Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

President directs EPA to raze water initiative

It may take agency years to roll back Obama-era rule

- By Evan Halper Washington Bureau evan.halper@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump stepped up his attack on federal environmen­tal protection­s Tuesday, issuing an order directing his administra­tion to begin the long process of rolling back sweeping clean water rules that were enacted by his predecesso­r.

The order directing the Environmen­tal Protection Agency to set about dismantlin­g the Waters of the United States rule takes aim at one of President Barack Obama’s signature environmen­tal legacies, a far-reaching anti-pollution effort that expanded the authority of regulators over the nation’s waterways.

The rule had been fought for years by farmers, ranchers, real estate developers and others, who complained it invited heavy-handed bureaucrat­s to burden their businesses with onerous restrictio­ns and fines for minor violations.

Obama’s EPA argued that such claims were exaggerate­d and misreprese­nted the realities of the enforcemen­t process of a rule that promised to create substantia­lly cleaner waterways and with them, healthier habitats for threatened species of wildlife.

The directive to undo the clean water initiative is expected to be followed by another aimed at unraveling the Obama administra­tion’s plan to fight climate change by curbing power plant emissions.

“It is such a horrible, horrible rule,” Trump said as he signed the directive Tuesday aimed at the water rule. “It has such a nice name, but everything about it is bad.”

He declared the rule, championed by environmen­tal groups to give the EPA broad authority over nearly two-thirds of the water bodies in the nation, “one of the worst examples of federal regulation” and “a massive power grab.”

The climate and the clean water rules were enacted only after a long process of public hearings, scientific analysis and bureaucrat­ic review. That entire process must be revisited before they can be weakened. It could take years.

And environmen­tal groups will be mobilized to fight every step of the way. “These wetland protection­s help ensure that over 100 million Americans have access to clean and safe drinking water,” climate activist Tom Steyer said in a statement. “Access to safe drinking water is a human right, and Trump’s order is a direct violation of this right.”

The executive orders are compounded by the administra­tion’s release of a budget blueprint that includes deep cuts at the EPA. Even if the process of changing the environmen­tal rules is slow, the Trump administra­tion will aim to hasten their demise by hollowing out the agencies charged with enforcing them.

At the same time, it is working with Congress to kill some environmen­tal protection­s under an obscure authority that applies to regulation­s enacted within the final months of the previous administra­tion.

Trump vowed Tuesday that he would continue to undermine the Obama-era environmen­tal protection­s wherever he sees the opportunit­y, arguing they have cost jobs. “So many jobs we have delayed for so many years,” Trump said. “It is unfair to everybody.”

Many industries take issue with that interpreta­tion. Tuesday’s order, for example, was met with a swift rebuke from sport fishing and hunting groups. They said the clean water rule has been a boon to the economy, sustaining hundreds of thousands of jobs in their industry.

“Sports men and women will do everything within their power to compel the administra­tion to change course and to use the Clean Water Act to improve, not worsen, the nation’s waterways,” a statement from a half-dozen of the organizati­ons said.

 ?? CHRIS ADAMS/MCT 2014 ?? Sport fishing and hunting groups say the water rule has sustained hundreds of thousands of jobs in their industry.
CHRIS ADAMS/MCT 2014 Sport fishing and hunting groups say the water rule has sustained hundreds of thousands of jobs in their industry.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States