Las Vegas Review-Journal

Clean car standards should be a ‘no brainer’ Lisa Abrahime and Laura Beauregard

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In February, we went to Washington, D.C., to discuss proposed rollbacks on fuel emission standards. We met with Sens. Catherine Cortez Masto and Dean Heller, as well as staff members for Reps. Mark Amodei and Jacky Rosen. We told our stories of being working mothers of young children who have asthma, and nurses to a vulnerable Las Vegas oncology population. The response we received was encouragin­g. It felt so empowering to speak to members of Nevada’s congressio­nal delegation about clean air, something very important to us, and we left the Capitol feeling as if we had been heard.

It’s easy to say clean air is a basic right and to assume our congressio­nal representa­tives will do everything in their power to protect this right. In the words of Heller, “It’s a no-brainer.” During our meeting, he joked that his own kids drive electric cars and it’s all they want to talk about. Heller reassured us that no one wants to roll back these standards on Capitol Hill. I left his office feeling uplifted.

However, as I’ve come to find out, nothing is as it seems in the political sphere, and somehow the Environmen­tal Protection Agency has advanced its agenda to do exactly what we feared it would. Under the leadership of Scott Pruitt, the EPA would like to challenge the current fuel emissions standards as being unsafe, and dismantle the goal of having car manufactur­ers meet a 50 mpg requiremen­t by 2025.

These standards have been championed by California, a state with terrible air pollution that has led the way in environmen­tal activism and legislatio­n. And it makes sense. California has a lot to lose. We all do. Lack of clean air is a huge problem in large metropolit­an areas such as Los Angeles and Las Vegas.

We know greenhouse gas emissions contribute to climate change and pollution contribute­s to a number of public health issues.

Asthma, allergies, lung cancer and other lung disease, mental health disorders and substance abuse are some of the serious illnesses made worse by the warming planet. Air pollution affects our quality of life and our economy.

One of the most sensible and economical­ly feasible solutions to these issues is to regulate emissions. Studies show that thousands of lives and millions of dollars are saved as a result of these standards being in place. Not only that, but the stan- dards are spurring innovation in the auto industry, and innovation leads to more jobs and more job security.

It’s unlikely this will reach the desk of the EPA, but our collective voice might. As concerned citizens and members of the Las Vegas community, we have a duty to protect our most vulnerable population­s and future generation­s. Without some regulation, greenhouse gases from the burning of fossil fuels will continue to pollute our environmen­t, disproport­ionately affecting the young, elderly and poor.

Resilient communitie­s and strong communitie­s are healthy communitie­s. Clean car standards need to remain in place for us to survive. Climate change is not coming far off at a future date, it is already here. And our responsibi­lity is to do whatever we can to mitigate the damage today and in the upcoming weeks, months and years.

Call your congressio­nal delegates and let them know that you oppose any weakening of these clean car safeguards. Generation­s of Nevadans will thank you for your concern and work in protecting the air we breath.

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