Russell E. Train: Oral History Interview
Contents
Interview:
- Legal career
- Early environmental involvement
- Service in the Nixon administration
- Chairman of CEQ
- Catalytic converter
- Registration of pesticides
- Toxic substances
- Clean Air Act
- Energy policy
Contrast between Nixon and Ford
EPA, the states, and the cities
EPA and the environmental movement
EPA in the international setting
Train's achievements and legacies
- Risk assessment
- EPA, the White House, and OMB
EPA 202-K-93-001
July 1993
Interview conducted by Dr. Michael Gorn on May 5, 1992 at the World Wildlife Fund Office, Washington, D.C.
full-text (75KB)
Foreword
This publication is the second in a series of oral history interviews with the Environmental Protection Agency's administrators and deputy administrators. The EPA History Program has undertaken this project in order to preserve, distill, and disseminate the main experiences and insights of the men and women who have led the agency. EPA decision-makers and staff, related government entities, the environmental community, scholars, and the general public, will all profit from these recollections. Separately, each of the interviews will describe the perspectives of particular leaders. Collectively, these reminiscences will illustrate the dynamic nature of EPA's historic mission; the personalities and institutions which have shaped its outlook; the context of the times in which it has operated; and some of the agency's principal achievements and shortcomings.
The techniques used to prepare the EPA oral history series conform to the practices commonly observed by professional historians. The questions, submitted in advance, are broad and open-ended, and the answers are preserved on audio tape. Once transcripts of the recordings are completed, the History Program staff edits the manuscripts to improve clarity, factual accuracy, and logical progression. The finished manuscripts are then returned to the interviewees, who may alter the text to eliminate errors made during transcription of the tapes, or during the editorial phase of preparation.
A collaborative work such as this incurs a number of debts. Kathy Petruccelli, Director of EPA's Management and Organization Division, sought support for transcription and printing costs. John Chamberlin, Director of the Office of Administration, provided the necessary funds. Finally, Russell Train himself must be acknowledged for his candid and insightful reflections on this formative period in EPA history.