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Funding Superfund

Laptop Battery Every year for the rest of this decade the Environmental Protection Agency will need to spend roughly $1.4 billion to clean up contamination from hazardous substances, according to a congressionally commissioned report released last year. Where will the money come from?

According to the indictment, Jones would steal various IBM and Penguin computer servers from Verisign's warehouse in Virginia and sell them to Johnson. Johnson would then sell the servers to several individuals, who would sometimes place them for sale on eBay. As a result of this scheme, the indictment alleges that Jones and Johnson caused Verisign to lose more than $120, 000 worth of computer equipment. In the indictment, Jones and Johnson are charged in three counts with causing the interstate transportation of stolen property, namely IBM 330 and 335 servers, in violation of 18 U.S.C.

Thinkpad The taxes originally imposed to pay for cleanups expired in 1995. The Clinton administration sought to restore the Superfund levies on petroleum, hazardous chemicals and profits of major corporations, but Congress didn't go along. Instead, the program was funded by drawing down surpluses from earlier collections and by gradually increasing general fund contributions to cleanup costs. President Bush doesn't want to restore the taxes: EPA Administrator Christie Whitman has said it's not fair to impose a burden even on companies with good environmental records. For fiscal 2003 Mr. Bush wants to pay with $700 million from the general fund and $529 million from the trust fund. But after that the trust fund will be virtually empty, with Superfund work far from done.

The Sept. 18 editorial "Shifting the Burden" perpetuated the myth that the dwindling Superfund trust fund is crucial to the cleanup program's success. But thanks to strong Environmental Protection Agency enforcement, about 70 percent of Superfund cleanups are funded by the responsible parties, not by the trust fund. Also, taxes from oil and chemical companies primarily created the trust fund, which is handy but hardly fair, because these firms already pay directly for their own sites, and most sites were created by other industries, governmental units and even individuals.

Microsoft To keep spending close to needed levels, as the administration has pledged to do, would require nearly doubling current contributions from the general fund. Some Democrats and environmentalists object to putting the burden on all taxpayers instead of on big corporations and users of hazardous substances. Democratic lawmakers seized on an EPA inspector general's report this week of funding shortfalls at some sites as evidence that the program is already underfunded. (EPA spokesmen said the report is overly bleak and that some sites listed as short of money will get funding later this year.) Critics accuse Mr. Bush of giving too much deference to industry interests and of abandoning the "polluter pays" framework behind the original law.

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Laptop Computers Rhetorical heat shouldn't obscure the fact that in cases where the companies responsible for contamination can be identified and still have assets, polluters are paying for cleanup. During the last decade, while EPA has usually taken the lead in initially assessing sites, roughly 70 percent of the actual cleanups were paid for primarily by the responsible private parties. Government foots the bill for "orphan sites," where companies that caused the pollution no longer exist or have no money.

"Computer industry analysts estimate that some 60 percent of all corporate data exists only on desktop and laptop computers, " said Walter Scott, CEO of Acronis. "Incorporating Acronis True Image with New Mexico Software backup server is the ideal solution to capture that corporate data and ensure that it is not lost. While traditional server backups are effective for protecting server data, every company should have a combination of server and workstation backup plans."

Laptop Computer There's an argument to be made that the public benefits of cleaning up those contaminated sites justify funding Superfund from the general treasury. But even if you accept that, there's still the question of finding the money. The budget is already in deficit. Homeland security, defense spending and the impact of last year's tax cuts will put extreme pressure on other domestic spending for the rest of the decade. Where in the budget does Mr. Bush propose to look for the Superfund money? Spokesmen this week would say only that those decisions will be made as part of the 2004 budget deliberations. At least the proponents of reinstating the expired taxes acknowledge that it takes resources to meet the government's commitments. A similar dose of realism from the administration would be welcome.

laptop computers is driving strong sales for notebook computers, according to the latest quarterly sales figures from the research firm IDC, which reported a 37% computer sales for the second quarter, compared with a year earlier. In the U.S., laptop sales grew 17.7%, while sales of desktop computers and servers fell 4%. The New York Times ( 10), CNET ( 10)

Desktop Computer Washington Post - 7/4/2002

Topic: SuperFund

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