ment, and to demonstrate the need  for
continuing programs of environmental
protection.
  The  entries were reviewed by a panel
of judges made up of EPA staff members
from the Air, Water, Solid Waste,  and
Enforcement Branches, the Management
Division and Public  Affairs  Division.
Most of the photographers focused on
solid waste, although a number of  air
and water pollution photos were submit-
ted.
  The judges selected 29  pictures for
first prizes and 18 for honorable men-
tion. Plaques will be sent to first prize
winners and certificates for honorable
mention.
poetry and posters
  Region I has begun its third annual
Elementary Education Ecology Poem
and Poster Program. Offered to all stu-
dents in grades K-6 in New England, the
program encourages young people to
examine various aspects of pollution and
the  environment. The students submit
poems or posters for review by a panel of
judges appointed by EPA Public Affairs.
The panel is made  up of representatives
from civic, educational, and environ-
mental groups in the metropolitan Bos-
ton  area. Plaques and certificates will be
presented to winners in April. Approxi-
mately 100,000 students participated in
the  program in both 1973 and 1974 and
even more entries are expected this year

environmental stamp
  For the last two years, the Region I
Office has issued an environmental
stamp designed by  its Graphics Office.
Preparations are now under way for the
third annual stamp.  As in previous years,
the  stamp will read  "For a Cleaner New
England" and will depict in three colors
a rural scene and the  EPA logo.
  A total of 300,000 copies of the stamp
will be printed and  sent in April to en-
vironmental, civic,  educational,  and
government groups in the six states, as
well as to all employees in the Regional
Office.
  The environmental stamp is a  remin-
der  that people must continue to work for
a cleaner and healthier environment in
New England. The  stamps' widespread
use  in 1973 and 1974 demonstrated an
increasing support and concern "for a
cleaner New England."
                                                                               awareness week
                                                                                 Region 2 has offered to act as an in-
                                                                               formation exchange point in its area for
                                                                               environmental groups that are planning
                                                                               activities for National Environmental
                                                                               Awareness Week, April  19-26. The re-
                                                                               gional office has  suggested that these
                                                                               events could be used to highlight how far
                                                                               the various  governmental jurisdictions
                                                                               have progressed in meeting the goals of
                                                                               the 1970 Clean Air Act, the 1972 Water
                                                                               Pollution Control Act and other en-
                                                                               vironmental laws.
      PHILADELPHIA
on-land disposal
•  Follow-up interest has been high after
the  Middle Atlantic Region's sym-
posium Nov. 20-21 on  land application
of waste water. Many citizen groups,
some from outside of the region, have
expressed an interest in getting their
communities to use spray irrigation or
other land application techniques as part
of their municipal waste water treatment
systems. They are especially attracted by
the  lower treatment costs of land applica-
tion as opposed to more conventional
advanced waste treatment methods.
Copies of the symposium proceedings
will be available soon from  the Region
II] Public Affairs Division.
PAGE 10

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           ATLANTA
 water quality
   The National Water Quality Commis-
 sion has begun a study of water quality
 in the Southeast which is expected to
 continue into the Fall and may culminate
 in a full-fledged public hearing in Atlan-
 ta. The study is focused on the Chat-
 tahoochee River, one of some 11 river
 basins in the Nation under survey by the
 Commission. The Chattahoochee begins
 as a mountain brook in North  Georgia
 and flows into the Gulf of Mexico, divid-
 ing the states of Georgia and Alabama in
 route. The river is the source of Atlanta's
 drinking water.

 tva resists order
   EPA and the Tennessee Valley Au-
 thority, after months of efforts at
 negotiating legal and operative com-
 plexities of the Clean Air Act  as it
 applies to TVA, were officially dead-
 locked as EPA Journal  went to press.
 The disagreement stemmed from a De-
 cember order by Region IV Adminis-
 trator Jack E. Ravan directing TVA to
 clean up stack emissions of particulate
 matter at 10 of its coal-fired electric
 plants in Alabama,  Tennessee, and Ken-
 tucky. TVA contends it is not subject to
 enforcement action under the Clean Air
 Act.
   However, the Authority did not im-
 mediately come up with a formal reply.
 If TVA does not submit certain informa-
 tion on its intent, it would be in violation
 of the order and subject to criminal pro-
 visions of the Clean Air Act, contends
 EPA. Region IV enforcement says TVA
 is lagging behind most private utilities in
 its clean-up efforts.  It  also is contended
 that precipitators installed by TVA do
 not meet state emission regulations.
   EPA has  taken the position that TVA,
 although a corporate agency of the Fed-
 eral Government, is subject to the same
 pollution-control rules as private utilities
 and industry.  Earlier, the U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals in New Orleans upheld
 a suit brought by the State of Alabama
 against TVA. The State also argued that
TVA must obtain the same air pollution
 permits as private utilities and industry.
TVA, under the Ravan order, is directed
 to install air pollution control according
 to a timetable extending over the  next
three years.
 shopping centers
   The International Council of Shop-
 ping Centers Environmental Action
 Committee  is sponsoring a series of
 workshops  for its members in Region
 V, beginning in late March or early
 April, to orient them to  EPA's re-
 quirements  for indirect sources of air
 pollution. Called "Indirect Source Re-
 view Workshops," the sessions will be
 designed to clarify application proce-
 dures and regulations, to answer ques-
 tions on the Federal review time
 schedule, and to  review  criteria. The
 workshops will be held by and for
 ICSC members with EPA personnel
 participating. In states where  indirect
 source regulations are being proposed,
 the workshops will be supplemented
 with explanations of state review
 criteria by state officials.
construction grants
  Region VI has been holding a series
of meetings with representatives from
organizations and industries involved
in EPA's construction grants program.
  Purpose of the meetings is to discuss
problems involving the program for
construction of municipal wastewater
treatment plants and to help speed
these projects.
  Comments received from meetings
held in Dallas and elsewhere in the re-
gion are being studied to determine
procedures for eliminating existing
problems.
newspaper tour
  The Deputy Regional Administrator
Charles V. Wright and Randall Jessee,
director, Division of Public Affairs,
recently completed a four-day tour of
major regional newspapers as well as
State Offices to discuss the economic
impact of environmental controls.
  A question and  answer pamphlet was
prepared by the Regional Office and
was distributed during the tour. Sev-
eral constructive stories resulted from
the  meetings with editors and environ-
mental writers. A positive case for the
development of en v iron men a 1 controls
was presented to the news officials.

pesticides  conference
  On Feb. 25-26 pesticide producers
and state regulatory agencies will meet
with EPA Pesticide officials, including
authors of the new pesticide regula-
tions, in a two-day seminar at the Con-
tinental Hotel  in Kansas City,  Mis-
souri.
  Jerome Svore, Regional Adminis-
trator, said that in  view of the registra-
tion requirements and stepped-up ac-
tivities in the pesticide distribution
control field, it was felt that such a
meeting would enable registrants to
better understand  the new law  as well
as enable  EPA officials to coordinate
their activities in controlling toxic pes-
[icides.
                                                                                                            PAGE 1!

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                                       gasps  in  Utah
                                        News of reported increased respira-
                                       tory illness  in some parts of Utah be-
                                       cause of exposure to high levels of sul-
                                       fur oxide and sulfates in the air has
                                       stirred wide interest in that State and
                                       requests  for more information.
                                        The inquiries stemmed from release
                                       of EPA research results which showed
                                       that communities closest to the Ken-
                                       necott copper smelter near Magna,
                                       Utah, suffered the highest incidence of
                                       such problems as bronchitis, croup and
                                       acute lower respiratory illness.
                                        Most significant increases were
                                       noted after people had lived in the ex-
                                       posure area  for two years or more, ac-
                                       cording to the report "Health Con-
                                       sequences of Sulfur Oxide." The re-
                                       port pointed out that cigarette smokers
                                       who live in  the high and moderate ex-
                                       posure communities subject them-
                                       selves and their families to even higher
                                       likelihood of respiratory problems
                                       when effects of smoking and sulfur
                                       pollution are combined.
                                            SAN FRANCISCO
                                      suit against smelter
                                        A court decision is expected shortly
                                      in a case brought by Region IX against
                                      the  Phelps Dodge Corporation for al-
                                      legedly discharging, without a permit,
                                      industrial wastes and domestic sewage
                                      from its Douglas, Arizona,  copper
                                      smelting facility.
                                        This plant, located one mile  above
                                      the  Mexican border, discharges ap-
                                      proximately 500,000 gallons of
                                      wastewater a day  into the Whitewater
                                      Draw which flows across the interna-
                                      tional boundary into Mexico.
                                        The  action, charging Phelps  Dodge
                                      with violation of the Federal Water
                                      Pollution Control  Act, was  taken by
                                      the  United States attorney, on behalf of
                                      EPA, in the U.S. District Court for the
                                      District of Arizona, on Dec.  13, 1974.
                                                                               Since September,  1973, Phelps
                                                                             Dodge  has twice been requested by
                                                                             EPA to file an application for a permit
                                                                             to discharge. As EPA Journal went to
                                                                             press, the company had not filed an
                                                                             application.
pesticide disposal
  Disposal of pesticide containers,
identified as the number one hazardous
waste problem in Region X, will be a
topic of discussion at a meeting in
Seattle Feb. 25-26 of representatives
of Alaska, Idaho, Oregon and
Washington.
  Purpose of the meeting, to be hosted
by the Hazardous Wastes Section at re-
gional headquarters, is to develop
cooperative approaches to solving
hazardous waste disposal problems in
all four states.
  Battelle Northwest, a private re-
search firm, will present a status report
on its study of the management of all
hazardous waste in Region X.  Battelle
Northwest is currently under contract
to EPA to identify state by state, and
industry by industry, business firms
that generate hazardous waste  in order
that EPA and State governments can
implement environmentally  sound
waste disposal practices.
  Representatives from the Hazardous
Waste Management Division in EPA
headquarters will also make presenta-
tions at the meeting.
PAGE 12

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        THE REAL COST OF POLLUTION
       k
           \
        Rusting cans litter Anza-Barego State Park, Calif.
Mounting pressures to slow down
the environmental movement may
be caused, at least in part, by the
mistaken belief that concern for
the environment is a fad and not
nearly as important as bolstering
the economy or obtaining
adequate supplies of energy.
These quotations and photographs
remind us that the environmental
cause is fundamental
to our survival and well-being.
                                                                   PAGE

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 A refuse pile in Philadelphia.
          -    x   *
  Little girl playing in trash in Puerto Rico slum.
  "Environmental degradation may not
  be the apocalypse that will destroy
  the ecosphere but it may soon reach
  a level dangerous for the quality of
  human life."

  Rene Dubos. excerpt from "Who Speaks for
  Earth?" (W.W.  Norton, Inc., 1973)
                                        Dead menhaden floating in Chesapeake Bay north of the Bay Bridge.
PAG!-: 14

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Sea gull lies dead in polluted area on Gulf Coast.
                                      Railroad switching yard in Philadelphia, Pa.
                                      "Doomsday is possible—even
                                      probable—if we continue on our
                                      present course, but it is  not inevita-
                                      ble. It is possible to opt for a future of
                                      unparalleled promise and opportunity
                                      for the human species. But this future
                                      can come about only if we make a
                                      radical change in our present
                                      course."

                                      Maurice Strong, secretary-general of the U.N.
                                      Conference on the Human Environment,
                                      Saturday Review/World, Dec.  14, 1974
"America the beautiful is the land of
the disposable beer can and the dis-
posable city. The American dream is
of unlimited growth and profligate
consumption.  But the throwaway so-
ciety isn't working anymore; it has
backfired environmentally.  With
scarcity of  money and resources
added to a litany of familiar ills,  it is
now necessary to save, reuse, recy-
cle and make  do to help American
cities survive."

New York Times editorial Dec. 27, 1974
                                                                            "Pollution kills. It is as simple as that.
                                                                            We are not talking about esoteric val-
                                                                            ues or abstruse aesthetics. We are
                                                                            talking about the lives of people—and
                                                                            whether they live at all. We are talking
                                                                            about people in hospitals, people dy-
                                                                            ing, people home from work sick,
                                                                            people coughing—gasping for
                                                                            breath, people with cancer, em-
                                                                            physema, bronchitis, heart and lung
                                                                            disorders, or any of a score of other
                                                                            deadly or debilitating diseases."
                                                                            John R. Quarles, speech before Philadelphia
                                                                            Bar Association Dec. 2, 1974
                                                                            Lung patient receiving treatment
                                                                            in Birmingham, Ala.
"... how ironic it would be if the
primeval Promethean sin should turn
out to be, not man's theft of fire from
heaven, but his theft of fire from
earth—his profligate use and abuse
of the earth's energy and other  re-
sources without regard for  the needs
of future generations and without re-
spect for the laws and limits of the
natural  world."

Russell E. Train, Year End Report to EPA
Employees, Dec. 31, 1974
                                                                                                        PAGH 15

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            f
                                                              i
   EPA's research team can be "the good
guys" in the battles to protect and enhance
the environment, Dr. Wilson K.  Talley,
the Agency's new Assistant Administrator
for Research and Development, believes.
   "Research can find out which  conta-
minants are pollutants and help find ways
to allow industry to pollute less while still
providing the goods and  services  neces-
sary to the lifestyles and aspirations of our
people," Dr. Talley suid in an interview.
   The slim  40-year-old  scientist  from
Oakland, Calif., said that  in his new post
he would like to "see us make use  of all
the fruits of environmental research by
other governmental  organizations  as well
as  HPA and  by  the  private  sector,
acadernia as well as industry."
   At the same time, the former University
of California assistant vice president and
professor said, "We cannot rely on others
to do our work; I would not tike to see any
shorting of the  resources and  people
needed within  EPA to  discharge the
Agency's responsibilities."
   Asked what would  be his top priority,
Talley said, "One of my top priorities will
be a reaffirrnation of the mission of the re-
search arm  in  a  regulatory  agency—
serving the needs of the program offices
and regions, as they perceive them. But
we would also like to find  resources suffi-
cient to head off problems  of the future. If
our research efforts focus too much on the
immediate  problems of the Agency, I am
afraid  that  the  urgent will drive out  the
important."
   He also  indicated that  he will  be on
guard  against excessive compartmentali-
zation  of research efforts that ignores the
intermedia  nature of pollution.
   "Obviously,"  he  said, "we do not
want  to remove a pollutant from the air
only to put  it in the water where it may be
a greater hazard."
   Asked why he was willing to accept
KPA's top  research  post. Dr. Talley said
that he regards "EPA as the cutting edge
of the conservation  movement  in  this
country. If  the Office of Research and De-
velopment  performs its functions correct-
ly, we can  help serve the  mission  of the
Agency—to protect and enhance the qual-
ity of the environment—and yet maintain
a viable national economy  as we meet the
needs for new resources—including ener-
gy-"
   Dr.  Talley has  been associated with
EPA since it began, as  he  served on the
"Ash Council" that put EPA together. He
has also served for  three years on EPA's
Hazardous Materials Advisory  Commit-
tee.
  On the  subject of recent criticisms of
EPA's  research organization. Dr. Talley
said, "I have read thoroughly the critique
made by  the National  Academy of Sci-
ences, the  Senate subcommittee report and
some of the internal  critiques. My belief is
that while there is  value to some of the
critiques,  we should not lose sight of the
fact that at the  working level we have—
and have had—the competence and dedi-
cation needed for an efficient and  effec-
tive  research operation.  I concur in the
finding of almost all the reports that what
is needed  are planning  and  management
strategies  that will allow fuller utilization
of the talents and resources of ORD."
  Regarding possible  reorganization  of
the research office,  Dr. Talley would say
only that "our research  program is a col-
lection  of   missions  and  people—a
dynamic,  organic structure  that has been
changing  and will  continue  to change. I
view  reorganization  as nothing  but  a
DR-WILSON  K.JALLEY
bench mark—external evidence of internal
changes that have and will occur continu-
ally.
  "After having  met  the  people I've
talked to in ORD in the last few months,  I
am  optimistic about the  future of the pro-
grams. "
  He said that while serving as a full-time
EPA  consultant during  the  past few
months,  he  visited 22  of EPA's  24
laboratories and research field sites, plus a
half dozen regional offices and other field
installations.
  Queried on whether he plans to bring in
new people  to help  lead EPA's research
effort. Dr. Talley said,  "A  very limited
number, and most  of them  are already
here. I would like to utilize the  talents al-
ready in the Agency."
  On hobbies.  Dr.  Talley  said he has
two—skiing and flying  "I hope to  com-
plete my instrument  rating as a pilot this
spring," he said.
  Meanwhile, Dr.  Talley has  taken  up
residence  "right  across the  street  from
Waterside Mall,  so 1 won't lose any time
commuting."
  Dr. Talley's most recent post prior to
his  EPA position was Study Director of
the  Commission on  Critical Choices  for
Americans.
  From 1971  to 1974 he had served as  as-
sistant vice president for academic  plan-
ning and program review in the Office of
the  President of the University of Califor-
nia.
  In 1969 he was named special assistant
to the Secretary of Health, Education and
Welfare,  serving  until 1970.  He  then
served as a consultant to the University of
California Lawrence  Livermore Labora-
tory until he became leader of the Labora-
tory's Theoretical  Physics  Division  in
1971. From 1963 to  1969 he  held  posi-
tions as  assistant professor, associate pro-
fessor and professor in the Department of
Applied Science at  the  University  of
California,  Davis;  he  served as  vice
chairman and acting  chairman of the De-
partment during 1966-1969.
  Born on January 27, 1935, in St. Louis,
Missouri, Dr.   Talley  received  his
Bachelor of Science in  physics from the
University of California  in 1956. He was
awarded his master's degree in 1957 from
the  University of Chicago and his doctor-
ate  in nuclear engineering from the Uni-
versity of California  in 1963.
PAGK 16

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Continued from page 7
 area to gain a better idea of training opportunities available.
  One aspect of providing more jobs for minorities is obviously
 our upward mobility program.  And, as I  indicated,  we are
 going to give major attention to the upward mobility program
 and 1 believe we will have some strong initiatives in the near
 future.
  Q Is there any special advice you can offer to a young, am-
 bitious EPA employee of how he or she can climb the bureau-
 cratic ladder?
  A Again, I think that employees need to set very concrete
 goals for themselves. They should talk to their supervisor and
 to the personnel  people, and should evaluate training oppor-
 tunities. I think  clearly  the executive development program
 and upward mobility program will provide training and voca-
 tional assignments that  have  not  been available heretofore.
 These  mechanisms,  coupled  with the inititative  of the
 employee,  provide an excellent opportunity for advancement
 within  EPA.
  Q What about the older worker at EPA, the man or woman  in
 the fifty-and-up  age bracket,  for example. Are  they really
 wanted by EPA? Are they still eligible for promotions?
  A They  certainly  are.  There has  been some confusion  or
 sterotyping of older employees. EPA has the kind of program
 that has attracted a large number of young people. We have
 had literally thousands of applications and many young people
 have been hired throughout the Agency. That fact should in no
 way obscure the  contributions of our older employees.
^ We have older people represented in all parts of the Agency
 and at  all  grade levels. The Agency clearly needs the experi-
 ence, the wisdom and the  talent of all of its employees. We
 simply cannot afford age discrimination, just as we cannot af-
 ford other forms of discrimination.
  Q How many consultants does EPA use? And is this number
 going to be reduced?
  A EPA currently has 275 consultants at its disposal. A large
 number of these  are on special boards and commissions. We
 continually  review the level of consultants. As you may be
 aware, we require that the  Assistant Administrator or office
 director sign off on the need for all consultants. It  is an area
 that we need to watch very closely.
  Q There have been rumors that some present EPA  programs
 are to be disbanded and may revert to other Federal  agencies,
 such as Interior or Commerce. Is there any foundation to these
 reports?
  Q No. The only program within EPA that has been trans-
 ferred  is the Advanced Automotive Power Systems Program,
 which  was transferred to the  Energy Research and Develop-
 ment Administration. That transfer was contemplated for some
 period of time. Clearly,  ERDA will  have a number of respon-
 sibilities that are  somewhat overlapping with those of EPA, but
 this will not in any way diminish EPA's strong role in the en-
 vironmental aspects of energy  research and development.
  Aside from these areas, I am not aware of any plan to transfer
 or shift EPA's functions to other agencies.
  Q Well, a recent congressional committee report was critical
 of  our  research   and  development  program  and questioned
 whether it  was being effectively managed. Do you have any
 comments on this?
  A There was a concern within EPA itself, including within
 the research program, that our research activities were not fully
 responsive to program needs.  Because of these concerns, the
 Administrator asked the National Academy of Sciences to con-
 duct a review. While that report was critical of some aspects of
 the program, it indicated very clearly that the criticisms in no
 way reflected on  the many competent and dedicated ORD staff
members.
 The agency has recognized the shortcomings as well as the
strengths of its research program. A task force was set up under
the leadership of Andy Breidenbach to develop recommenda-
tions for the ORD planning and management system.
 I believe it is important that EPA initiated the Academy study
and has taken action to change its way of doing business. I am
convinced the most viable organizations are those that are will-
ing to have others evaluate their operations, and, based on such
evaluation, take corrective actions.
 Q Is the Breidenbach report complete now?
 A It is complete.
 Q We are starting to hear a lot about the executive develop-
ment program. Would you explain briefly what is the objective
of this program and whether the  minorities are adequately rep-
resented?
 A The  purpose of the program  is  obviously to identify
employees  with high  potential for increased responsibility, to
give these employees  the training, rotational assignments, etc.,
to prepare them for higher level jobs, and to assure that they
are considered for top management positions within EPA.
 We  are making a concerted effort to insure that  the high-
potential employees represent all facets of the EPA employ-
ment force: minorities, women,  and older people. The funda-
mental purpose of the program is to open opportunity for a
broad spectrum of EPA employees to achieve higher levels of
responsibility.
 Q Has the new and tighter security system for employees en-
tering and leaving Waterside Mall proved effective in reducing
the number of thefts from the buildings?  It is really  worth the
trouble?
   The strength of this  agency is clearly
          in its  career civil servants."
 A Restricting access  to Waterside Mall has effectively cut
down our losses and I believe it has been worth every bit of the
efforts. For example, during  September and October of last
year, we had Government losses totalling over $3,500 in ac-
quisition costs. During November, after the controls, and up to
December  14, we had a Government loss totalling $120.00.  1
might add that the cooperative response of EPA personnel has
been splendid and very encouraging to the Security and Inspec-
tions Staff charged with planning and carrying out these con-
trols.
 Q I think that completes my list of questions. If you have
anything else that you  would especially  like to respond to,  I
would  be happy to ask  the questions.
 A 1 certainly appreciated having this opportunity to discuss
some of the concerns that EPA employees have. I am a relative
newcomer  to EPA, although I have known many of the people
in EPA and its predecessor agencies over a number of years.
 I am  impressed with the  very high quality of the EPA staff
and its tremendous dedication. I think that EPA's accomplish-
ments  are second to none in the Government. The  strength of
this Agency is clearly in its career civil servants. The experi-
ence, skill  and dedication that they bring to their jobs has re-
sulted  in the Agency's  program accomplishments. I know of
no other agency that has been  under greater pressure to imple-
ment far-reaching  legislation  with extremely  stringent dead-
lines, and has accomplished so much under these conditions.  I
think we can be very proud of these accomplishments.
                                                                                                              PAGE  17

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                   WINTER   RIDER
  Dressed in what her friends
jokingly call her "Evel
Knievel" outfit, Nina
Dougherty dismounts from her
hike after pedaling through the
chill of winter to EPA head-
quarters. Nina is one of a small
band of EPA employees who
commute by bicycle year
round, carrying out their own
transportation control plan to
protect the environment and
setting positive  examples  in
development of simpler life-
styles. For those of you who
may be considering the pos-
sibilities of biking to work,
EPA Journal asked some of
these bikers:
                          What are your
                          biggest problems
                          in riding a bike
                          to work at EPA ?
                           Nina Dougherty, Research
                           and Development: "I ride
                           seven miles to and from work
                           and while I enjoy it there are
                           some hassles involved caused
                           mostly by lack of bike lanes.
                           Some of the other problems are
                           no available shower facilities at
                           EPA and inadequate bike
                           racks. Bicycles have been stol-
                           en from the racks at EPA and
                           this could be prevented by get-
                           ting good but relatively inex-
                           pensive racks which are theft-
                           proof."
                                                                               "... the very rough
                                                                               street surface
                                                                               conditions.'
William Frietsch, Research
and Development: "I am one
of approximately 50 people
who live in outlying areas and
commute daily by train to
Washington's Union Station
and then bike to and from
work. The two greatest prob-
lems are the very rough  street
surface conditions which pre-
sent a safety hazard as well as a
bumpy ride and the engine
exhaust fumes resulting  from
cars, trucks and buses which
present a potential health
hazard. I'm optimistic the lat-
ter condition will improve as
more and more vehicles  with
emission control equipment are
placed into service. All things
considered 1 enjoy using the
bicycle as a fast dependable
mode of transportation between
Union Station and EPA."
   PAGI-: is

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          ARRIVALS  AND DEPARTURES
 Peter L.Cashman
 I';,n ii in I,. Cahn

    Patricia L. Cahn has assumed the
leadership  of  EPA's Public Affairs Of-
fice.
  For the lust three years, Mrs. Cahn had
been Assistant Commissioner for Public
Affairs in the  U.S. Office of Education,
Department of Health, Education,  and
Welfare. During  nine years  of service
with that Office, she filled several execu-
tive and advisory posts and  for five years
was editor of the Office's monthly
magazine,  "American Education."
  Announcing her appointment as Public-
Affairs Director,  effective Jan. 6, Ad-
ministrator Russell Train  said,  "Mrs.
("aim's distinguished career  in govern-
ment service will  add a wealth of experi-
ence and professionalism to  our public
affairs  programs.  Public  understanding
of environmental  objectives and regula-
tory actions is extremely important as the
Nation  examines its economic and social
priorities. We  are very fortunate to have-
Pat Cahn join  us."
  She is married to Robert  Cahn, report-
er,  author, and  former member of the
Council on Environmental  Quality. Mr.
Cahn's articles in The Christian Science
Monitor on the environmental problems
of national parks won him  a Pulitzer
Prize in 1969.
  Mrs.  Cahn was  born in Los Angeles in

PAGE 20
 Arthur W. Busch
 <,uilfi.nl F.  Thornton

 1927. Before joining the Federal service
 she was a free lance writer of magazine
 and newspaper articles, was an assistant
 to television producer Stan Freberg, and
 worked in the  publicity office of Samuel
 Goldwyn Productions.
  She succeeds Ann L. Dore, who  re-
 signed Nov. 15 to join the Washington
 Office of Union Carbide Corporation.

     Peter  L.  Cashnian,  former
 lieutenant governor of Connecticut, has
 joined EPA  as Director of the new Office
 of Regional  and Intergovernmental Oper-
 ations.
  "Mr. Cashman will be responsible for
 establishing  an Agency  program  of
 liaison with  the Nation's governors,
 mayors,  and local officials,"  Adminis-
 trator Russell Train said. "He will act as
 my  spokesman with them  and will also
 direct the  Agency's regional  liaison
 staff."
  Mr.  Cashman, 38, had served  as
 lieutenant governor of Connecticut since
 June, 1973,  presiding over the State Sen-
 ate  and  heading the  State Council  on
 Human Services, which coordinates the
 work of nine State agencies. Before that
 he had twice  been  elected  to  the State
 Senate,  where he was instrumental  in
enacting  environmental  legislation, in-
cluding the so-called Cashman Bill pro-
viding for increased  efforts to preserve
the lower Connecticut River.
  His previous experience included three
years as vice  president of an industrial
market research company and administra-
tive and teaching positions at a Connec-
ticut preparatory school.

    Guilford F. Thornton,  former
Tennessee commissioner of agriculture,
was recently appointed EPA's consultant
for agricultural affairs by Administrator
Russell Train.
  "EPA's programs  and  policies often
affect farming," Mr. Train said. "Mr.
Thornton's varied agricultural experience
should be of great benefit to us in those
areas of EPA  responsibility of concern to
farmers."
  Mr. Thornton, 44, is a Tennessee na-
tive  and  started  farming  in  Haywood
County in 1955. For  four years he was a
farm management specialist with  the
University of Tennessee Extension Serv-
ice in Tipton County. In 1965  he founded
the  Thornton Spray Company, a dis-
tributor of agricultural  chemical equip-
ment, which  in  1966 became Harnden-
Thornton and  Co. He served as  a com-
pany partner through  1970.
  In 1971 he  was  appointed commis-
sioner of agriculture by Gov. Winfield
Dunn. Mr. Thornton has been president
of the Southern Association of State De-
partments of Agriculture, chairman of the
Tennessee Pesticides Council, and a di-
rector of the  Tennessee Water  Quality
Control and  the Obion-Forked River
Basin Authorities.
  He is  married to the  former Ann Dil-
lard and is the father of three children.

     Arthur  W. Busch resigned as re-
gional administrator for Region VI, Dal-
las, effective Jan. 31.
  In his  resignation letter, Mr.  Busch
cited his intention, stated at his appoint-
ment to  the  regional  post in January,
1972, to serve only three years.  He had
taken a leave of absence from Rice Uni-
versity, Houston, where he was professor
of environmental  engineering,  to join
EPA.
  Mr. Busch is a registered professional
engineer in Texas, author of  a book and
many technical papers,  and has  been
chairman of  the Southwest Federal  Re-
gional Council. The Environmental Divi-
sion of the American Institute of Chemi-
cal Engineers  gave him its annual award
in 1973.

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                  news "briefs
NEW APPOINTMENTS TO REPLACE  KIRK
Administrator Russell  E.  Train  intends to name Richard H.  Johnson
as Acting Assistant Administrator for Enforcement and Robert
V. Zener as General Counsel.  The two vacancies developed  because
Alan Kirk, who was  both Assistant Administrator for Enforcement
and General Counsel, resigned to accept a position as general
counsel for Potomac Electric Power Co.  Mr. Train has signed an
order which creates a  separate  Office of General Counsel for the
first time in EPA's history.

NATIONAL CONFERENCE ON WOMEN

EPA's Third Annual  Conference on Women will be held in
Washington March 10-14.   Delegates from Regional Offices and
NERC's will participate in workshops and seminars designed to
emphasize career advancement for women.  Dr. Estelle Ramey of
Georgetown University's School  of Medicine and Administrator
Russell E. Train will  be  speakers at the plenary session.

AIR GETTING CLEANER
The Nation's air quality  is  improving, according to a recent EPA
report on trends through  1973.  Pollution reductions, especially
in particulates, sulfur oxides, and carbon monoxide, are both
"encouraging and challenging,"  Administrator Russell Train said,
although it is likely  that not  all of the ambient air standards
will be met everywhere in the country by mid-1975, as called
for in the Clean Air Act.

U.S. STEEL SHUTDOWN DEPLORED
U.S. Steel's year-end  shutdown  of its No. 4 Open Hearth furnaces
at Gary, Ind., was deplored  by  Administrator Russell Train in a
recent letter to Sen.  Birch  Bayh.  Starting in 1965, the company
had made various agreements  with City and State to replace these
polluting furnaces with  the  cleaner basic oxygen process,  Mr.
Train said.  EPA had twice granted six-month extensions of the
December, 1973, deadline. When the firm sought an additional
extension -- because the  basic  oxygen equipment was not yet
operating at capacity  --  the court imposed  a daily fine of
$2,300.  U.S. Steel chose to shut down rather than pay the
penalty, which Mr.  Train  pointed out would  be less than what
the firm would pay in  benefits  to laid-off  workers.
                                                                PAGK 21

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U.S. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
OFFICE OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS (A 107)
WASHINGTON. D.C 20460
                                   POSTAGE AND FEES PAID
                  U.S. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
                                                 EPA-33S
                                  THIRD CLASS BULK RATE
  DECISION DUE
  MARCH  3   IN
  AUTO  HEARING

    A decision will be made March 3
  on a request by automobile com-
  panies for a one-year suspension of
  1977 hydrocarbon and carbon
  monoxide emission standards. EPA
  Administrator Russell E.  Train and
  other top EPA officials have been
  holding hearings on the suspension
  request and related matters such as
  the auto industry's ability to achieve
  a 40 percent fuel economy im-
  provement by 1980.
  GAS  DEALERS
  COMPLYING WITH
  UNLEADED  GAS
  RULES

    Practically all gasoline stations
  required to supply unleaded gas for
  the new catalyst-equipped au-
  tomobiles are complying with the
  law, according to Norman D. Shut-
  ler, director of the Mobile Source
  Enforcement Division. About
  180,000 retail gasoline dealers are
  involved.
    Field inspections by EPA per-
  sonnel in all regions have found
  only about 5 percent of the stations
  visited failing to have the unleaded
  gas available, 9 percent in violation
  of nozzle regulations, and 12 per-
  cent having improper labels and
  signs.
  Nearly 2,000 inspections were
made in the first four months after
the unleaded gas rules went into ef-
fect last July 1, said James
Sakolosky, chief of the Division's
Fuels Section. Altogether about 50
EPA people have been performing
inspections throughout the country,
sometimes on rotating assignments.
  After checking the station's
signs, labels, and pumps, the in-
spectors take samples to insure that
the gas meets the Federal standard
of less  than  .05 grams of lead per
gallon.
  About one percent of the samples
taken failed to pass lead contamina-
tion tests made in regional
laboratories. This is a better record
than Sakolosky had expected, since
errors by distributors  and dealers
can result in leaded gas getting into
the wrong underground  tank at the
service  station.
  "We think the industry in gen-
eral  is trying very hard to comply
with the law," he said.
HEADQUARTERS
COPY  CENTERS
MANNED BY
THE  HANDICAPPED

  Nine persons hired under a selec-
tive placement program for the
handicapped are increasing the pro-
ductivity of EPA's document copy-
ing centers in Washington and at
the same time supporting them-
selves in a world that often over-
looks the handicapped.
  They are working full time as
"key operators" at the  copying
. centers, handling all kinds of du-
 plicating assignments and keeping
 the machines in good running or-
 der. All have been trained in this
 work by the Xerox Company and
 are doing a first-rate job, according
 to Henry Washington, chief of
 EPA's Printing Management
 Branch.
   "We had been having a lot of
 trouble with our  Xerox copiers,"
 Mr. Washington  said,  "when any-
 one and everyone could walk in and
 use the machines."
   "Last summer we decided to try
 full-time operators  at our  larger
 copying centers,  and we asked var-
 ious vocational rehabilitation in-
 stitutions in the Washington  area to
 recommend people. The first
 operator was hired in June,  and he
 worked out so well that now we
 have nine.
   "Anyone who  wants to  make  his
 own copies can still go to self-
 service machines  placed throughout
 the offices."
   In hiring the key operators,
 Henry Washington  worked with
 Robert FitzSimon, Personnel Man-
 agement, and Janice Williams, re-
 habilitation counselor for  the Dis-
 trict of Columbia. Mr. Washington
 supervises their work,  and the
 operators also receive follow-up
 counseling  from the Xerox Com-
 pany and the D. C. Bureau of Re-
 habilitation Service.
   "Placement of these people and
 their success on the job,"  Mr.
 Washington said, "show that EPA
 provides employment opportunity
 on the basis of ability to do the job
 and that a handicap will not prevent
 an individual from achieving EPA
 employment."

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