Sierra Club intervenes in open records lawsuit against Texas Attorney General

Michael Honeycutt, director of the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality's toxicology division, also serves as chair of the Science Advisory Board at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Sierra Club has requested Honeycutt's emails and other communications related to a controversial rule change. Texas Commission on Environmental Quality

The Sierra Club on Wednesday intervened in a lawsuit that the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality filed against the Texas Attorney General's Office in October over an open records ruling.

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In July, weeks after the TCEQ proposed increasing the acceptable limit on air emissions of a toxic gas known as ethylene oxide, Earthjustice submitted an open records request to the commission on behalf of the Sierra Club for records related to how the commission went about devising the rule. Instead of releasing them, TCEQ requested a decision from the Attorney General's office, which ruled in favor of the environmental groups in September.

TCEQ asked the attorney general to reconsider its opinion and sued the office on Oct. 4, arguing that it didn't have to release the documents under a provision of state law that can allow public entities to withhold records related to internal policy deliberations. The lawsuit is still pending.

Neil Carman, clean air director for the Lone Star Chapter of the Sierra Club, said the group decided to intervene because "it's the only way to ensure that we get access to the TCEQ's ethylene oxide documents."

He said TCEQ's decision to sue the attorney general suggests the agency is "hiding significant details." And he noted that the open records request covered communications to and from TCEQ's chief toxicologist Michael Honeycutt, who also chairs the Science Advisory Board of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, which is pursuing a similar rule to relax restrictions on ethylene oxide emissions.

Spokespeople for the TCEQ and Attorney General's office didn't immediately respond to requests for comment.

Media lawyer Joseph Larsen, a member of the Freedom of Information Foundation of Texas, said state law dictates that the only way governmental entities can avoid complying with an Attorney General's open records ruling is to sue the office.

While "this causes what one might think of as a conflict of interest" because the attorney general typically represents TCEQ in legal proceedings, he said "they build a 'Chinese wall' to restrict the transmission of information between the two branches of the AG involved in the litigation."

And Larsen said governmental entities frequently sue the attorney general.

"Where the AG orders release of potentially contentious information like that at issue here, it is almost sure to happen," he said.

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