"We knew that bad things would happen when President Bush filled many of his important environmental posts with right-wing activists and industry lobbyists who had spent their careers criticizing the laws they were now being told to uphold and representing industries they were now being told to regulate. Just how bad became clear this week in the course of some pointed testimony from the Interior Department�s inspector general, who accused top officials at his agency of fostering a culture of �managerial irresponsibility� that tolerated conflicts of interest, cronyism and other lapses.
At a House subcommittee hearing, the official, Earl Devaney, said that �short of a crime, anything goes at the highest levels of the Department of the Interior.� The committee had summoned Mr. Devaney to give his views on some flawed drilling leases the department signed in the late 1990�s � before the Bush administration came to office � that could allow big oil companies to escape billions of dollars in royalties on oil and gas produced in the Gulf of Mexico. The leases appear to have been the result of bureaucratic bungling, not favoritism, but Mr. Devaney suggested that Interior had since gone to some lengths to cover up its mistakes."
Get the Story:
Editorial: Interior's Internal Messes
(The New York Times 9/16)
pwnyt
Relevant Documents::
Devaney
Testimony | Hearing
Information
Relevant Links:
House Committee on Government Reform - http://reform.house.gov
Related Stories:
Interior comes under fire for royalty giveaway
(9/15)
Norton shielded
Griles despite ethics probe (9/15)
House
committee to consider DOI 'irresponsibility' (9/12)
MMS reduces role of tribal-state royalty panel
(9/12)
DOI accused of hindering probe
into oil and gas royalties (08/04)
Accounting firm defends social relations with OST
(7/27)
OST contract tied to favors to
top officials (7/25)
OST officials
awarded $6.6M contract to friends (7/24)
Tribes, states weigh lawsuits against oil companies
(5/8)
Norton denies fraud or major
problem with trust (3/29)
GAO report
warns of billions in lost oil, gas royalties (3/29)
Tribes, states object to Interior's lack of
audits (03/01)
Pombo starts
investigation of DOI royalty program (2/16)
Bush, Democrats oppose $7B royalty giveaway
(2/15)
Interior to give away $7B in oil
and gas royalties (2/14)
Oil companies
fall behind on royalty payments (2/10)
Editorial: 'Anything goes' at Interior Department
Monday, September 18, 2006
Trending in News
1 Tribes rush to respond to new coronavirus emergency created by Trump administration
2 'At this rate the entire tribe will be extinct': Zuni Pueblo sees COVID-19 cases double as first death is confirmed
3 Arne Vainio: 'A great sickness has been visited upon us as human beings'
4 Arne Vainio: Zoongide'iwin is the Ojibwe word for courage
5 Cayuga Nation's division leads to a 'human rights catastrophe'
2 'At this rate the entire tribe will be extinct': Zuni Pueblo sees COVID-19 cases double as first death is confirmed
3 Arne Vainio: 'A great sickness has been visited upon us as human beings'
4 Arne Vainio: Zoongide'iwin is the Ojibwe word for courage
5 Cayuga Nation's division leads to a 'human rights catastrophe'