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2019年1月4日 星期五

Overnight Energy: Zinke denies lying to investigators | Interior won't take FOIA requests during shutdown | Ocasio-Cortez makes pitch for 'ambitious' Green New Deal

 
 
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ZINKE DENIES LYING TO INVESTIGATORS: Former Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke denied the allegation that he lied to federal investigators.

His denial came after a Washington Post story reporting that the Justice Department is looking into whether he was untruthful with officials from Interior's Office of the Inspector General who were working on an unspecified probe.

"It's an unauthorized leak from an anonymous source over false allegations," Zinke told the Associated Press in his first interview since he left Interior Wednesday.

He said the leaks are part of an effort by conservation groups to undermine his legacy and ruin his political future.

"They believe I'm going to run for governor, or they want to dismiss the Trump administration's accomplishments in conservation," he told AP. "The investigations started nearly on the first day in office. After 10 investigations, the conclusions are all the same: No wrongdoing, followed all procedures, policies and laws. Every investigation will follow the same conclusion."

Zinke said he spoke with investigators twice about his decision not to approve a proposed American Indian casino in Connecticut after lobbying by a competitor to the project. He answered their questions truthfully, he said.

Zinke also said that he never spoke with investigators about a land deal the OIG is probing between a nonprofit he used to lead and a development backed in part by David Lesar, the recently departed chairman of Halliburton Co.

Read more about Zinke's remarks here.

 

Zinke tells parkgoers to pick up trash: Zinke also weighed in on the ongoing partial government shutdown, and the buildup of trash in national parks, since most employees are furloughed.

"Pitch in, grab a trash bag and take some trash out," he said in the AP interview.

Read more.

 

TGIF! Welcome to Overnight Energy, The Hill's roundup of the latest energy and environment news.

Please send tips and comments to Timothy Cama, tcama@thehill.com, and Miranda Green, mgreen@thehill.com. Follow us on Twitter: @Timothy_Cama, @mirandacgreen, @thehill.

CLICK HERE to subscribe to our newsletter.

 

INTERIOR WON'T ACCEPT FOIA REQUESTS DURING SHUTDOWN: The Interior Department is not accepting public requests for information during the partial government shutdown, which is now in its 14th day with no end in sight.

The agency's Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request website--an automated site that typically accepts requests through drop-down menus--is no longer receiving new submissions.

Members of the press, advocacy groups and individuals looking to request public information are now greeted with a message that reads: "No FOIA requests can be accepted or processed at this time."

Interior spokeswoman Faith Vander Voort said the lapse in funding is why the agency cannot accept new submissions.

"FOIA requests cannot be processed at this time due to the lapse in funding as is standard protocol," she said in a statement Friday. "FOIA requests are not directly related to protecting life and imminent threats to property."

Critics, however, say no manpower is needed for an automated site to receive requests.

"It does strike me as out of the ordinary," said Margaret Kwoka, a professor on civil procedure and administrative law at Brown University. "It is true that typically agencies may stop functions that require funding but they are not blocking things that are passive."

"The agency isn't doing anything on its end in terms of necessary expenditures," she added.

FOIA requests for other agencies affected by the partial shutdown remain functioning via Foiaonline.gov, which serves agencies like the Justice Department, Environmental Protection Agency and U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

More on the FOIA controversy here.

 

OCASIO-CORTEZ ON GREEN NEW DEAL: IT'S AMBITIOUS: Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) said in a new interview that she believes only radicals "have changed this country."

Ocasio-Cortez made the remark during an interview on CBS' "60 Minutes" program with Anderson Cooper that is set to broadcast on Sunday.

The comment comes as the New York Democrat backs high tax rates on America's wealthiest citizens to help finance an aggressive plan to combat climate change. The plan, known as the "Green New Deal," aims to eliminate carbon emissions in the U.S. completely within 12 years.

"That is the goal. It's ambitious," Ocasio-Cortez said while discussing the deal. "It's going to require a lot of rapid change that we don't even conceive as possible right now. What is the problem with trying to push our technological capacities to the furthest extent possible?"

When pressed by Cooper during the interview about how the plan would ultimately require people to pay more in taxes, Ocasio-Cortez said there is an "element where people are going to have to start paying their fair share in taxes."

"You know, you look at our tax rates back in the sixties, and when you have an aggressive tax rate system, your tax rate from 0-$75,000 may be 10 percent or 15 percent, et cetera," Ocasio-Cortez said.

More here.

 

TOP DEM SECURED POLICY PROMISES FROM TRUMP ENVIRONMENTAL NOMINEES BEFORE VOTE: The top Senate Democrat overseeing environmental policy secured a number of commitments from three Trump administration nominees before the Senate confirmed this week.

In recent letters, Alexandra Dunn, the incoming head of the Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) chemical safety office; William "Chad" McIntosh, the next head of the EPA's international affairs office; and Mary Neumayr, the soon-to-be leader of the White House Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ), made assurances to Sen. Tom Carper (D-Del.), the ranking member of the Environment and Public Works Committee.

The three nominees were confirmed this week by voice vote hours before the Senate ended its final session of the 115th Congress.

In the letters provided by Carper's staff, Dunn, currently the New England regional administrator at the EPA, made a number of commitments regarding the EPA's implementation of the Frank R. Lautenberg Chemical Safety for the 21st Century Act and other concerns Carper had.

Her commitments include: certain actions to boost public transparency of the thousands of notices EPA receives from companies before they start making new chemicals, a new report on how the agency handles claims from companies that certain business information is confidential, a promise to withdraw a December 2017 proposal to reduce protections for agricultural workers and a peer review process for how the agency will evaluate new chemicals for safety.

More on the promises here.

 

ON TAP NEXT WEEK:

Mike Sommers, the new president of the American Petroleum Institute, will give a speech and presentation on the State of American Energy. The speech is an annual API event, and it will be Sommers's first time delivering it.

 

OUTSIDE THE BELTWAY:

Major insurance companies are suing utility PG&E over its alleged role in last year's massive Camp Fire in California, the Sacramento Bee reports.

The Navajo Nation Council withdrew a bill that would have allowed an energy company owned by the tribe to become a for-profit corporation, the Associated Press reports.

Minnesota Gov.-elect Tim Walz (D) has named two women to head the state's main environmental agencies, Minnesota Public Radio reports.

 

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT:

Check Friday's stories ...

- Dem secured policy commitments from environmental nominees

- O'Rourke signals support for 'concept' of Green New Deal
- Zinke: National park visitors should 'grab a trash bag'

- Ocasio-Cortez on push for changes: Only radicals 'have changed this country'

- Zinke denies he's under investigation for lying

 
 
 
 
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Hillicon Valley: Marriott cuts breach estimates, but says millions of passports exposed | Los Angeles sues Weather Channel app over data collection | Bill would create office to fight Chinese threats to US tech | German politicians hit by major breach

 
 
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Welcome to Hillicon Valley, The Hill's newsletter detailing all you need to know about the tech and cyber news from Capitol Hill to Silicon Valley.

Welcome! Follow the cyber team, Olivia Beavers (@olivia_beavers) and Jacqueline Thomsen (@jacq_thomsen), and the tech team, Harper Neidig (@hneidig). And CLICK HERE to subscribe to our newsletter.

 

WE'VE GOT SOME GOOD NEWS, WE'VE GOT SOME BAD NEWS: Marriott International announced Friday that fewer guests were impacted by a breach of its Starwood reservations database than originally announced, but that millions of unencrypted passport numbers were accessed.

The chain said in a release that it now believes as many as 383 million records were accessed in the hack but noted that some of those records were repeats impacting the same guests. That's down from the 500 million guests originally believed to be impacted by the hack.

However, Marriott said that roughly 5.25 million unencrypted passport numbers were obtained by hackers, as well as 20.3 million encrypted passport numbers.

And about 8.6 million encrypted debit and credit cards were accessed by a third party, with about 354,000 of those cards not having expired by September of last year.

Marriott noted that there is no evidence that the hackers were able to decrypt the encrypted passport and payment card numbers.

Organizations will often lower the number of the parties impacted in a breach after investigating the hack further.

Read more here.

 

DELETE ALL THE APPS: The city of Los Angeles is accusing The Weather Channel app of improperly mining detailed data from users about their daily habits and handing the information over to advertisers and hedge funds.

In a lawsuit filed Friday, L.A. City Attorney Mike Feuer accused the company that operates the app -- TWC Product and Technology, a subsidiary of IBM -- of misleading users about what it does with their precise geolocation data.

"For years, TWC has deceptively used its Weather Channel App to amass its users' private, personal geolocation data -- tracking minute details about its users' locations throughout the day and night, all the while leading users to believe that their data will only be used to provide them with 'personalized local weather data, alerts and forecasts,'" Feuer writes in the lawsuit.

"TWC has then profited from that data, using it and monetizing it for purposes entirely unrelated to weather or the Weather Channel App," the complaint continues.

The lawsuit was first reported by The New York Times.

"The Weather Company has always been transparent with use of location data; the disclosures are fully appropriate, and we will defend them vigorously," an IBM spokesperson said in a statement to The Hill.

Read more here, and revisit The New York Times investigation into location tracking.

 

NEW YEAR, NEW BILLS: A pair of senators on Friday introduced bipartisan legislation that would establish a new federal office focused on combating Chinese and other foreign threats to U.S. technology, including supply chain risks and technology theft.  

Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.), vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, and Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), also a member of the panel, said that creating the Office of Critical Technology and Security at the White House would help coordinate efforts to protect technology across the federal government.

The office would also coordinate with the private sector, federal and state tech and telecom regulators, international partners and allies, and other relevant organizations.

"It is clear that China is determined to use every tool in its arsenal to surpass the United States technologically and dominate us economically," Warner, a former telecommunications executive, said in a statement. "We need a whole-of-government technology strategy to protect U.S. competitiveness in emerging and dual-use technologies and address the Chinese threat by combating technology transfer from the United States."

More on their proposal here.

 

MAYBE THIS TIME: House Democrats on Friday unveiled several election security measures as part of their first sweeping bill of the session.

The legislation, H.R. 1, or the For the People Act, mandates that states use paper ballots in elections, which must also be hand-counted, or by "optical character recognition device," the bill states.

Rep. John Sarbanes (D-Md.) introduced the legislation, which he and other Democrats have described as a comprehensive anti-corruption package that will set the tone for their time in control of the House.

The bill will also allow the Election Assistance Commission (EAC) -- the small federal agency tasked with helping officials carry out elections -- to hand out funding to states for the improvement of their elections systems.

The Department of Homeland Security would also be required to conduct a threat assessment ahead of elections and that voting systems be tested nine months before any national election.

More on that here.

 

MERKEL, GERMAN LAWMAKERS BREACHED: German authorities are reportedly investigating the leak of personal data belonging to hundreds of German politicians including German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

The leak impacted individuals tied to left and centrist political parties, but not Germany's populist right-wing party, the AfD, according to multiple German news outlets.

While the hack affected Merkel, a government spokesperson told multiple news outlets that no sensitive data tied to Merkel or the government was leaked.

The cybercriminals uploaded the personal details of these politicians -- including names, home addresses, phone numbers, photo IDs, chat histories, personal photos, and others -- and then pushed the leaked information out on Twitter. The social media giant later removed the posts.

Read more here.

 

A SECOND SHOT: A bipartisan duo of lawmakers on Friday reintroduced legislation that would elevate the post of the federal government's chief information officer, as well as establish a new line for reporting about information technology across the administration.

Reps. Robin Kelly (D-Ill.) and Will Hurd (R-Texas), the chair and ranking member, respectively, of the House Committee on Oversight and Reform's subcommittee on information technology, reintroduced the bill after it failed to pass Congress during the last legislative session.

The House passed the legislation in November, but it did not advance out of Senate committee in time for it to be taken up by the end of the 115th Congress.

Under the measure, the federal chief information office (CIO), who oversees all IT for the federal government and currently reports to the Office of Management and Budget's (OMB) deputy director, would start reporting directly to the head of OMB. Read more here.

 

A LIGHTER CLICK: I too have discovered early 2000s memes.

 

NOTABLE LINKS FROM AROUND THE WEB:

Will 5G end up leaving some people behind? (NBC News)

Corsi's lawsuit against Mueller hits hurdle in first hearing. (The Hill)

Facebook is mad at The New York Times for its investigative reporting on the company. (NBC News)

Amazon debuts 'Showroom' to help users visualize which furniture to buy for their space. (TechCrunch)

 
 
 
 
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Breaking News: Schumer: Trump threatened to keep government shut down for years

 
 
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Schumer: Trump threatened to keep government shut down for years
Senate Democratic Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) on Friday said President Trump threatened to keep the government closed for "months or even years" until he gets his desired wall funding.
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