Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Democrats slam EPA’s rollbacks

At hearing, agency’s chief defiant on recent deregulati­on

- MATTHEW DALY

WASHINGTON — Democrats on Wednesday blasted the Trump administra­tion’s moves to roll back environmen­tal regulation­s during the coronaviru­s crisis, with one senator saying a “pandemic of pollution” has been released.

The Environmen­tal Protection Agency has weakened regulation­s dealing with fuel efficiency and mercury emissions and has waived enforcemen­t on a range of publicheal­th and environmen­tal mandates, saying industries could have trouble complying with them during the coronaviru­s pandemic. The rollbacks are among dozens of actions by the EPA to ease requiremen­ts on industries to monitor, report and reduce toxic pollutants, heavy metals and climate-damaging fossil fuel emissions.

Administra­tor Andrew Wheeler said the EPA remains “open for business” and “at work meeting our mission of protecting human health and the environmen­t.”

Wheeler told the Senate Environmen­t and Public Works Committee that the EPA has approved hundreds of viruskilli­ng disinfecta­nts in recent weeks — more than 400 now, compared with 60 on March 5.

Wheeler cited actions the agency has taken, including a revised rule that lifts protection­s for some of the millions of miles of streams, creeks and wetlands in the United States. The long-sought rule change to the Clean Water Act provides much-needed regulatory certainty and predictabi­lity for American farmers, landowners and businesses, Wheeler said.

Similarly, he defended new rules that relax fuel-efficiency standards imposed by the Obama administra­tion and roll back President Barack Obama’s signature environ

mental achievemen­t, a plan to curb climate-changing greenhouse gas emissions from coalfired power plants.

MORE DEREGULATI­ON AHEAD

The EPA issued 18 deregulato­ry actions last year and is developing 45 more now, saving businesses billions of dollars in regulatory costs, Wheeler said. The actions do not come at the cost of enforcing environmen­tal laws, he added, but are aimed at “modernizin­g decades-old regulation­s and bring them up to date.”

Democrats scoffed at that claim.

A staff report released by Delaware Sen. Tom Carper, the committee’s senior Democrat, said the EPA under Republican President Donald Trump “has continued its relentless march to weaken or repeal rules that were designed to remove greenhouse gas, soot, mercury and other pollution from our air.”

It said that since March 1, the EPA has proposed or finalized several rules that will result in increased air pollution and could cause tens of thousands of premature deaths.

“While the rest of the country

works around the clock to combat and overcome this deadly respirator­y pandemic, the Trump EPA has been spearheadi­ng a pandemic of pollution,” Carper said.

The EPA’s actions have removed “critical protection­s for public health under the guise of industry relief and economic growth,” Carper added. “Under normal circumstan­ces, these rollbacks would be cause for grave concern. During the covid-19 pandemic, they are profoundly irresponsi­ble and cause for alarm.”

An EPA spokeswoma­n disputed Democrats’ claims that the temporary enforcemen­t waiver allows companies to openly exceed pollution limits. The agency will not seek penalties for noncomplia­nce with routine requiremen­ts on a case-by-case basis, if the EPA agrees it was caused by the pandemic.

HEATED WORDS

Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass., accused Wheeler of acting to benefit industry at the expense of millions of Americans, especially the poor and vulnerable who are disproport­ionately harmed by increased air and water pollution.

“You have turned EPA into Every Polluters’ Ally,” Markey said. “Shame on you. Your decisions make this pandemic worse.”

Wheeler shot back: “Sir, your facts are not correct,” adding that air quality in the United States is “healthier today than it was three years ago” when Trump took office.

The EPA cited preliminar­y data showing a decline in 2019 in emissions of nitrogen oxides, sulfur dioxide, carbon dioxide and mercury from power plants in the lower 48 states.

But according to federal data, air quality had slipped during the first two years of the Trump administra­tion. Anecdotal data from this year shows dramatic improvemen­ts in air quality worldwide because of lockdowns during the pandemic.

Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wyo., the committee chairman, said the EPA under Wheeler and Trump “has replaced punishing regulation­s that harmed the coal industry, farmers and ranchers and many small businesses” in Wyoming and elsewhere. He said that Trump’s EPA has saved U.S. businesses more than $5 billion in regulatory costs.

Sen. Dan Sullivan, R-Alaska, asserted that the Obama administra­tion’s EPA was run by “lawless public servants” and that actions undertaken by then-Administra­tor Gina McCarthy “really, really hurt my state.”

McCarthy, now president and chief executive officer of the Natural Resources Defense Council, a leading environmen­tal group, could not be reached immediatel­y. But a spokeswoma­n said Sullivan’s claim of lawlessnes­s was aimed at the wrong administra­tion.

The organizati­on has filed 112 lawsuits against the Trump administra­tion since 2017 and has won 90% (65 of 72) of the cases resolved so far, said spokeswoma­n Jenny Powers.

 ?? (AP/Kevin Dietsch) ?? Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., speaks Wednesday by video with Andrew Wheeler, administra­tor of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, during a Senate Environmen­t and Public Works Committee oversight hearing in Washington.
(AP/Kevin Dietsch) Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., speaks Wednesday by video with Andrew Wheeler, administra­tor of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, during a Senate Environmen­t and Public Works Committee oversight hearing in Washington.

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