Statement of
Joseph G. Pizarchik
as nominee to be
Director of the Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement
Department of the Interior
Before the
Committee on Energy and Natural Resources
of
the
August 6, 2009
Thank you, Chairman Bingaman and Senators. I am honored to appear before you as President Obama’s nominee to head the Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement at the Department of the Interior. I thank President Obama and Secretary Salazar for their confidence in me and I thank you for considering my nomination.
I appreciate the opportunity to
present my background and qualifications. The majority of my career has been in
public service for the
For the past 17 years I have been
engaged in Pennsylvania’s mining program, first as legal counsel and then as
the Director of the Bureau of Mining and Reclamation, where I have worked on a
variety of projects. Under the guidance of Kathleen McGinty, then Secretary of
the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, we developed and
implemented a policy, based on sound scientific and legal principles, to
protect streams from underground coal mining subsidence without shutting down
mining. I was also assigned the responsibility and did resolve a postmining
discharge liability matter that was blocking progress on the Flight 93 National
Memorial. While working closely with the Pennsylvania State Police and the
Pennsylvania Office of Homeland Security, I led the state effort to secure
explosive storage magazines. These security measures, the only ones of their
kind in the country, greatly reduced the risk to the nation’s capital and other
major East Coast cities. The number of break-ins and thefts of explosives in
I understand and appreciate the
interests and duties of the states and federal government and the roles of
citizens, environmentalists, and industry in protecting the environment and our
citizens while helping to meet
I have represented
As a member of the Executive Branch,
I see my duty as executing the laws enacted by the legislators and, at times,
as interpreted by the courts. The laws are to be implemented for the benefit of
If confirmed, I will be leaving a
corps of state government employees dedicated to implementing the laws to
protect
On a more personal note, I grew up
on a small farm in southwestern
When I was 10, my brothers and I assumed full operation of the farm. We planted and harvested all of the crops, cared for the livestock, and repaired and maintained the equipment and buildings. My brother owns and runs that farm today. Through that experience I learned the value of hard work, cooperative decision making, work distribution, and completing a job the right way the first time. The values and work ethic instilled in me as a kid are still with me.
Coal was a part of our daily lives; that’s how we heated our home. I also knew many people who worked in the mines so I saw first-hand the value placed on a job in the mines tempered by the effects of poor safety regulations and the environmental havoc wreaked by unfettered mining. Through friends and family I witnessed the benefits of improved safety and environmental standards.
Like four of my siblings, I worked
my way through college using a combination of summer jobs, work study,
education grants, and Social Security, as my dad died while I was in high
school. I have worked as a laborer for masons, in general construction, in a
plant that fabricated steel buildings, in flood cleanup, and as a security
guard. After getting my BA from the
It would be an honor and privilege
to serve
Thank you, Mr. Chairman, for the opportunity to testify. I am ready to answer questions.