EPA staffer’s offhand remark on climate funds fuels political firestorm after secret video sting

A midlevel U.S. Environmental Protection Agency employee was secretly recorded on a Tinder date by a Project Veritas operative, triggering political attacks and agency rollbacks based on a misrepresented comment about clean energy funding.

Lisa Friedman reports for The New York Times.


In short:

  • Brent Efron, an EPA employee, was recorded without his knowledge by a Project Veritas operative during what he thought was a casual date, where he described Biden-era climate investments as “gold bars” being tossed from a sinking ship.
  • The phrase was used by EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin to justify halting $20 billion in grants meant for low-income and tribal communities under the Biden administration’s climate initiatives.
  • Although federal investigators found no wrongdoing, Efron faced harassment, a federal probe, and career setbacks after the video was shared widely online, including by Elon Musk and conservative media.

Key quote:

“It’s been used to justify actions that I view as terrible, in terms of trying to cancel grants and claw back funding, and I want to set the record straight.”

— Brent Efron, former EPA employee

Why this matters:

Climate funding decisions increasingly sit at the intersection of science, policy, and politics. The Biden administration’s $20 billion in clean energy grants targeted underserved communities, aiming to reduce emissions, promote public health, and prepare for climate impacts such as extreme heat and wildfires. The abrupt cancellation of those programs under a new EPA administration — based on political rhetoric rather than evidence — could delay urgently needed upgrades to public infrastructure, harm frontline communities, and undermine trust in government programs. Meanwhile, the targeting of civil servants via covert recordings raises broader concerns about chilling scientific discourse and public service in an already polarized climate policy landscape.

About the author(s):

EHN Curators
EHN Curators
Articles curated and summarized by the Environmental Health News' curation team. Some AI-based tools helped produce this text, with human oversight, fact checking and editing.

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