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Testimony: 

Before the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, U.S. House 
of Representatives: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

For Release on Delivery: 
Expected at 10:00 a.m. EDT:
October 15, 2009: 

Clean Water Act: 

Longstanding Issues Impact EPA's and States' Enforcement Efforts: 

Statement of Anu K. Mittal, Director:
Natural Resources and Environment Team: 

GAO-10-165T: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-10-165T, a testimony before the Committee on 
Transportation and Infrastructure, U.S. House of Representatives. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

Congress enacted the Clean Water Act to help reduce water pollution and 
improve the health of the nation’s waterways. The Environmental 
Protection Agency (EPA) administers its enforcement responsibilities 
under the act through its Office of Enforcement and Compliance 
Assurance (OECA), as well as its 10 regional offices and the states. 

Over the last 9 years, GAO has undertaken a number of reviews of EPA’s 
environmental enforcement activities, including for the Clean Water 
Act. For this testimony statement, GAO was asked to summarize the 
results of five prior reports on the effectiveness of EPA’s enforcement 
program. Specifically, this statement includes information on the (1) 
factors that cause variations in enforcement activities and lead to 
inconsistencies across regions, (2) impact that inadequate resources 
and work force planning has had on enforcement, (3) efforts EPA has 
taken to improve priority planning, and (4) accuracy and transparency 
of measures of program effectiveness. 

GAO’s prior recommendations have included the need for EPA to collect 
more complete and reliable data, develop improved guidance, and better 
performance measures. Although EPA has generally agreed with these 
recommendations, its implementation has been uneven. GAO is not making 
new recommendations in this statement. 

What GAO Found: 

In 2000, GAO found variations among EPA’s regional offices in the 
actions they take to enforce environmental requirements. For example, 
the regions varied in the inspection coverage of facilities discharging 
pollutants, the number and type of enforcement actions taken, and the 
size of the penalties assessed and the criteria used in determining 
penalties. GAO also found that variations in the regions’ strategies 
for overseeing state programs may have resulted in more in-depth 
reviews in some regional programs than in others. Several factors 
contributed to these variations including differences in the 
philosophical approaches among enforcement staff about how best to 
achieve compliance with environmental requirements, differences in 
state laws and enforcement authorities and how the regions respond to 
these differences, variations in resources available to state and 
regional offices, the flexibility afforded by EPA policies and guidance 
that allow latitude in state enforcement programs, and incomplete and 
inadequate enforcement data that hampered EPA’s ability to accurately 
characterize the extent of variations. In 2007, GAO reported 
improvements in EPA’s oversight of state enforcement activities with 
the implementation of a state review framework. However, while this 
framework helped identify several weaknesses in state programs, the 
agency had not developed a plan for how it would uniformly address 
these weaknesses or identify the root causes of these weaknesses. 

In 2005, GAO reported that the scope of EPA’s responsibilities under 
the Clean Water Act along with workload associated with implementing 
and enforcing the act’s requirements had increased significantly. At 
the same time, EPA had authorized states to take on more 
responsibilities, shifting the agency’s workload from direct 
implementation to oversight. In 2007, GAO reported that while overall 
funding for enforcement activities had increased from $288 million in 
fiscal year 1997 to $322 million in fiscal year 2006, resources had not 
kept pace with inflation or the increased responsibilities. Both EPA 
and state officials told GAO that they found it difficult to respond to 
new requirements while carrying out previous responsibilities and 
regional offices had reduced enforcement staff by about 5 percent. In 
2005, GAO also reported that EPA’s process for budgeting and allocating 
resources did not fully consider the agency’s workload, either for 
specific statutory requirements such as those included in the Clean 
Water Act or the broader goals and objectives in the agency’s strategic 
plan. Any efforts made by the agency to develop a more systematic 
process would be hampered by the lack of comprehensive and accurate 
workload data. 

In 2007, GAO reported that EPA had made substantial progress in 
improving priority setting and enforcement planning with states through 
its system for setting national enforcement priorities and this had 
fostered a more cooperative relationship with the states. Finally, in 
2008, GAO reported that EPA could improve the accuracy and transparency 
of some of the measures that it uses to assess and report on the 
effectiveness of its civil and criminal enforcement programs. GAO 
identified shortcomings in how EPA calculates and reports these data 
that may prevent the agency from providing Congress and the public with 
a fair assessment of the programs. 

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-165T] or key 
components. For more information, contact Anu Mittal, (202) 512-3841, 
mittala@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Committee: 

We are pleased to be here today to participate in your hearing on the 
37TH anniversary of the Clean Water Act. As you know, the Clean Water 
Act has played a critical role in reducing water pollution and 
improving the health of the nation's waterways. The Environmental 
Protection Agency (EPA) administers its environmental enforcement 
responsibilities under the Clean Water Act and other environmental 
statutes, through its headquarters Office of Enforcement and Compliance 
Assurance (OECA). OECA monitors the compliance of regulated facilities, 
identifies national enforcement concerns and sets priorities, and 
provides overall direction on enforcement policies. While OECA 
headquarters occasionally takes direct enforcement action, much of 
EPA's enforcement responsibilities are carried out by its 10 regional 
offices. These offices are responsible for carrying out core program 
activities under each of the major federal environmental statutes, as 
well as significant involvement in implementing EPA's national 
enforcement priorities and taking direct enforcement action. In 
addition, the Clean Water Act directs EPA to authorize qualified states 
to implement and enforce environmental programs consistent with federal 
requirements. EPA expects its 10 regional offices to take a systematic 
and generally consistent approach in overseeing the state enforcement 
programs and, in doing so, to follow EPA's regulations, policies, and 
guidance. 

Over the last 9 years, GAO has reviewed various aspects of EPA's 
enforcement activities and has made several recommendations to enhance 
its enforcement program. Our testimony today is based on the findings 
and conclusions contained in five of these reports and will 
specifically focus on the following:[Footnote 1] 

* Factors that cause variations in EPA's enforcement activities and 
lead to inconsistencies across its regional offices, 

* The impact that inadequate resources and workforce planning has had 
on EPA's ability to meet changing enforcement needs, 

* EPA's efforts to improve priority planning and enforcement planning 
as well as oversight of state programs, and: 

* Improvements that are needed to improve the accuracy and transparency 
of measures of program effectiveness. 

For the reports used to support this testimony statement, we conducted 
our work in accordance with generally accepted government auditing 
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit 
to obtain sufficient and appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable 
basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 
We believe that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for 
the findings and conclusions in these reports. We discussed the 
contents of this testimony with an EPA official. 

Background: 

Since EPA was created in 1970, the agency has been responsible for 
enforcing the nation's environmental laws. This responsibility has 
traditionally involved monitoring compliance by those in the regulated 
community (such as factories or small businesses that release 
pollutants into the environment or use hazardous chemicals), ensuring 
that violations are properly identified and reported, and ensuring that 
timely and appropriate enforcement actions are taken against violators 
when necessary. Most major federal environmental statutes, including 
the Clean Water Act, permit EPA to allow states under certain 
circumstances to implement key programs and to enforce their 
requirements. EPA establishes by regulation the requirements for state 
enforcement authority, such as the authority to seek injunctive relief 
and civil and criminal penalties. 

EPA also outlines by policy and guidance its views as to the elements 
of an acceptable state enforcement program, such as necessary 
legislative authorities and the type and timing of the action for 
various violations, and tracks how well states comply. Environmental 
statutes generally provide authority for EPA to take appropriate 
enforcement action against violators in states that have been delegated 
authority for these programs when states fail to initiate enforcement 
action. The statutes also provide that EPA may withdraw approval of a 
state's program if the program is not administered or enforced 
adequately. 

EPA administers its environmental enforcement responsibilities through 
its headquarters Office of Enforcement and Compliance Assurance (OECA). 
While OECA provides overall direction on enforcement policies, and 
sometimes takes direct enforcement action, it carries out much of its 
enforcement responsibilities through its 10 regional offices. These 
offices are responsible for taking direct enforcement action and for 
overseeing the enforcement programs of state agencies in those 
instances in which the state has been delegated such enforcement 
authority. 

EPA has established principles for its enforcement and compliance 
program. State guidance, providing the framework for state/EPA 
enforcement agreements, has been in place since 1986. According to EPA, 
this state guidance, together with statute-specific guidance, is the 
blueprint for both EPA and state enforcement and compliance programs 
and serves as the basis for both authorizing and reviewing state 
programs. 

OECA expects the regions to take a systematic approach to administering 
and overseeing the enforcement programs among delegated and 
nondelegated programs and, in doing so, to follow the policies and 
guidance issued for this purpose. While federal and state enforcement 
officials agree that core enforcement requirements should be generally 
implemented consistently, according to EPA some variation is to be 
expected--and, in some cases, encouraged. For example, EPA expects some 
variation in how regions target resources to the most significant 
compliance issues in different regions and states, the level of 
enforcement activity--which should vary with the severity of the 
problem, and the level of regional oversight of state enforcement 
programs--with the greater oversight provided for weaker programs. 

Variations in Enforcement By EPA's Regions Have Resulted in 
Inconsistencies in Program Implementation: 

As we noted in our 2000 report on the consistency of EPA's regions in 
enforcing environmental requirements, some variation in environmental 
enforcement is necessary to take into account local conditions and 
local concerns.[Footnote 2] At the same time, EPA enforcement officials 
readily acknowledged that core enforcement requirements must be 
consistently implemented, and to ensure fairness and equitable 
treatment, similar violations should be met with similar enforcement 
responses, regardless of geographic location. However, when we reviewed 
EPA's enforcement efforts we found that variations among EPA's regional 
offices had led to inconsistencies in the actions they take to enforce 
environmental requirements. For example, we found that: 

* inspection coverage by EPA and state enforcement staff varied for 
facilities discharging pollutants within each region, 

* the number and type of enforcement actions taken by EPA's regions 
also varied, 

* the size of the penalties assessed and the criteria used in 
determining penalties assessed varied by region, and: 

* the regions' overall strategies in overseeing the states within their 
jurisdiction varied, which may have resulted in more in-depth reviews 
in some regional programs than in others. 

EPA headquarters officials responsible for the water program explained 
that such variation was fairly commonplace and has posed problems. The 
director of OECA's water enforcement division, for example, said that 
in reacting to similar violations, enforcement responses in certain 
regions were weaker than in others, and that such inconsistencies had 
increased. 

We identified a number of factors that contributed to variations in 
EPA's enforcement that included the following: 

* differences in the philosophical approaches among enforcement staff 
about how to best achieve compliance with environmental requirements, 

* differences in state laws and enforcement authorities, and in the 
manner in which regions respond to these differences, 

* variations in resources available to both state and regional 
enforcement offices, 

* the flexibility afforded by EPA policies and guidance that allow 
states a degree of latitude in their enforcement programs, and: 

* incomplete and inadequate enforcement data which, among other things, 
hamper EPA's ability to accurately characterize the extent of 
variations. 

We also noted in our 2000 report that EPA headquarters enforcement 
officials were developing performance information that would allow for 
comparisons among both regions and states in their conduct of key 
enforcement responsibilities. Such assessments were expected to 
highlight any major program variations and would be communicated 
through the issuance of periodic status reports. A number of EPA 
regional offices were also developing and applying new audit protocols 
in their state reviews and encouraging more effective communication 
between and among regional and state enforcement staff. But we also 
concluded that a number of factors would continue to challenge EPA's 
ability to ensure reasonably consistent enforcement across its regions. 
Among the most important of these factors was the absence of reliable 
data on how both states and regions are performing their enforcement 
responsibilities. 

In 2007, we again examined EPA's efforts to improve oversight of state 
enforcement activities. At that time, we reported that EPA had improved 
its oversight of state enforcement programs by implementing the State 
Review Framework (SRF). We noted that EPA's implementation of the SRF 
gave it the potential to provide for the first time a consistent 
approach for overseeing authorized states' compliance and enforcement 
programs. Nonetheless, we also reported that the SRF had identified 
several significant weaknesses in how states enforce their 
environmental laws in accordance with federal requirements. For 
example, reviews conducted under the framework found that the states 
were not properly documenting inspection findings or how they calculate 
or assess penalties, as provided by EPA's enforcement policy and 
guidance, that the states were not adequately entering significant 
violations noted in their inspection reports into EPA databases, and 
that the states lacked adequate or appropriate penalty authority or 
policies. While we recognized the value in EPA's identification and 
documentation of these findings, we also reported that EPA had not 
developed a plan for how it would uniformly address them in a timely 
manner, nor had the agency identified the root causes of the 
weaknesses, although some EPA and state officials attributed the 
weaknesses to causes such as increased workloads concomitant with 
budgetary reductions. We concluded that, until EPA addressed 
enforcement weaknesses and their causes, it faced limitations in 
determining whether the states are performing timely and appropriate 
enforcement, and whether they are applying penalties to environmental 
violators in a fair and consistent manner within and among the states. 

In 2000 and in 2007, GAO made several recommendations to EPA to address 
the concerns that we identified with the agency's enforcement programs. 
For example, in 2000, we recommended that EPA develop a comprehensive 
strategy to adequately address problems with the quality of the 
agency's enforcement data and issue guidance to the regions describing 
the required elements of audit protocols to be used in overseeing state 
enforcement programs. In 2007, we recommended that to enhance EPA's 
oversight of regional and state enforcement activities consistent with 
federal requirements that the agency should (1) identify lessons 
learned and develop an action plan to address significant issues, (2) 
address resource issues such as state staffing levels and resource 
requirements, (3) publish the results of the SRF reviews so that the 
public and others will know how well state enforcement programs are 
working, and (4) conduct a performance assessment of regional 
enforcement programs similar to the SRF. EPA generally agreed with most 
of the recommendations we made in 2007, but did not specifically 
comment on the recommendations we made in 2000. Although EPA has taken 
steps to address the recommendations in our 2000 report, it has not yet 
implemented the recommendations in our 2007 report. 

Enforcement Resources Have Not Kept Pace with Increased 
Responsibilities and Better Resource Planning Would Enhance Enforcement 
Activities: 

[End of section] 

In 2005, we reported that the scope of EPA's responsibilities under the 
Clean Water Act had increased significantly since 1972, along with the 
workload associated with implementing and enforcing the act's 
requirements.[Footnote 3] For example, EPA's implementation of the 1987 
amendments which expanded the scope of the act by regulating storm 
water runoff resulted in (1) increasing the number of regulated 
industrial and municipal facilities by an estimated 186,000 facilities 
and (2) adding hundreds of thousands of construction projects to 
states' and regions' workloads for the storm water program. At the same 
time, EPA had authorized states to take on more responsibilities, 
shifting the agency's workload from direct implementation to oversight. 

In 2007, we reported that while overall funding for carrying out 
enforcement activities to regions and authorized states had increased 
from fiscal years 1997 through 2006, these increases had not kept pace 
with inflation and the growth in enforcement responsibilities.[Footnote 
4] Over the 10-year period we reviewed, EPA's enforcement funding to 
the regions increased from $288 million in fiscal year 1997 to $322 
million in fiscal year 2006, but declined in real terms by 8 percent. 
Both EPA and state officials told us they found it difficult to respond 
to new requirements while carrying out their previous responsibilities. 

In 2007, officials in OECA and EPA's Office of the Chief Financial 
Officer told us that in recent years OECA headquarters absorbed 
decreases in OECA's total enforcement funding to prevent further 
reductions to the regions. We determined that enforcement funding for 
OECA headquarters increased from $197 million in fiscal year 2002 to 
$200 million in fiscal year 2006--a 9 percent decline in real terms. 
During the same time, regional enforcement funding increased from $279 
million to $322 million--a 4 percent increase in real terms. EPA also 
reduced the size of the regional enforcement workforce by about 5 
percent over the 10 year period between fiscal years 1997 and 2006. 
During this 10-year period, the regional workforce was reduced from 
2,568 full-time equivalent (FTE) staff in fiscal year 1997 to 2,434 
FTEs in fiscal year 2006. In comparison, the OECA headquarters 
workforce declined 1 percent, and the EPA total workforce increased 1 
percent during the same period. However, the change in FTEs was not 
uniform across the 10 regions over the period. For example, two 
regions--Region 9 (San Francisco) and Region 10 (Seattle)--experienced 
increases in their workforce: Region 9 increased 5 percent, from 229 to 
242 FTEs, and Region 10 increased 6 percent, from 161 to 170 FTEs. In 
contrast, two regions--Region 1 (Boston) and Region 2 (New York) 
experienced the largest declines: Region 1 experienced a 15 percent 
decline, from 195 to 166 FTEs, and Region 2 had a 13 percent decline, 
from 291 to 254 FTEs. 

Although we recognized that resources had not kept pace with EPA's 
responsibilities under the Clean Water Act, we also found that EPA's 
process for budgeting and allocating resources did not fully consider 
the agency's current workload, either for specific statutory 
requirements, such as those included in the Clean Water Act, or for the 
broader goals and objectives in the agency's strategic plan. Instead, 
EPA made incremental adjustments and relied primarily on historical 
precedent when making resource allocations. In 2005, we concluded that 
changes at the margin may not be sufficient because both the nature and 
distribution of the Clean Water Act workload had changed, the scope of 
activities regulated under the act had increased, and EPA had taken on 
new responsibilities while shifting others to the state. 

While we reported in 2005 that EPA had taken some actions to improve 
resource planning, we also found that it faced a number of challenges 
that hindered comprehensive reform in this area. Specifically, we 
identified several efforts that EPA had initiated to improve the 
agency's ability to strategically plan its workforce and other 
resources. While some of these efforts were not directly related to 
workforce planning, we found that they had the potential to give the 
agency some of the information it needed to support a systematic, data- 
driven method for budgeting and allocating resources. In addition, we 
identified two initiatives within the Office of Water that we believed 
had the potential to provide relevant and useful information for a data-
driven approach to budgeting and allocating resources. First, beginning 
in December 1998, EPA and the states collaborated on a state resource 
analysis for water quality management to develop an estimate of the 
resources that states needed to fully implement the Clean Water Act. 
The primary focus of the project was identifying the gap between 
states' needs and available resources. To develop the estimates of the 
gap, EPA and the states created a detailed model of activities 
associated with implementing the Clean Water Act, the average time it 
took to complete such activities, and the costs of performing them. The 
National Academy of Public Administration subsequently reviewed the 
model and determined that the underlying methodology was sound, and 
recommended that EPA and the states refine the model to support data- 
driven grant allocation decisions. However, as we reported, the agency 
did not implement the recommendation, citing resource constraints and 
reluctance on the part of some states. Second, in 2003, the Office of 
Water implemented an initiative called the Permitting for Environmental 
Results Strategy to respond to circumstances that were making it 
increasingly difficult for EPA and the states to meet their 
responsibilities under the Clean Water Act. According to EPA, in 
addition to the scope and complexity of the act expanding over time, 
the states were also facing an increasing number of lawsuits and 
petitions to withdraw their authorization to administer some Clean 
Water Act programs. As part of its effort to identify and resolve 
performance problems in individual states, EPA and the states were 
developing profiles containing detailed data on the responsibilities, 
resources, and workload demands of each state and region. We concluded 
that this information would be useful to any comprehensive and 
systematic resource planning method adopted by the agency. 

Nonetheless, we also identified a number of larger challenges that EPA 
would face as it tried to adopt a more systematic process for budgeting 
and resource allocation. Specifically, we found that EPA would be 
challenged in obtaining complete and reliable data on key workload 
indicators, which we concluded would be the most significant obstacle 
to developing a systematic, data-driven approach to resource 
allocation. Without comprehensive and reliable data on workload, EPA 
cannot accurately identify where agency resources, such as staff with 
particular skills, are most needed. EPA officials told us that some of 
the key workload factors related to controlling point and nonpoint 
source pollution include the number of point source dischargers, the 
number of wet weather dischargers, and the quantity and quality of 
water in particular areas. However, we reported that for some of this 
information, the relevant databases may not have the comprehensive, 
accurate, and reliable information that is needed by the agency. 

Even with better workload data, we found in 2005 that EPA would also 
find it difficult to implement a systematic, data-driven approach to 
resource allocation without staff support for such a process. Support 
might not be easily forthcoming because, according to EPA officials in 
several offices and regions, staff were reluctant to accept a data- 
driven approach after their experience in using workload models during 
the 1980s. At that time, each major program office used a model to 
allocate resources to the agency's regional offices. When the models 
were initially developed, agency officials believed they were useful 
because EPA's programs were rapidly expanding as the Congress passed 
new environmental laws. Over time, however, the expansion of EPA's 
responsibilities leveled off, and its impact on the relative workload 
of regions was not as significant. The change in the rate of the 
workload expansion, combined with increasingly constrained federal 
resources during the late 1980s, meant that the workload models were 
only being used to allocate changes at the margins. The agency stopped 
using the models in the early 1990s because, according to officials, 
staff spent an unreasonable amount of time negotiating relatively minor 
changes in regional resources. 

To address the concerns that we identified with EPA's resource 
allocation and planning processes for the enforcement programs, in 
2005, we made several recommendations to the agency. Specifically, we 
recommended that EPA identify relevant workload indicators that drive 
resource needs, ensure that relevant data are complete and reliable, 
and use the results to inform budgeting and resource allocation 
decisions. In responding to our recommendations, EPA voiced concerns 
that a bottom-up workload assessment contrasts with its approach, which 
links budgeting and resource allocation to performance goals and 
results. However, we reiterated our belief that assessing workload and 
how it drives resources was fully compatible with EPA's approach. In 
2008,[Footnote 5] when we again reported on EPA's resource allocation 
process, we found that the process was essentially the same as we 
reported in 2005 and that the agency had not made progress on 
implementing our recommendations. 

EPA Has Improved Its Process for Collaborating with States to Set 
Priorities: 

In 2007, we reported that, despite the interdependence between EPA and 
the states in carrying out enforcement responsibilities, effective 
working relationships have historically been difficult to establish and 
maintain, based on reports by GAO, EPA's Office of Inspector General, 
the National Academy of Public Administration, and others.[Footnote 6] 
We identified the following three key issues that have affected EPA and 
state relationships in the past: 

* EPA's funding allocations to the states did not fully reflect the 
differences among the states' enforcement workload and their relative 
ability to enforce state environmental programs consistent with federal 
requirements. In this regard, EPA lacked information on the capacity of 
both the states and EPA's regions to effectively carry out their 
enforcement programs, because the agency had done little to assess the 
overall enforcement workload of the states and regions and the number 
and skills of people needed to implement enforcement tasks, duties, and 
responsibilities. Furthermore, the states' capacity continued to evolve 
as they assumed a greater role in the day-to-day management of 
enforcement activities, workload changes occurred as a result of new 
environmental legislation, new technologies were introduced, and state 
populations shifted. 

* Problems in EPA's enforcement planning and priority setting processes 
resulted in misunderstandings between OECA, regional offices, and the 
states regarding their respective enforcement roles, responsibilities, 
and priorities. States raised concerns that EPA sometimes 
"micromanaged" state programs without explaining its reasons for doing 
so and often did not adequately consult the states before making 
decisions affecting them. 

* OECA had not established a consistent national strategy for 
overseeing states' enforcement of EPA programs. Consequently, the 
regional offices were not consistent in how they oversaw the states. 
Some regional offices conducted more in-depth state reviews than 
others, and states in these regions raised concerns that their 
regulated facilities were being held to differing standards of 
compliance than facilities in states located in other regions. 

Our 2007 report acknowledged that EPA had made substantial progress in 
improving priority setting and enforcement planning with states through 
its system for setting national enforcement priorities and the National 
Environmental Performance Partnership System (NEPPS), which was 
designed to give states demonstrating strong environmental performance 
greater flexibility and autonomy in planning and operating their 
environmental programs. We concluded that the NEPPS had fostered a more 
cooperative relationship with the states and that EPA and the states 
had also made some progress in using NEPPS for joint planning and 
resource allocation. State participation in the partnership had grown 
from 6 pilot states in fiscal year 1996 to 41 states in fiscal year 
2006. 

Measures Used to Report on the Effectiveness of Enforcement Efforts Can 
Be Improved: 

In 2008, we reported that EPA relies on a variety of measures to assess 
and report on the effectiveness of its civil and criminal enforcement 
programs.[Footnote 7] For example, EPA relies on assessed penalties 
that result from enforcement efforts among its long-standing measurable 
accomplishments. The agency uses its discretion to estimate the 
appropriate penalty amount based on individual case circumstances. EPA 
has developed penalty policies as guidance for determining appropriate 
penalties in civil administrative cases and referring civil judicial 
cases. The policies are based on environmental statutes and have an 
important goal of deterring potential polluters from violating 
environmental laws and regulations. The purpose of EPA's penalties is 
to eliminate the economic benefit a violator gained from noncompliance 
and to reflect the gravity of the alleged harm to the environment or 
public health. In addition to penalties, EPA has also established what 
it considers two major performance measures for its civil enforcement 
program. These are (1) the value of injunctive relief--the monetary 
value of future investments necessary for an alleged violator to come 
into compliance, and (2) pollution reduction--the pounds of pollution 
to be reduced, treated, or eliminated as a result of an enforcement 
action. EPA relies on these measures, among others, in pursuing its 
national enforcement priorities and overall strategy of fewer, but 
higher impact, cases. However, unless these measures are meaningful, 
the Congress and the public will not be able to determine the 
effectiveness of the enforcement program. 

When we reviewed EPA's assessed penalties data we determined that from 
fiscal years 1998 to 2007 total inflation-adjusted penalties declined 
when excluding major default judgments.[Footnote 8] When adjusted for 
inflation, total assessed penalties were approximately $240.6 million 
in fiscal year 1998 and $137.7 million in 2007. Moreover, we identified 
three shortcomings in how EPA calculates and reports penalty 
information to the Congress and the public that may result in an 
inaccurate assessment of the program. Specifically, we reported that 
EPA was: 

* Overstating the impact of its enforcement programs by reporting 
penalties assessed against violators rather than actual penalties 
received by the U.S. Treasury. 

* Reducing the precision of trend analyses by reporting nominal rather 
than inflation-adjusted penalties, thereby understating past 
accomplishments. 

* Understating the influence of its enforcement programs by excluding 
the portion of penalties awarded to states in federal cases. 

In contrast to penalties, we found that both the value of estimated 
injunctive relief and the amount of pollution reduction reported by EPA 
generally increased. The estimated value of injunctive relief increased 
from $4.4 billion in fiscal year 1999 to $10.9 billion in fiscal year 
2007, in 2008 dollars. In addition, estimated pollution reduction 
commitments amounted to 714 million pounds in fiscal year 2000 and 
increased to 890 million pounds in fiscal year 2007. However, we 
identified several shortcomings in how EPA calculates and reports this 
information as well. We found that generally EPA's reports did not 
clearly disclose the following: 

* Annual amounts of injunctive relief and pollution reduction have not 
yet been achieved. They are based on estimates of relief and reductions 
to be realized when violators come into compliance. 

* Estimates of the value of injunctive relief are based on case-by-case 
analyses by EPA's technical experts, and in some cases the estimates 
include information provided by the alleged violator. 

* Pollution reduction estimates are understated because the agency 
calculates pollution reduction for only 1 year at the anticipated time 
of full compliance, though reductions may occur for many years into the 
future. 

In addition, we identified a number of factors that affected EPA's 
process for achieving annual results in terms of penalties, estimated 
value of injunctive relief, and amounts of pollution reduction. Some of 
these factors that could affect the outcomes included: 

* The Department of Justice (DOJ), not EPA, is primarily responsible 
for prosecuting and settling civil judicial and criminal enforcement 
cases. 

* Executive Order 12988 directs DOJ, whenever feasible, to seek 
settlements before pursuing civil judicial actions against alleged 
violators. 

* Unclear legal standards, as illustrated by the 2006 Supreme Court 
decision, Rapanos v. United States have hindered EPA's enforcement 
efforts. This case generally made it more difficult for EPA to take 
enforcement actions because the legal standards for determining what is 
a "water of the United States" were not clear. 

In our 2008 report, we recommended that EPA take a number of actions to 
improve the accuracy and transparency of the information that it 
reports to the Congress and the public regarding penalties assessed, 
value of injunctive relief, and estimates of pollution reduction. EPA 
generally agreed with most of our recommendations and stated that it 
would consider making these changes in the future. 

In conclusion, our work over the past 9 years has shown that the Clean 
Water Act has significantly increased EPA's and the states' enforcement 
responsibilities, available resources have not kept pace with these 
increased needs, and actions are needed to further strengthen the 
enforcement program. To address these concerns, we have made several 
recommendations to EPA, however, EPA's implementation of our 
recommendations has been uneven and several of the issues that we have 
identified over the last decade remain unaddressed today. The agency 
still needs comprehensive, accurate, and reliable data that would allow 
it to better target limited resources to those regions and potential 
pollution problems of the greatest concern. The agency still needs 
better processes to plan and allocate resources to ensure that the 
greatest risks are being addressed. Finally, the agency needs accurate 
and transparent measures to report on whether the Clean Water Act is 
being consistently implemented across the country in all regions and 
that like violations are being addressed in the same manner. 

Mr. Chairman, this concludes our prepared statement, we would be happy 
to respond to any questions that you or other committee Members might 
have. 

Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Contact points for our Offices of Congressional Relations and Public 
Affairs may be found on the last page of this statement. For further 
information about this testimony, please contact Anu Mittal at (202) 
512-3841 or mittala@gao.gov. Key contributors to this testimony were 
Steve Elstein, Diane Raynes, Ed Kratzer, Sherry McDonald, Antoinette 
Capaccio, and Alison O'Neill. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] GAO, Environmental Protection: More Consistency Needed Among EPA 
Regions in Approach to Enforcement, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/RCED-00-108] (Washington, D.C.: June 2, 
2000); GAO, Clean Water Act: Improved Resource Planning Would Help EPA 
Better Respond to Changing Needs and Fiscal Constraints, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-721] (Washington, D.C.: July 22, 
2005); GAO, Environmental Protection: EPA-State Enforcement Partnership 
Has Improved, but EPA's Oversight Needs Further Enhancement, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-883] (Washington D.C.: 
July 31, 2007); GAO, Environmental Enforcement: EPA Needs to Improve 
the Accuracy and Transparency of Measures Used to Report on Program 
Effectiveness, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-1111R] 
(Washington, D.C.: Sept.18, 2008); GAO, EPA's Execution of Its Fiscal 
Year 2007 New Budget Authority for the Enforcement and Compliance 
Assurance Program in the Regional Offices, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-1109R] (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 26, 
2008). 

[2] GAO, Environmental Protection: More Consistency Needed Among EPA 
Regions in Approach to Enforcement, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/RCED-00-108] (Washington, D.C.: June 2, 
2000). 

[3] GAO, Clean Water Act: Improved Resource Planning Would Help EPA 
Better Respond to Changing Needs and Fiscal Constraints, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-721] (Washington, D.C.: July 22, 
2005). 

[4] GAO, Environmental Protection: EPA-State Enforcement Partnership 
has Improved, but EPA's Oversight Needs Further Enhancement, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-883] (Washington, D.C.: 
July 31, 2007). 

[5] GAO, EPA's Execution of Its Fiscal Year 2007 New Budget Authority 
for the Enforcement and Compliance Assurance Program in Regional 
Offices, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-1109R] 
(Washington, D.C., Sept. 26, 2008). 

[6] GAO, Environmental Protection: EPA-State Enforcement Partnership 
has Improved, but EPA's Oversight Needs Further Enhancement, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-883] (Washington, D.C.: 
July 31, 2007). 

[7] GAO, Environmental Enforcement: EPA Needs to Improve the Accuracy 
and Transparency of Measures Used to Report on Program Effectiveness, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-1111R] (Washington, 
D.C.: Sept. 18, 2008). 

[8] A default judgment is a binding judgment in favor of the plaintiff 
when the defendant has not responded to a civil complaint. 

[End of section] 

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