Los Angeles Times

Trump’s bald lies about lead paint policy

- DAVID LAZARUS

You may not have known this is National Lead Poisoning Prevention Week, but the Trump administra­tion did. It marked the occasion with a “call to action” aimed at protecting “current and future generation­s from exposures to lead-containing paint and dust.”

I can only assume the White House is punking the American people after months of underminin­g and throwing out environmen­tal rules and regulation­s.

“No president has ever cut so many regulation­s in their entire term, OK, as we have cut in less than a year,” President Trump proudly declared in February.

Analysts say that’s not true. But the dozens of regulation­s he has cut, or intends to cut, are primarily rules that prevent businesses from harming people and the environmen­t. Trump’s so-called Affordable Clean Energy proposal, for example, would relax emissions standards for coal-fired power plants.

A recent essay in the Journal of the American Medical Assn. by Harvard University researcher­s concluded that Trump’s environmen­tal agenda “is likely to cost the lives of over 80,000 U.S. residents per decade and lead to respirator­y problems for many more than 1 million people.”

Yet the heads of Trump’s Task Force on Environmen­tal Health Risks and Safety Risks to Children characteri­zed the administra­tion this week as being singularly focused on keeping Americans, and particular­ly kids, safe from dangerous industrial practices.

The task force’s activities are “a continuati­on of the

Trump administra­tion’s commitment to preventing future generation­s from being affected by lead exposure,” said Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar, citing “great progress” in safeguardi­ng public safety.

Andrew Wheeler, a former coal industry lobbyist who now serves as the acting head of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, said reducing exposure to toxic lead “is a top priority for EPA.”

Not really. Not if you define “reducing exposure to toxic lead” as reducing exposure to toxic lead.

“Like meat bees on baloney, the pollution lobby has swarmed the Trump administra­tion from its inception,” said Ken Cook, president of Environmen­tal Working Group, an advocacy organizati­on.

“No number of press releases and statements by Mr. Wheeler or others claiming environmen­tal and public health protection is a ‘top priority’ for this administra­tion can change that indisputab­le fact,” he told me.

In December, a federal appeals court gave the Trump administra­tion 90 days to propose tougher standards for levels of lead in paint and dust. Trump had wanted six years to deal with the matter.

Although lead-based paint was banned in this country in 1978, it wasn’t until 2001 that the EPA set standards for lead contaminat­ion — the point at which lead levels in paint and dust require cleanup. In 2009, health and safety advocates petitioned the agency to tighten those standards to “more adequately protect” kids.

President Obama backed the move, but the EPA dragged its feet. So the appeals court was asked in 2016 to get things moving.

Trump’s attempt to stall for another six years was rejected by the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals. “The children exposed to lead poisoning due to the failure of EPA to act are severely prejudiced by EPA’s delay,” it ruled.

The agency, after receiving an extension on the court order in March, proposed stricter regulation­s in July. It has until next summer to finalize the rule change.

Scientists say even small amounts of lead can cause permanent harm to kids, including lower IQs, as well as learning and developmen­tal problems.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says “at least 4 million households have children living in them that are being exposed to high levels of lead.”

This month, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to review lower-court rulings requiring the lead paint industry to pay more than $400 million to clean thousands of California homes built before 1951. The high court’s rebuff ended an 18-year legal battle and means the remediatio­n program will proceed.

All evidence to the contrary notwithsta­nding, the Trump administra­tion wants Americans to believe it takes environmen­tal dangers such as lead poisoning very seriously.

It said this week it is “launching a new Healthy Homes-Youth app that teaches children about health hazards within the home.”

The Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t also has cooked up a Partner Informatio­n Kit to help state and local government­s stage their own National Lead Poisoning Prevention Week activities. (Step One, which I’m not making up, is “form a task force.”)

The Trump administra­tion depicting itself as a champion of the environmen­t is as ludicrous as its recent attempts to portray itself as a defender of protection­s for people with preexistin­g medical conditions.

It’s neither. The opposite, in fact.

“This rhetoric from the Trump administra­tion is just painting over its refusal to keep our kids safe, not just from lead poisoning, but from toxic air and water pollution,” said Melinda Pierce, legislativ­e director of the Sierra Club.

“Propaganda won’t disguise the reality that Trump is responsibl­e for the most serious attacks on clean air and water by any administra­tion ever,” she said.

Trump followed up on this week’s we-love-kids news release with a tweet claiming the United States “has the best air in the world BY FAR!”

It featured a map purporting to show that the entire country is safe from air-pollution levels deemed hazardous by the World Health Organizati­on.

In fact, the map was from 2016, so it reflected Obama’s environmen­tal stewardshi­p, not Trump’s. And it was for a single pollutant — fine particles — not overall air quality.

Even on that score, we’re hardly the best. Levels of fine particles, which have been linked to a variety of ailments, are better in Finland, Estonia, Sweden, Canada, Norway and Iceland, according to the United Nations.

Erik Olson, senior director for health and food at the Natural Resources Defense Council, said he’d give the Trump administra­tion’s environmen­tal track record “a strong F.”

“They repeatedly say things that aren’t true,” he said. “They make promises to do things and then they do exactly the opposite.”

This is National Lead Poisoning Prevention Week. That much at least Trump got right.

As for the rest, maybe we should form a task force to pick apart the lies.

‘Like meat bees on baloney, the pollution lobby has swarmed the Trump administra­tion from its inception.’ — Ken Cook, president of Environmen­tal Working Group

 ?? Mandel Ngan AFP/Getty Images ?? PRESIDENT TRUMP has cut dozens of regulation­s that prevent businesses from harming people and the environmen­t. Above, a sign at a West Virginia rally.
Mandel Ngan AFP/Getty Images PRESIDENT TRUMP has cut dozens of regulation­s that prevent businesses from harming people and the environmen­t. Above, a sign at a West Virginia rally.
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