12-Thursday, February 15, 1979-The Michigan Daily DISCUSSES POLLUTION STANDARDS' ,:a ,.- :. .. . a .s 9. A a Muskie calls for tight controls by MARIANNE EGRI Senator Edmund Muskie (D-Maine), speaking before about 600 people in Rackham Auditorium last night, at- tacked the new mood of those opposed to environmental regulation because they say "It is. too costly and burden- some to protect people from the hazar- ds of pollution." Blaming economists and cost-benefit analyses for the new sentilhents, Muskie gained a round of applause from the crowd when he said: "In trying to protect health from the en- vironmental impacts, we can't wait for precise, clinical, and positive evidence. We must measure the risk and build in a margin that protects the public health. "THE ENVIRONMENT is being at- tacked by people who believe in num- bers," he said. "We need better eviden- ce on health effects of pollution, trends, BOWLING here, is what it used to be at pUNON LANES Open 10 am and abetter techniques to measure pollution." Citing the dumping of hazardous wastes in the environment as a major problem, Muskie said, "We must develop procedures and techniques to render hazardous ways of ,dumping harmless prior to disposal. This is something Congress should address this year, but the mood of the anti- regulators is preventing it." He said the Environmental Protec- tion Agency (EPA) has spent two years developing rules to guard against dum- ping, and too much emphasis is being placed on costs, practicality, and effec- tiveness. "THERE ARE a group of economists who second-guess environmental regulations," said Muskie. "The com- panies producing the wastes won't bear the costs." Another major problem Muskie cited. was the new draft legislation for a regulatory reform bill of environmental protection. This will require review of all environmental rules, regulations and policies. "This would stop the agency from providing new protection, and would override every existing environmental statute," said Muskie. "UNDER DRAFT legislation the health standard would be eliminated, and instead the standard would be based on most-benefit analysis," he said. "This is not* the minimnum requirement of public health, but it is the least burdensome alternative." "The draft bill is a bone tossed to the individual by the bureaucratic economists, and the bone is the health of the nation," said Muskie. Since measuring the effects of pollution in "dollars and cents" is very difficult, it is used as an "economic veto fo environmental regulations," said Muskie. HOWEVER, Muskie said "pollution has costs - lost jobs, lost health, lost recreation and sfewer options for the future." Stressing his point, Muskie said the .Environmental Protection Agency was going to relax its ozone standard so that the allowable level was increased by 50 per cent. Furthermore, he cited the problem of acid precipitation. Despite the anti-regulator mood, Muskie said he was optimistic because f the people." Muskie said only a poll indicated that pollution control had a great deal of public support, and a study which indicated that the costs of control are not as great as they appear. INDICATING HE was "sorry to be trapped by a specific title and subject," Muskie added that although it was a boring topic, it was extremely impor- tant. The senator's visit, sponsored by the School of Public Health, the Public Health Student Association, and the University's Council on Environmental Programs, was connected to his leading role in environmental activities. Muskie is chairman of the Public Works Subcommittee on Environmen- tal Pollution, and was a key figure in the passage of the Clean Air Act and Clean Water Act. A former governor of Maine, Muskie entered national politics as the 1968 Democratic vice presidential can- didate, and was also an unsuccessful candidate for President in 1972. POETRY PRIZE NEW YORK (AP)-W. S. Merwin has been awareded the 1979 Bollingen Prize in Poetry. Given "in recognition of his achievement in poetry over 25 years," it carries a stipend of $5,000. Merwin received the Pulitzer Prize in Poetry in 1972, and in 1974 he was awar- ded the Fellowship of the Academy of American Poets. His most recent collection was "The Compass Flower," published in 1977 by Atheneum. Merwin is also noted as a translator J~f~k ~mqSWtp&t6 SWEATER SALE 30% OFF 100 % Wool GI BLANKETS-66x84 $9.98 reg. $16.98 PAINTER'S PANTS-au colors $9.98-$13.98 SALE ENDS 2/17/79 201 E. WASHINGTON-994-3572 Mon-Sat 9-6