Santa Fe New Mexican

Pruitt faces anger from right on EPA finding he won’t fight

Critics want to remove ‘endangerme­nt finding’

- By Coral Davenport

WASHINGTON — When President Donald Trump chose the Oklahoma attorney general, Scott Pruitt, to lead the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, his mission was clear: Carry out Trump’s campaign vows to radically reduce the size and scope of the agency and take apart President Barack Obama’s ambitious climate change policies.

In his first weeks on the job, Pruitt drew glowing praise from foes of Obama’s agenda against global warming, as he moved to roll back its centerpiec­e, known as the Clean Power Plan, and expressed agreement with those who said the EPA should be eliminated. His actions and statements have galvanized protests from environmen­talists and others on the left.

But now a growing chorus of critics on the other end of the political spectrum say Pruitt has not gone far enough — in particular, they are angry that the EPA chief has refused to challenge a landmark agency determinat­ion known as the “endangerme­nt finding” that provides the legal basis for Obama’s Clean Power Plan and other global warming policies.

These critics say that Pruitt is hacking only at the branches of current climate policy. They want him to pull it out by the roots.

“The endangerme­nt finding must redone or all of this is for naught,” said Steven J. Milloy, who runs a website, JunkScienc­e. com, aimed at debunking the establishe­d science of humancause­d climate change, and who worked on the Trump administra­tion’s EPA transition team.

“If you get rid of the endangerme­nt finding, the rest of the climate regulation­s just sweep themselves away.

“But if they don’t get rid of it, the environmen­talists can sue, and then there’s going to have to be a Trump Clean Power Plan,” said Milloy, who is also a former policy director for Murray Energy, a major coal company whose chief executive, Robert E. Murray, was a backer of Trump’s campaign and his push to undo climate change policy.

The 2009 legal finding is at the heart of a debate within the Trump administra­tion over how to permanentl­y reverse Obama’s climate change rules.

The finding concludes that carbon dioxide emissions endanger public health and welfare by warming the planet, which led to a legal requiremen­t that the EPA regulate smokestack­s and tailpipes that spew planet-warming pollution.

Thus, say climate policy experts on both sides of the debate, even if Pruitt succeeds in the legally challengin­g process of withdrawin­g the Clean Power Plan, the endangerme­nt finding will still put him under the under the legal obligation to put together a replacemen­t regulation.

Pruitt has told the White House and Congress that he will not try to reverse the finding, saying that such a move would almost certainly be overturned by the courts.

Last month, as Trump prepared to release an executive order directing Pruitt to dismantle the Clean Power Plan, along with nearly every other major element of Obama’s climate change legacy, Pruitt argued against including a repeal of the endangerme­nt finding in the order, according to people familiar with the matter.

Legal experts outside the Trump White House say that while Pruitt may face political fire on his right flank for the move, it is nonetheles­s pragmatic legally, since the finding has already been challenged and upheld by federal courts.

But Pruitt is now being pilloried by conservati­ve allies of the White House. Writing in Breitbart News, the conservati­ve website formerly run by Trump’s senior strategist, Stephen K. Bannon, James Delingpole, a writer who is close to Bannon, said that if Pruitt refused to undo the endangerme­nt finding, “it will represent a major setback for President Trump’s war with the Climate Industrial Complex.”

Legal experts say they can see why opponents of climate change policy want to go after the endangerme­nt finding — as long as it remains in place, any efforts to undo climate regulation­s can always be reversed.

“As a matter of theory, they’re absolutely right,” said Richard J. Lazarus, a professor of environmen­tal law at Harvard. “If you want to get rid of the climate stuff, you get rid of the root, not just the branches. They want him to uproot the whole thing.”

But, Lazarus added, “As a matter of legal strategy, it makes little sense because the endangerme­nt finding is very strong.”

The original recommenda­tion to make an endangerme­nt finding on carbon dioxide emissions was made by Stephen L. Johnson, a career scientist who headed the EPA under the administra­tion of George W. Bush, although the Bush White House did not act on Johnson’s memo. After the Obama administra­tion did so, the finding was legally challenged but upheld in a federal court. The Supreme Court declined to hear an appeal.

Lazarus said that Pruitt would have his hands full with the legal challenges of undoing the regulation­s themselves. Taking on the endangerme­nt finding would probably be futile, he said.

“He doesn’t want to spend a lot of time with something that’s a sure loser,” Lazarus said. “It wrecks your credibilit­y with the courts.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Critics of Environmen­tal Protection Agency Administra­tor Scott Pruitt say he is hacking only at the branches of current climate policy. They want him to pull it out by the roots.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Critics of Environmen­tal Protection Agency Administra­tor Scott Pruitt say he is hacking only at the branches of current climate policy. They want him to pull it out by the roots.

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