Anonymous ID: bdc4d6 April 19, 2018, 12:32 p.m. No.1103654   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>1103613

i think the new board is active somewhere to those savvy enough to find it.

 

some weeks ago there was a cryptic post regarding a board. perhaps it was legit, perhaps not.

Anonymous ID: bdc4d6 April 19, 2018, 12:52 p.m. No.1103852   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>1103529

>>1103542

 

http:// archive.li/LGegL

 

The EPA deposited more than $6.3 billion into an estimated 1,308 special accounts between 1990 and 2015, according to the agency’s website, and has spent more than half of the total. The agency doesn’t publicly report individual special account balances or expenses.

The “special accounts” are financed by legal settlements between the agency and parties responsible for polluting Superfund sites. Funds are deposited and spent without prior congressional approval.

 

http:// archive.li/pmVm8

 

Congress appropriates about $1 billion annually for EPA’s Superfund program, and the agency has accumulated nearly $6.8 billion in more than 1,300 slush fund-like accounts since 1990.

“The National Risk-Based Priority Panel and the Superfund Special Accounts Senior Management Committee engage in pre-decisional deliberations which are internal to the agency and not open to the public,” an EPA spokeswoman who requested anonymity told TheDCNF.

It’s nearly impossible to determine where the estimated $3.3 billion spent so far went, or who will get the remaining $3.5 billion (after adding interest). The EPA will also continue collecting funds from new superfund sites, such as the recently proposed Gold King Mine, where the agency spilled 880,000 pounds of dangerous metals into drinking water.