Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

EPA challenged safety of Trump’s mileage freeze

- Ellen Knickmeyer

WASHINGTON – The Environmen­tal Protection Agency privately challenged the Trump administra­tion’s rationale for freezing Obama-era mileage standards, saying the proposal would actually increase U.S. highway deaths.

In announcing the mileage proposal earlier this month, officials with the EPA and Department of Transporta­tion contended the mileage freeze would save about 1,000 lives a year. But in a June email, senior EPA staffers told the Office of Management and Budget – the White House office charged with evaluating regulatory changes – that it would slightly increase highway deaths, by 17 annually.

The “proposed standards are detrimenta­l to safety, rather than beneficial,” William Charmley, director of the assessment­s and standards division of the EPA’s office of transporta­tion and air quality, said in a June 18 interagenc­y email, released Tuesday.

While the Trump administra­tion has said it wants to freeze mileage standards after 2020, agencies are still seeking public comment on that and other options, EPA spokesman John Konkus said Tuesday.

“These emails are but a fraction of the robust dialogue that occurred during interagenc­y deliberati­ons for the proposed rule,” he said.

The Obama-era rules, which lay out years of increasing­ly toughened mileage standards, were one of the former administra­tion’s biggest efforts against climate-changing tailpipe emissions and were also meant to lessen Americans’ dependence on the gas pump.

The Trump administra­tion’s own public report on the mileage freeze proposal projected that it would cut tens of thousands of auto-industry jobs. EPA acting administra­tor Andrew Wheeler had emphasized the safety projection­s as one of the strongest arguments for the mileage freeze.

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