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[In the fourth of a series of articles on Illinois coal, James Krohe, Jr. examines the role of the governor, the state executive agencies and the General Assembly in making coal policy for Illinois. The fifth article will discuss the role of interest groups and the federal government. Previous articles presented: a general overview, the ownership of the coal industry, and technology and the environment.] ILLINOIS COAL is a pie with many fingers in it. Depending on how one counts them, there are from 15 to 20 separate agencies, departments, commissions and committees that have a hand in shaping the state's energy policy in which coal figures so prominently. To that number must be added the various agents of the federal government and a half-dozen trade associations, citizens' groups and unions, not to mention some two dozen companies that sell, ship or burn coal and, ultimately, the millions 18/ November 1979/ Illinois Issues of people whose lives are affected in one way or another — through their air or water, their paychecks or their electric bills — by coal. If there is a chef presiding over the making of coal policy in Illinois, it is the governor. As chief executive, he officially controls such key agencies as the Illinois Department of Mines and Minerals and the Institute of Natural Resources. He also wields veto power over coal legislation passed by the General Assembly and, through his public pronouncements, can exercise power of a less dramatic sort over public opinion. Pro-coal governor James R. Thompson is generally regarded as a pro-coal governor. It is a bias common among Illinois governors, none of whom, Democrat or Republican, can afford to ignore a resource of such economic importance to the state. To that extent coal, like agriculture and (until recently) highways, is a nonpartisan issue. Beginning in 1973, for example, Gov. Dan Walker began a series of policy initiatives aimed at securing for Illinois a share of the bonanza of federal coal conversion funds that was expected to flow to the state following the OPEC embargo. More recently, his successor has had to worry about ways to protect the industry against sagging demand thought to be caused by government regulation and high prices. Toward that end, Thompson, like Walker, has been an energetic advocate of the various coal conversion schemes planned for the state. In 1977 he vetoed the coal severance tax bill passed by the 80th General Assembly — S.B. 39, sponsored by Sen. Gene Johns (D., Marion) — because the added cost would, he said, further erode the marketability of Illinois coal. He has called for relaxation of federal clean air standards to allow more burning of coal and pushed--for amendments to the state's own regulations that would make it easier to legally burn Illinois coal. Much of the governor's coal program is as much philosophical as practical. Thompson has earned the enmity of environmentalists and some coal-county activists by moving slowly on H.B. 2548, a bill to implement the 1977 Federal Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act (SMCRA). A spokes person for one of those groups complained to a subcommittee of the U.S. House in March that Thompson reportedly told a public meeting that he would like to tell the federal government to take the SMCRA and "do you-know-what with it." It is an opinion shared by the coal industry, to be sure, but the remark may also have been prompted by almost constitutional resentment felt by Republicans toward what they regard as federal interference in state affairs. Politics shapes policy, of course; Thompson is a Republican, and the coal industry is a part of the party's natural business constituency. But sometimes politics is mistaken for policy. A protracted wrangle in 1974 over creation of a new coal development commission for the state was complicated by legislators' reluctance to cede its control to a governor — in this case, Dan Walker — they despised. In a somewhat different case, Thompsons's recent attacks on federal clean air rules (expressed most forcefully in July in his "little more dirt in my lungs" speech to the National Urban League in Chicago) seem to have been calculated for their political effects. Cynics in the bureaucracy note that Thompson's complaints seem to be addressed more to a national audience than an Illinois one and may have more to do with the 1980 national elections than Illinois coal policy. In any event, there has been no indication of any major policy shift in the agencies under the governor's control. Governors do not make coal policy alone, of course. In fact, the cabinet and subcabinet agencies may be said to run a governor as much as he runs them, at least to the extent that he is often dependent on them for information and advice. Of the several members of this "permanent government" which have a say in coal policy, the Illinois Department of Mines and Minerals (IDMM) is one of the most important. It is the only cabinet department dealing with coal, having been organized in 1919 to administer the new state Coal Mining Act; it has since also been made responsible for administering the federal November 1979/ Illinois Issues/ 19
This is not to say, however, that the department lacks influence. Because of its pivotal position between state government on the one hand and mine owners and unions on the other, and because of the close working relationship it has evolved with all three groups, the IDMM perceives itself as a consensus-finder, the agency that "brings all these people to the table to talk," as one department official has put it. Usually the IDMM invites to its table the Illinois Coal Association and the Coal Producers Association of Illinois (representing coal owners) and the United Mine Workers and the Progressive Mine Workers of America (representing coal diggers). Occasionally the department expands its guest list, as when it solicited comment on the permanent reclamation program from environmentalists, farmers and the general public as well as the industry and unions. Because of its role as consensus-maker, the IDMM is presumed by the rest of state government to speak for more than itself. Department officials insist (generally without contradiction) that it is impossible to implement major coal legislation unless it has been endorsed by the IDMM. A recent report on an unsuccessful reorganization proposal in the General Assembly bears out this view ("Energy Reorganization in Illinois: Agency and Clientele Influence," Albert J. Nelson, Kenneth E. Mitchell and Leon S. Cohen, Legislative Studies Center, Sangamon State University, Springfield). The authors cite a 1977 House proposal tacked on to energy reorganization bill S.B. 1142, sponsored by Sen. John J. Nimrod (R., Park Ridge). The House proposal, which would have made IDMM part of a new Department of Mines and Energy, included an amendment transferring mined-land reclamation authority to the Illinois Department of Conservation. Environmentalists had argued that the IDMM "was too closely identified with the mining interests to effectively regulate reclamation." The amendment was defeated on the House floor after extensive lobbying against it by the department, the industry and the unions. During the debate, the study notes, "miners lobbied the Democratic side of the House, while the coal operators lobbied the Republican side. The authors describe the campaign as "a clear example of clientele who disagreed among themselves rallying behind 'their' agency." The issue wasn't really who was going to administer the reclamation program, the study concluded, but how stringently it would be administered. As the authors note, "policy and structural issues are often intimately connected, and . . . the underlying determinant is the pattern of the agencies' clientele relationships." Regulation and promotion The question is sometimes asked whether the IDMM is truly impartial in its role as mediator of the state's coal interests. Nelson, Mitchell and Cohen conclude that established agencies such as the IDMM are usually "captured" by their clientele, in this case mine owners and unions. Though the department is charged with regulating the coal industry and not with promoting it, it is IDMM policy to encourage the opening of new mines by cooperating with mining interests. Evilsizer has said he sees no conflict between the two roles, but some observers outside the industry are not so sure. For example, in May the IDMM filed a lawsuit in the District of Columbia requesting a judicial review of the regulations adopted by the U.S. Department of Interior's Office of Surface Mining under the 1977 federal surface mining act (SMCRA). The department claimed that some of the regulations covering state permanent regulatory programs are inconsistent with the federal act, are technically unsound or discriminate unduly against the Illinois coal industry. The IDMM asserts (along with Gov. Thompson) that the suit is merely an attempt to resolve differences between state needs and federal demands and does not signal any intention by the state to shun its responsibilities under the SMCRA. However, skeptics likethe Illinois South Project, a southern Illinois coal community activist group, perhaps noting that the national coal industry has filed similar suits, see the IDMM suit as another of the Thompson administration's "continuing efforts to shirk its responsibilities for implementing the federal law in a meaningful way." Of course, the governor gets advice on coal from more than the IDMM. When he first took office, for example, Thompson relied on an "energy sub-cabinet" made up of the directors of the IDMM, the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (IEPA), the Illinois Institute for Environmental Quality 20/ November 1979/ Illinois Issues
November 1979/ Illinois Issues/ 21
Standards that apply to all major new sources even if, as sometimes happens, IEPA thinks such variances would cause no significant deterioration of the state's air quality. The range for discretion left to the state agency by Washington is increasingly small, and this contributes to the agency's reputation for intransigence. Even in those areas where the IEPA retains a relatively free hand, some industry people and legislators sympathetic to them have complained that the state regulations designed to bring the state into compliance with federal ambient air quality standards are stricter than necessary, or that the IEPA enforces them with more enthusiasm than absolutely necessary. Egged on by industry and union lobbyists, legislators last winter introduced no fewer than five bills to force reductions in state standards to be relaxed to the minimum allowed under federal law. Most of these bills were political gestures — they were either in violation of the Clean Air Act or, if implemented, would have made it impossible to open new factories and power plants in the future in many areas of the state. What they did indicate was a growing concern that coal policy was being made not in the Statehouse but in the hostile environs of IEPA's Churchill Road headquarters. In their defense, IEPA officials point out that agency rules are not the severe impediment to Illinois coal use they are sometimes said to be. They acknowledge that enforcement of the Clean Air Act led some utilities to switch to cleaner-burning western coal. But the economic impact of the switch, they say, is nearly over. New coal-burning plants will, because they must meet federal emission ceilings that require scrubbing equipment, be able to burn Illinois coal. In fact, in a 1977 report, the IEPA claimed to have "worked diligently with the Illinois coal-burning industry to lessen the economic impact of air pollution regulations." The IEPA sought more flexible rules from the Pollution Control Board (PCB), extended compliance deadlines, allowed temporary use of taller smokestacks, and granted variances. These measures, the agency said, made it possible to burn 14 million tons more of Illinois coal in the state than would have been possible otherwise. IEPA's immunityL The IEPA, then, is not entirely immune from the usual pro-coal biases of state government. It is true, however, that it is more immune than any of the other agencies and officials who share responsibility with it for coal policy. There are several reasons for this: the agency's mandate comes from the federal, not state, government; its constituency is large but diffuse, so that agency actions cannot easily be interpreted (and thus dismissed) as benefiting any vested interest; no statewide politicians can afford to be perceived as anti-environment, so attacks on the agency are moderated; the rules the agency enforces are set by the PCB, which probably is as independent of partisan influence (both political and economic) as it is possible to be in Illinois government. Thus, when peoplt complain that the IEPA does not play by the accustomed rules, that the IEPA is "arrogant," as a, commonly heard word has it, they are paying what is, in terms of the agency's mission, a compliment. The General Assembly Along with the governor, the Illinois General Assembly matters the most when it comes to coal. Not only does the General Assembly pass coal law (will and sometimes without, the cooperation of the governor), but it is the principal forum where coal issues are debated and the arena where contending claims from coal interest groups are brokered by legislators acting as surrogates of those interests. In the past, for example, deep-mining interests periodically would induce a sympathetic legislator to introduce a bill regulating strip mining, which was then considered unfair competition to deep mining. The United Mine Workers' man would vote for it, because most of their members worked below ground. The farmers' man would vote for it to protect the farms. The Progressive Mine Work ers' man would vote for it (according to at least one account) to bedevil mine owners. The strip-mine operators in turn protected their interests by appeal ing to the self-interest of legislator in James D. Nowlan and Janet Koran, in an unpublished monograph titled, "Coal v. Corn: The Politics of Strip-mining Reclamation in Illinois," describe many land reclamation bills in the 1930's as classic "fetchers." As one union leader put it to the authors: "It 22/ November 1979/ Illinois Issues was cheaper to spend a few thousand dollars to get several key guys to kill bills than it was to carry on massive public relations programs." Things have changed in the last 40 years. No one openly buys votes the way they used to, and massive public relations programs are now the rule. Lobbying is now more sophisticated, and the cast has changed to include environmentalists, farmers, county officials. But though making laws about coal has become much more complicated, certain aspects of the process have changed little. Some votes are still cast in behalf of the interests to whom lawmakers are politically beholden, or for the side they sympathize with ideologically. The key question is still: "Who's got the votes?" And getting the votes still means lobbying. A few legislators have developed their own expertise in certain coal subjects: Rep. A. T. McMaster (R., Oneida), a farmer well-versed on land reclamation issues; Rep. Michael F. McClain (D., Quincy), chairman of the House Environment, Energy and Natural Resources Committee, who successfully shepherded the permanent surface mining regulatory program through the 81st General Assembly; and Sen. Gene Johns (D., Marion), a stubborn proponent of a coal severance tax. But most members, lacking that kind of expertise, must allow themselves to be persuaded variously by spokesmen for industry, miners, farmers or even state agencies. As a result, the General Assembly reflects (albeit imperfectly) the ebb and flow of power among coal's contendingm champions. For the moment it is anti-clean air laws, anti-severance tax, proreclamation (if only because a state bill seems more desirable than a federal one), and it is undecided on minimum coal royalties. But the General Assembly is more than just a forum. It is a contender (chiefly with the executive branch) for policy power. It was largely to augment that power that the legislature established the Illinois Energy Resources Commission (IERC) in 1974. Among other tasks, the IERC was charged with recommending administrative changes, developing long-range energy planning, and reviewing proposed coal development projects under the Coal Development Bond program. The IERC is composed of 10 legislators and eight public members. Its posture, as it relates to coal anyway, has been pro-coal development. This is a reflection of its membership, which tends to be dominated by energy interests, including southern Illinois legislators. Indeed, the major administrative reform so far advanced by the IERC was, according to Nelson et al, "designed implicitly to insure dominance of developmental over conservation interests." That was the IERC's 1977 proposal to meld several key state agencies, including the Department of Conservation and the IEPA, into a Department of Natural Resources, a "supercabinet" agency that would handle both energy and environmental issues.
The IERC notwithstanding, the General Assembly does not so much make coal policy as reflect the policies made by others. Speaking in 1977 to the fifth annual Illinois Energy Conference in Chicago, Sen. Kenneth Buzbee (D., Carbondale) complained about what he called "the traditional reactive role of government" in the development of natural resource policies. Some observers find it significant that no major state policymaker has yet considered the implications of acid rain and carbon-dioxide overload in the atmosphere — two potentially calamitous consequences of the use of coal. Whatever the faults of the method — and Buzbee cites shortsightedness as one of them — coal policy in Illinois still depends largely on what group the government is reacting to and how it decides to respond. James Krohe Jr. is associate editor of the Illinois Times in Springfield; he specializes in planning, land use and energy issues. November 1979/ Illinois Issues/ 23 |
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