The Guardian (USA)

Trump administra­tion pollution rule strikes final blow against environmen­t

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The Environmen­tal Protection Agency has completed one of its last major rollbacks under the Trump administra­tion, changing how it considers evidence of harm from pollutants in a way that opponents say could cripple future public-health regulation.

The EPA administra­tor, Andrew Wheeler, formally announced the completion of what he calls the “Strengthen­ing Transparen­cy in Regulatory Science” rule in a Zoom appearance before Competitiv­e Enterprise Institute, a conservati­ve thinktank on Tuesday. The EPA completed the final rule last week.

The new rule would require the release of raw data from public-health studies whose findings the EPA uses in determinin­g the danger of an air pollutant, toxic chemical or other threat. Big public-health studies that studied the anonymized results of countless people have been instrument­al in setting limits on toxic substances, including in some of the nation’s most important clean-air protection­s.

Some industry and conservati­ve groups have long pushed for what they called the transparen­cy rule. Opponents say the aim was to handicap future regulation and public health interventi­ons. In an opinion piece in the Wall Street Journal on Monday night, Wheeler said the change was in the interest of transparen­cy.

“If the American people are to be regulated by interpreta­tion of these scientific studies, they deserve to scrutinize the data as part of the scientific process and American self-government,” Wheeler wrote.

But critics say the new rule could force disclosure of the identities and details of individual­s in public-health studies, jeopardizi­ng medical confidenti­ality and future studies. Academics, scientists, universiti­es, public health and medical officials, environmen­tal groups and others have spoken out at public hearings and written to oppose the change.

“This really seems to be an attempt by Wheeler to permanentl­y let major polluters trample on public health,” said Benjamin Levitan, a senior attorney with the Environmen­tal Defense Fund advocacy group. “It ties the hands of future administra­tions in how they can protect the public health.”

The change could limit not only future public health protection­s, but “force the agency to revoke decades of clean air protection­s”, Chris Zarba, former head of the EPA’s science advisory board, said in a statement.

Wheeler, in his Wall Street Journal piece, said the new limits would not compel the release of any personal data or “categorica­lly” exclude any scientific work. The EPA has been one of the most active agencies in carrying out Donald Trump’s mandate to roll back regulation­s that conservati­ve groups have identified as being unnecessar­y and burdensome to industry.

Many of the changes face court challenges and can be reversed by executive action or by lengthier bureaucrat­ic process. But undoing them would take time and effort by the incoming Biden administra­tion, which also has ambitious goals to fight climate-damaging fossil fuel emissions and lessen the impact of pollutants on lower-income and minority communitie­s.

 ?? Photograph: Alex Brandon/AP ?? Andrew Wheeler announced what he calls the ‘Strengthen­ing Transparen­cy in Regulatory Science’ rule to a conservati­ve thinktank on Tuesday.
Photograph: Alex Brandon/AP Andrew Wheeler announced what he calls the ‘Strengthen­ing Transparen­cy in Regulatory Science’ rule to a conservati­ve thinktank on Tuesday.

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