Top Pruitt aide resigns from EPA amid controversies
A top aide of Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Scott Pruitt has issued her resignation in the midst of various scandals plaguing the agency chief.
Samantha Dravis, the senior counsel and associate administrator in EPA’s Office of Policy, tendered her resignation last week, the agency confirmed to The Hill on Thursday.
The sudden departure is described by one source familiar with the EPA as a “five-alarm story.”
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A friend close to Dravis suggested her decision to leave had been building.
“She has been looking to leave for a while. A lot of people in the administration wanted her to stay for the year to put her time in but it’s one drama after another. It’s a shit show,” the source said.
She previously worked with Pruitt as policy director and general counsel at the Republican Attorneys General Association. She was also president of the Rule of Law Defense Fund, affiliated with the same organization, and before that legal counsel at Freedom Partners Chamber of Commerce — an organization of conservative political donors led by the billionaire brothers Charles and David Koch.
The source familiar with the agency described the relationship between Pruitt and Dravis as a close working relationship.
EPA spokeswoman Liz Bowman said Dravis is departing the agency to pursue other career opportunities.
“After serving for over a year as EPA’s head of policy, Samantha Dravis has decided to pursue other opportunities. She has been integral in the agency’s successful implementation of the President’s environmental agenda and the agency wishes her success in her future endeavors,” Bowman said in a statement.
Two sources told The Washington Post that Dravis’s resignation was unrelated to Pruitt’s recent onslaught of ethics issues and that she is leaving to join the private sector.
Pruitt has recently come under fire for a number of scandals, including a decision to significantly raise the salaries of two close EPA political appointees. The salaries of Sarah Greenwalt and Millan Hupp — who had both come to Washington with Pruitt from Oklahoma — were raised from $107,435 to $164,200, and from $86,460 to $114,590, respectively, The Atlantic reported.
Pruitt denied knowledge of the raises in an interview with Fox News on Wednesday, and said the appropriate person who had signed off on the raises would be dealt with.
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