Albuquerque Journal

Rule tightening safety requiremen­ts delayed

Opponents say rule could make companies easier terrorist targets

- BY MATTHEW DALY

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion is delaying a new rule tightening safety requiremen­ts for companies that store large quantities of dangerous chemicals. The rule was imposed after a fertilizer plant in West, Texas, exploded in 2013, killing 15 people.

Scott Pruitt, administra­tor of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, delayed the effective date of the Obama-era rule until June.

Pruitt’s action late Monday came in response to complaints by the chemical industry and other business groups that the rule could make it easier for terrorists and other criminals to target refineries, chemical plants and other facilities by requiring companies to make public the types and quantities of chemicals stored on site.

The EPA issued a final rule in January, seven days before President Barack Obama left office. The EPA said at the time that the rule would help prevent accidents and improve emergency preparedne­ss by allowing first responders better data on chemical storage.

A coalition of business groups opposed the rule, saying in a letter to Pruitt that it would do “irreparabl­e harm” to companies that store chemicals and put public safety at risk.

Chet Thompson, president and CEO of the American Fuel and Petrochemi­cal Manufactur­ers, an industry group, praised Pruitt’s delay of the EPA rule.

“The midnight rulemaking in the final days of the Obama administra­tion would not enhance safety, create security vulnerabil­ities and divert resources from further enhancing existing safety programs,” Thompson said.

Environmen­tal groups questioned industry claims as “selfintere­sted” and misleading.

Hazardous chemical incidents like the explosion in West, Texas, are “frightenin­gly common,” according to the Environmen­tal Justice Health Alliance, an advocacy group. More than 1,500 chemical releases or explosions were reported from 2004 to 2013, causing 58 deaths and more than 17,000 injuries, the group said.

Instead of bowing to industry complaints, the EPA should “stand with the first responders, at-risk communitie­s, safety experts, workers, small businesses and others who live at daily risk of a catastroph­ic chemical release or explosion,” the group wrote in a letter last month to members of Congress.

The Obama-era rule came after a three-year process that included eight public hearings and more than 44,000 public comments, the group said.

The Obama administra­tion said the rule would help prevent chemical incidents such as the 2013 explosion in Texas, while enhancing emergency preparedne­ss requiremen­ts, improving management of data on chemical storage and modernizin­g policies and regulation­s.

Sen. Jim Inhofe, R-Okla., said the Obama-era rule gives “a blueprint to those who would like to do us harm.”

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