Document xdkyBzyn4bKk365QaEekNnR41

From: <personnel_security@ep3.gov> Date: Fri, May 19, 2017 at 11:42 AM Subject: Immediate Action Required: Report for Fingerprinting To: i Personal Email/Ex. 6 j Cc:" XEROSErwlLLlAM'@epa.gov. MYERS.KEVIN@epa.gov. LESPERANCE.TWANNA@epa.go\. (-Of PPMC `MAROUITA@epa.gov Dear HENRY R DARWIN: Congratulations on your pending appointment to a position at the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). To keep the appointment process moving ahead, you must report to an EPA badge office immediately or as soon as possible to be fingerprinted and enrolled for an EPA badge. Your offer of employment is pending this action. Timeliness is essential because the EPA must receive favorable fingerprint results before you can be assigned a date to begin work. Any delay in reporting to the badge office will affect your start date and jeopardize your ability to occupy the position. Homeland Security Presidential Directive 12 (HSPD-12) requires that all eligible personnel working for or on behalf of the federal government be issued a smart card identification badge, which at the EPA is called an EPA Personnel Access and Security System (EPASS) badge. An EPASS badge has been requested on your behalf. Before the badge can be created for you, you must go through the federally mandated ID proofing and enrollment process, which takes 10 to 15 minutes. At the badge office, we will: Ask to see two forms of identification. At least one must be a valid, original, unexpired state or federal government-issued photo ID, such as a driver's license or passport. For acceptable IDs, please refer to the "Acceptable Identity Source Documents" page. Scan and verify your two forms of identification. Collect a set of your fingerprints, which will be used to check criminal history records of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). Please Note: Procedures for obtaining changes, corrections or updates to an FBI identification record are set forth in Title 28, CFR, 16.34. Take a photograph. 17cv1906 Sierra Club v. EPA - 6/22 Production ED 001523 00004459-00003 Remember, you cannot be assigned a start date until you have reported to an EPA badge office to be fingerprinted, and the EPA has received favorable fingerprint results. The EPA has badge offices nationwide. You can visit any badge office to be fingerprinted. If the badge office recommended in this email is not near you, please find a convenient location on the list of EPA Badge Office Locations. If you need to schedule an appointment, or if you have questions about badge office locations or hours of operation, please call your area badge office at the listed number. Please visit an EPA badge office. In Washington D.C., go to the William Jefferson Clinton Federal Building-East (1201 Constitution Avenue NW, Washington, DC, near 12th Street), room B317 (basement), which is open Monday through Thursday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Fridays from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Closed Weekends and Federal Holidays. The phone number is (202) 564-2206. For more information, call the person listed below: MYERS, KEVIN-2025641500 Please bring a copy of this email with you. Sincerely, The EPA Personnel Security Branch 17cv1906 Sierra Club v. EPA - 6/22 Production ED 001523 00004459-00004 To: From: Sent: Subject: Jackson, RyanOackson.ryan@epa.gov] J. Steven Hart Thur 6/1/2017 7:15:34 PM Paris Climate Change Accord the Daily Beast gets an early report?? Multiple sources are reporting that WH energy policy adviser has informed the Hill of the move. http://www.thedailvbeast.com/trump-wilDan.iioun.ce-us-withdrawaDfrom-parisaccord?via=desktop&source=copyurl The United States will withdraw from the Paris Climate Accord, President Donald Trump will announce at a Rose Garden speech this afternoon. On a conference call with Capitol Hill staffers ahead of the speech, White House energy policy adviser Michael Catanzaro confirmed that "the United States is getting out of the Paris agreement." Trump, Catanzaro said, "will be open to and will immediately be looking for a better deal." A source provided The Daily Beast with the call-in information. The process could be a lengthy one. Catanzaro said the administration will follow the steps for withdrawal laid out in the deal itself. "We will initiate the process, which, all told, takes four years in total. But we're going to make very clear to the world that we're not going to be abiding by what the previous administration agreed to." Trump's withdrawal from the accord fulfills a major campaign promise, and dovetails with his "America First" mantra, a point stressed by White House deputy communications director Raj Shah in a separate conference call with conservative think tanks and pundits. "The president's action today is going to be in keeping with the president's pledge to put American workers first," Shah said. He asked those on the call write statements, op-eds, and tweets supporting the president's decision. "I can't explicitly state what the president is going to announce in an hour and a half, but I can say that I doubt folks on this call will be disappointed," Shah assured them. --Lachlan Markay 17cv1906 Sierra Club v. EPA - 6/22 Production ED 001523 00004461-00001 17cv1906 Sierra Club v. EPA - 6/22 Production ED 001523 00004461-00002