I few comments of my own:
1. The burocrates that dream up most of these regulations should be made to produce a realistic cost/benifit analysis of the consequences of the rule. IMHO many of them would be found to be too costly by any streach, for the benifit they MAY have. Feel good, make work programs are too costly in today's world.
2. CVG's comments are off base. First of all, the power industry has made huge strides in cleaning up their act - by force yes, but progress none the less. The same can be said for the car industry. As far as agriculture, it depends a lot on the State you are in. In Wisconsin great changes have been made, not just by State mandated requirements, but working arrangements with groups like Trout Unlimited. Working with sportsman's groups like TU doesn't spend tax dollars, but produces results without costing the farmer an arm and a leg either.
Frankly, I get tired of the same old environmental mantra. I think some of the enviromental movements would get farther with a positive approach rather than the same old, tired confrontational approach. There has been a lot of progress over the last thirty years, how about giving credit where credit is do? And, how about recognizing that people have to make a living too? They would get a lot farther with a balanced approach, IMHO.