The Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) Office of Inspector General (OIG) on Thursday recommended that the agency demand $124,000 in reimbursements from former Administrator Scott PruittEdward (Scott) Scott PruittOvernight Energy: Dems look to bypass EPA with asbestos ban | California moves to ban brain-damaging pesticide | Researchers tout new plastic as ‘Holy Grail’ of recycling California moves to ban brain-damaging pesticide as EPA resists court action Overnight Energy: Dems challenge Trump UN nominee on climate change | Senators seek probe into head of EPA air office | UN report warns 1 million species threatened by extinction MORE.
The watchdog found that Pruitt made “excessive airfare expenses … without sufficient justification to support security concerns requiring the use of first- and business-class travel.”
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“The OIG made a total of 14 recommendations, of which 10 are unresolved. Overall, actions need to be taken to strengthen controls over agency travel to help prevent the potential for future fraud, waste and abuse,” it said in a press release accompanying the report.
The EPA’s response, included in the report, is that “the trips were authorized by an appropriate official, making cost recovery inappropriate.”
Read the report and watchdog recommendations below:
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