(along with Boxer and Carper)
Who said he was partisan!
"A remarkable news release was issued this morning from Capitol Hill.
Senators as varied as John Kerry of Massachusetts and James M. Inhofe of Oklahoma — about as far apart on most environmental issues as it’s possible to be — united in introducing legislation requiring the Environmental Protection Agency to assess options for cleaning up a “dangerous pollutant” that can hurt people and warm the climate. The pollutant is not carbon dioxide, which the Environmental Protection Agency is adding to its list of pollutants. It is carbon on its own, in the form of particles of soot, also called black carbon.
The twin hazards of this substance — as laid out in the Elisabeth Rosenthal’s inaugural story in our “By Degrees” series — are its clear and immediate impact on health and its heat-trapping effects which have made it a serious target of scientists trying to kickstart actions to limit warming, while the harder task of reining in carbon dioxide and other gases continue. Black carbon was never in the basket of substances — all gases — included in the original climate treaty in 1992 and the addendum called the Kyoto Protocol. Maybe the E.P.A. study, due in one year, will help clarify its role in the climate and in the human lungs, and identify ways to clean it up here and abroad.
Bipartisanship on environmental issues was the norm back in the 1960s and 1970s, but has largely gone by the wayside since 2000 or so (there are various theories). Just for the wow factor in seeing such an unfamiliar example today, I’m posting the full release below: "
http://dotearth.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/04/22/senate-foes-agree-on-dangerous-pollutant/