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Wednesday
May262010

Salazar Details Inner-Workings Of Interior Department Amid Oil Spill

By Miles Wolf Tamboli-Talk Radio News Service

In Wednesday's hearing before the House Committee on Natural Resources, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar extrapolated on his plan, released last week, to split the controversial Minerals Management Service into three distinct entities with the ultimate goal of increasing transparency, accountability, and effectiveness through specialization. Salazar announced that he hopes to "strengthen oversight of offshore energy operations, improve the structure for revenue and royalty collections on behalf of the American people, and help our country build the clean energy future we need," by establishing the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement, and the Office of Natural Resources Revenue.

Much of the impetus behind the restructuring is the result of recently released information about relationships between the MMS and the private oil industry. In a recent report released by the U.S. Department of the Interior, Inspector General Mary Kendall affirmed that members of the MMS accepted gifts, meals, and sports game tickets from oil executives. During the hearing, Salazar admitted that, in the past, accepting gifts from oil executives had become a "part of the culture," not just in the Obama administration, but among previous ones as well.

Another highly debated issue raised in the hearing was the particular drilling operation in question being granted a special exemption from the usual safety requirements demanded by the MMS. Salazar said Wednesday that this exemption was due to government legislation requiring the agency to complete the review of a drilling project in 30 days or less, limiting the MMS' ability to thoroughly investigate the situation. Termed the "use-it or lose-it" tax at the hearing, the legislation was originally intended to uphold efficiency in the energy resources industry, and government officials today implied that the bypassing of safety measures was an unintended side effect of the law.

House Natural Resources Committee member George Miller (D-Calif.) grilled Salazar on the MMS' lack of safety regulations, citing the fact that the oil industry's drilling technology has far outpaced the ability to prevent or clean up after accidents. Exclaiming that the MMS, "went to hell in a hand-basket," Miller expressed his discontent that, in his eyes, the MMS is irresponsible for allowing the oil industry to drill when their capacity to avoid a disaster such as this lags so far behind.

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