San Antonio Express-News

Trump’s big win: showers, dishwasher­s

- By Todd C. Frankel

President Donald Trump was on a roll, standing before an adoring crowd in Carson City, Nev., just a couple of weeks before the 2020electi­on, and letting loose with a favorite campaign-trail complaint: Dishwasher­s don’t work like they used to. Shower heads dribble. Toilets are slow.

It was hard to tell how seriously to take Trump. The topic was light. It wasn’t tax cuts or COVID-19. The crowd cheered and laughed as he talked. Trump teased that he really shouldn’t even be talking about “the fact that people have to flush their toilet 15 times.” But showers were the worst, he said.

“Nowater comes out. Andme, I want that hair to be so beautiful,” he said.

A few days later, the Trump administra­tion rolled back long-standing rules for dishwasher­s to allow them to consume unlimited amounts of water and energy. Then in late December, the Department of Energy

announced it had changed the rules for shower heads and washing machines to allow the water to really pour out.

Trump won’t get his southern border wall finished before he leaves office. Obamacare has not been repealed. “Infrastruc­ture week” never came. And while he has notched some notable policy wins, such as immigratio­n limits, it is Trump’s push to deregulate common household appliances that remains a puzzling policy success.

‘Consumer choice’

Last summer, Trump described his push as aimed at “bringing back consumer choice in home appliances.” He was echoed by Secretary of Energy Dan Brouillett­e this month when he said in a release that the administra­tion’s rule changes “affirmed its commitment to reducing regulatory burdens and safeguardi­ng consumer choice.”

But almost no one was asking for these choices.

Consumers were not clamoring. Manufactur­ers of shower heads and dishwasher­s found themselves in the unusual spot of mostly opposing the proposed changes, saying there was no need. Consumer and environmen­tal advocacy groups objected, arguing the changes were costly and wasteful. Product testing firms cast doubt on the purported benefits of the proposals.

“It was a regulatory solution in search of aproblem— a problem that doesn’t really exist,” said Kerry Stackpole, executive director of Plumbing Manufactur­ers Internatio­nal, a leading trade group.

One of the few cheerleade­rs for the newruleswa­s the Competitiv­e Enterprise Institute.

“Between thedishwas­her rule and the two other ones that came out, we think it’s nice that Washington is finally doing things that will stop consumers from being soaked,” said Sam Kazman, the conservati­ve-leaning advocacy group’s general counsel.

Trump was targeting water and energy regulation­s that had been on the books for decades in some cases, since Ronald Reagan and the Bushes. The Obama administra­tion made changes to some of the regulation­s. But the rules were a rare area where conservati­onists and manufactur­ers shared broad agreement on the goal of saving water and energy.

At first, when most of the new regulation­s were introduced in the 1990s, companies struggled to create efficient products that performed well. It wasn’t easy to slash water use in shower heads by 30 percent or toilets by more than half without creating problems. Then the engineers and designers went to work.

Today, product testing groups say, these appliances by and large work better than ever.

But then Trump began criticizin­g them.

“Anybody have a new dishwasher?” Trump asked the crowd at a campaign rally in Milwaukee last January. “I’m sorry for that. I’m sorry for that. It’s worthless. They give you so little water.”

“So, shower heads,” Trump said at the White House in July. “You take a shower, the water doesn’t come out. You want to wash your hands, the water doesn’t come out. So what do you do? You just stand there longer or you take a shower longer? Because my hair — I don’t know about you, but it has to be perfect. Perfect.”

‘A regular riff’

Trump seemed to have found a topic with broad appeal.

“It became a regular riff in the last 12 months,” said Andrew delaski, executive director of the Appliance Standards Awareness Project, a consumer and environmen­tal advocacy group. “It sent off a fervor at the agencies.”

Delaski said he could imagine agency staff wondering, “Now what do we do?”

This was different from another product Trump targeted for abuse: lightbulbs.

Trump complained energy-efficient lightbulbs made him look orange. In late 2019, his administra­tion blocked an energy efficiency rule that would have banned the sale of most halogen and incandesce­nt bulbs on Jan. 1, 2020.

But the new rules also had faced opposition from the lighting industry. And consumers, too, had concerns about the disappeara­nce of incandesce­nt bulbs.

Trump’s problems with shower heads and dishwasher­s seemed to be shared by a much narrower audience.

“The marketplac­e was not asking for this,” Stackpole said.

Trump’s administra­tion also couldn’t just create new efficiency standards. The rules were contained in laws passed by Congress. So his administra­tion was forced to nibble around the edges.

A long-running effort

Policy surroundin­g dishwasher­s was the long-running effort. The competitiv­e Enterprise Institute filed a petition in 2018 asking the government to allow for a new, faster class of dishwasher­s. The stated goal was a cycle time under one hour. And that could be achieved by lifting caps on water use, according to the petition.

Dishwasher makers objected, arguing customers weren’t asking for this. They also pointed out that the one-hour option could be found on almost all dishwasher­s shipped since 2017.

But the Department of Energy passed a rule allowing for this new class of dishwasher­s in October.

A similar rule was passed for laundry washers and dryers in December.

The Trump administra­tion’s new shower head rule didn’t simply permit unlimited amounts of water. Shower heads were still capped at 2.5 gallons per minute. Instead, the agency offered a new interpreta­tion of existing rules, stating that water flow should be measured by each shower head, not the total for a shower stall. So multiple shower heads could be used together to put out more water.

A shower with an overhead rainfall headand a separate shower sprayer could put out 5 gallons per minute, for example.

With the term winding down, the Trump administra­tion has showed no signs of rolling back rules for water faucets or toilets, advocacy groups said.

Trump’s talk of toilets was the part of his appliance complaints where his audience laughed, and the president liked to accuse the media of paying too much attention. Federal rules limit toilets to 1.6 gallons per flush, down from 3.5 or even 5 gallons per flush.

But a new federal toilet rule appears likely to be left unfinished when Trump leaves office.

 ?? Jabin Botsford / Washington Post ?? During his presidency, Donald Trump pushed to deregulate common household appliances.
Jabin Botsford / Washington Post During his presidency, Donald Trump pushed to deregulate common household appliances.

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