The Denver Post

Elaine Chao’s record suggests skepticism on new safety regs

- By Joan Lowy and Jonathan Lemire

new york» Elaine Chao’s record at the Labor Department suggests she’d have a light hand when it comes to safety regulation as transporta­tion secretary and would seek to shift responsibi­lity from the federal government to states where possible.

President-elect Donald Trump’s choice for the Cabinet post is 63. She was labor secretary under President George W. Bush and the first Asian-American woman to serve in a president’s Cabinet. She also is the wife of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, which might be of some help if Trump is to fulfill his promise of generating $1 trillion in infrastruc­ture spending.

Chao’s record suggests she’d be skeptical of new safety regulation­s and may attempt to roll back existing regulation­s. Under Chao, the Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion didn’t issue a single significan­t new safety regulation for four years, and mine safety inspectors were cut and inspection­s reduced, said Thomas McGarity, a University of Texas law professor and author of “Freedom to Harm,” a book about the labor department that includes Chao’s tenure.

Among the pressing issues facing the next transporta­tion secretary will be how to boost the nation’s aging infrastruc­ture so that it can accommodat­e population growth and not become a drag on the economy, modernizin­g the nation’s air traffic control system, ensuring that new transporta­tion technologi­es are adopted in a safe manner and responding to a surge in traffic fatalities.

Whether it’s integratin­g drones into the national airspace, deploying selfdrivin­g cars or “some other new technology, she’s not going to be especially inclined to second-guess the industry when they say that this will be safe,” McGarity said.

As labor secretary, her job was to protect the nation’s workforce, including setting safety standards and addressing issues related to wages and retirement. She updated overtime regulation­s for “white-collar” workers and rules intended to force unions to disclose more details on their financial condition to members.

Chao is “a strong advocate of letting the markets function as they will, not intervenin­g into private sector arrangemen­ts,” McGarity said.

Mitch Bainwol, president of the Alliance of Automobile Manufactur­ers, applauded Trump’s selection of Chao as “a superb choice.”

More recently, Chao had been on the board of directors for Bloomberg Philanthro­pies, run by former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg. She resigned last year after learning the organizati­on planned to expand an environmen­tal initiative to shutter coal-fired power plants. Almost 90 percent of Kentucky’s electricit­y comes from coal, and her ties to the organizati­on were used against McConnell in his Senate race.

Chao came to the United States from Taiwan with her family at age 8. Her family settled in New York, where her father, James SiCheng Chao, became a wealthy shipping magnate.

Chao received her undergradu­ate degree from Mount Holyoke College and a Master of Business Administra­tion from Harvard. She went on to become head of the Peace Corps and the United Way of America.

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