The Columbus Dispatch

Environmen­tal reviews for big projects restored

- Matthew Daly

WASHINGTON – In the latest reversal of a Trump-era environmen­tal rollback, President Joe Biden is restoring federal regulation­s guiding environmen­tal reviews of major infrastruc­ture projects such as highways and pipelines. The reviews were scaled back by the Trump administra­tion in a bid to fast-track the projects.

The White House Council on Environmen­tal Quality said Wednesday it will restore key provisions of the National Environmen­tal Policy Act, an environmen­tal law designed to ensure community safeguards during environmen­tal reviews for a wide range of federal projects and decisions.

Former President Donald Trump overhauled the rules last year in a bid to accelerate projects he said would boost the economy and provide jobs.

Trump and his administra­tion frequently expressed frustratio­n at rules they said unnecessar­ily slowed approval for interstate oil and gas pipelines and other big projects. The rule change imposed last year restricted the timelines for environmen­tal reviews and public comment and allowed federal officials to disregard a project’s role in cumulative effects.

The 2020 changes caused implementa­tion challenges for federal agencies and “sowed confusion among stakeholde­rs and the general public,” the White House said in a statement. The changes proposed Wednesday will restore regulatory certainty and “help ensure that American infrastruc­ture gets built right the first time and delivers real benefits – not harms – to people who live nearby,” said Brenda Mallory, Council on Environmen­tal Quality chair.

Contrary to assertions by the Trump administra­tion, Mallory and other White House officials said, the new rule will actually speed up completion of major projects, since a rigorous review is more likely to withstand a legal challenge by environmen­tal groups or states. Many Trump-era environmen­tal decisions were reversed or delayed by courts after findings they did not undergo sufficient analysis.

Environmen­tal groups and African American, Latino and tribal activists had protested the Trump-era rule change, saying it would worsen pollution in areas already reeling from oil refineries, chemical plants and other hazardous sites. The 1970 environmen­tal law, known as NEPA, is credited with giving poorer communitie­s a platform to negotiate with government regulators and big industries over major projects.

“The National Environmen­tal Policy Act is critical to ensuring that federal project managers look before they leap – and listen to experts and the public on a project’s potential impacts to people and wildlife alike,” said Mustafa Santiago Ali, vice president of environmen­tal justice, climate and community revitaliza­tion for the National Wildlife Federation.

West Virginia Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, the top Republican on the Senate Environmen­t Committee, said the rule change “adds unnecessar­y red tape back into building infrastruc­ture. As I’ve said before, we can’t ‘Build Back Better’ if we can’t build at all.”

Capito’s comment referred to Biden’s oft-repeated pledge to rebuild the nation’s infrastruc­ture, including a number of projects that would be authorized under a bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill that has passed the Senate.

Rosalie Winn, a senior attorney for the Environmen­tal Defense Fund, said the new rule will allow agencies to consider climate change and other effects of major infrastruc­ture projects.

The Environmen­tal Defense Fund was among environmen­tal groups that challenged the Trump-era rule in court. Those cases are now on hold.

The Council on Environmen­tal Quality will accept comments through late November. The rule change is expected to become final early next year.

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Mallory

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