Alien Waste
Waste disposal giants Waste Management Inc. (WMX) and USA Waste announced
a merger in 1998. In one of his first opinions one year later, new Attorney
General Cornyn concluded that a 1991 state law unconstitutionally barred
Texas from importing hazardous waste from abroad.1
Waste companies pushed the Texas Natural Resources Conservation Commission
to obtain this opinion after the agency used the law to block WMX’s Chem
Waste from importing hazardous waste to its Port Arthur incinerator. Given
a prior U.S. Fifth Court of Appeals ruling striking a similar Louisiana
law,2 Cornyn’s
opinion would be uncontroversial but for the $114,000 he took from interests
that could benefit from it. Cornyn has received $43,000 from waste companies,
including $36,500 from Chem Waste’s parent companies. Cornyn received another
$71,000 from principals of Waste Control Specialists, Inc., which operates
a hazardous and radioactive waste dump in West Texas.3
Cornyn received $51,000 from Waste Control owner Harold Simmons and another
$20,000 from Waste Control lobbyist Kent Hance.4
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1 Opinion No. JC-0017, March 10, 1999.
2 Chemical Waste Management, Inc. v. Templet, 967 F.2d
1058 (5th Cir. 1992).
3 See “Simmons Would Make Billions,” TPJ’s Lobby Watch,
March 27, 2001.
4 Hance donations are classified as “Lobbyist” money;
Simmons is classified with “Finance” money. |