Inspector General tells EPA to ramp up monitoring and enforcement efforts
EPA’s Office of Inspector General (OIG) says that a decrease in EPA compliance monitoring and enforcement may be putting the public at risk. In an audit report released on May 13, 2021, the OIG found that EPA-led compliance actions, monetary enforcement results, and environmental benefits generally declined between 2007 and 2018 nationwide. The downward trend was repeated at the regional level and on a statute-by-statute basis.
The OIG concluded that fewer enforcement resources was the main cause of the decline in enforcement trends, which led to fewer compliance monitoring activities and fewer enforcement actions. Further, federal EPA shifted its focus to the most serious cases and deferred to state enforcement programs and compliance assistance.
According to the OIG, while new laws and economic activity increased the size and level of activity in key sectors that EPA regulated, the agency did not have the capacity to meet that need. The concern is that the decline in enforcement may be exposing the public and the environment to undetected harmful pollutants.
The OIG recommends EPA ramp up its enforcement efforts through a workforce analysis to assess its capacity to maintain a strong enforcement field presence. The results of the analysis should be used in agency strategic and annual planning.