Las Vegas Review-Journal

APPOINTEES STRONGLY TIED TO INDUSTRIES

-

about the appointees — not even their names.

The lack of transparen­cy has concerned several top Democratic members of Congress who serve on committees that oversee regulatory matters. In a letter to the White House on Monday, they called on the administra­tion to release the names of all regulatory team members as well as documents relating to their potential conflicts of interest.

“It is unacceptab­le for federal agencies to operate in such a clandestin­e and unaccounta­ble manner especially when the result could be the undoing of critical public health and safety protection­s,” Reps. Elijah E. Cummings of Maryland, John Conyers Jr. of Michigan, Gerald E. Connolly of Virginia and David Cicilline of Rhode Island wrote in the letter.

The congressme­n cited a recent investigat­ion by The Times and Propublica revealing that members of the deregulati­on teams have included lawyers who represente­d businesses in cases against government regulators, staff members of political dark money groups and employees of industry-funded organizati­ons opposed to environmen­tal rules.

Since the publicatio­n of that investigat­ion last month, the news organizati­ons have identified more than a dozen other appointees through interviews, public records and reader tips — including the three appointees to the deregulati­on team at the Transporta­tion Department.

In all, there are now 85 known current and former team members, including 34 with potential conflicts. At least two of the appointees may be positioned to profit if certain regulation­s are undone and at least four were registered to lobby the agencies they now work for.

One Transporta­tion appointee, Daniel Elwell, was previously a top lobbyist for American Airlines who sought to influence the Transporta­tion Department. He also held executive positions with the Aerospace Industries Associatio­n, a trade group representi­ng aerospace and defense companies, and Airlines for America, a trade associatio­n for major airlines.

The airlines group recently applauded the Transporta­tion Department’s decision to suspend a rule that would have required airlines to provide more public informatio­n about passenger fees. The Transporta­tion Department has estimated that airlines collected more than $4.1 billion last year in baggage fees.

A department spokespers­on said Elwell left the deregulati­on team after being appointed as deputy administra­tor of the Federal Aviation Administra­tion in June.

Another Transporta­tion appointee, Marianne Mcinerney, was president of a trade group representi­ng car dealers. She also held executive positions at several electric and hybrid automotive companies.

The department has oversight over some rules affecting electric cars. For example, this year it delayed new safety requiremen­ts that would have forced the vehicles, which are normally quiet, to make a minimum amount of noise to catch the attention of nearby pedestrian­s.

A third Transporta­tion appointee, Jonathan Moss, was previously managing director of internatio­nal and regulatory affairs at United Airlines. One of his top responsibi­lities at the airline, which is regulated by the Transporta­tion Department, was “anticipati­ng and responding to proposed regulation­s affecting United’s operations.”

Moss also served at the department during the Obama administra­tion. An agency spokeswoma­n said all deregulati­on team members had signed agreements requiring them to recuse themselves from issues that narrowly affect recent employers.

The deregulati­on teams are part of Trump’s push to cut red tape across government, and they have presented a new avenue for industries to shed rules they have argued for years are hurting profits, depressing job creation and raising prices. Environmen­tal, consumer and other liberal groups have argued that such regulation­s protect the public, keeping drinking water clean and roads safe, for example.

In the recent past, presidents from both parties have entered office pledging to scrutinize regulation­s, but Trump’s order goes further, putting a premium on cutting rules and empowering teams of political appointees who are typically less wedded to an agency’s existing guidelines.

The agencies have also been opaque about their deregulati­on teams.

The Justice Department has released the names of only two appointees working on its team. In an email exchange, a spokesman, Ian Prior, said he could not provide additional names because “the Task Force is made up of components, not particular employees.”

“A component may have multiple employees assisting with the work,” he added.

Asked if he could name any of those employees, he responded, “Decline.”

The Defense Department and the Department of Homeland Security provided only the titles for most appointees to their review teams, not the names.

In their letter to the White House, the Democratic lawmakers suggested that withholdin­g names could violate the Freedom of Informatio­n Act.

“These Task Forces must have an effective and transparen­t guard against conflicts of interest, especially those in which industry lobbyists seek to overturn environmen­tal and health protection­s for financial gain,” wrote the lawmakers, who are the ranking Democrats on the House’s Committee on Oversight and Government Reform; Committee on the Judiciary; Subcommitt­ee on Government Operations; and Subcommitt­ee on Regulatory Reform, Commercial and Antitrust Law.

“It appears,” the letter continued, “that the current Task Forces are already failing on this front, and instead are actively hiding their members and their meetings from public view.”

The letter was addressed to Mick Mulvaney, director of the Office of Management and Budget, and Neomi Rao, administra­tor of the Office of Informatio­n and Regulatory Affairs, which vets regulatory changes coming out of federal agencies.

 ?? AL DRAGO / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? President Donald Trump arrives June 9 to speak at the Department of Transporta­tion in Washington. The department has turned to people with strong industry ties to fill posts on teams charged with deregulati­on.
AL DRAGO / THE NEW YORK TIMES President Donald Trump arrives June 9 to speak at the Department of Transporta­tion in Washington. The department has turned to people with strong industry ties to fill posts on teams charged with deregulati­on.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States