The Palm Beach Post

McConnell goes after environmen­tal rules

He offers list of rules he’d like to see Trump overturn.

- By Matthew Daly Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The to p Republican in the Senate outlined a series of actions he hopes President-elect Donald Trump will take to overturn environmen­tal regulation­s imposed by President Barack Obama, including a rule to protect streams from coal-mining debris.

Majorit y L eader Mitch McConnell urged Trump in a letter to scrap a rule to protec t small stre ams and wetlands from developmen­t and other regulation­s that the GOP considers overly burdensome. He also asked Trump to drop a legal defense of the Clean Power Plan, Obama’s signature effort to limit carbon pollution from coal-fired power plants.

The plan, the linchpin of Obama’s strategy to fight climate change, is on hold awaiting a court ruling.

In a Jan. 4 letter to the president-elect, McConnell said Trump “inspired the American people with your vision of less regulation, free and fair competitio­n and enhanced job opportunit­ies.” McConnell said he personally appreciate­d Trump’s public commitment to “provide relief for coal communitie­s” such as Kentucky, which he represents.

McConnell’s letter decried what he and other Republican­s describe as Obama’s “war on coal,” a series of regulation­s that the GOP says has made coal more expensive to mine, transport and use for energy production.

U.S. coal production has declined sharply in recent years amid stiff competitio­n from cheap, easy-to-produce natural gas. But McConnell said those who attribute coal’s decline simply to low gas prices “are not seeing the full picture,” which he maintains includes costly federal regulation­s that place an unfair burden on coal.

Mc C o n n e l l c a l l e d t h e stream-protection rule “a direct assault on coal mining operations” that “must be stopped.” He pledged to use the rarely invoked Congressio­nal Review Act to overturn the stream rule and asked for Trump’s support in that effort.

The review act requires a simple majority of both chambers and the president’s signature to make a recently enacted regulation invalid. The Congressio­nal Research Service estimates that rules submitted on or after June 13 are subject to disapprova­l by Congress. The stream rule was finalized in December.

Separately, McConnell urged Trump to drop legal defense of the Clean Power Plan and the clean-water rule, calling each “an abuse of power” and harmful to coal communitie­s.

Mc C o n n e l l a l s o u r ge d Trump to scrap a rule targeting future power plants and to boost technology that captures and stores carbon dioxide, a key contributo­r to global warming. Carbon-capture technology is considered crucial to developmen­t of so-called clean coal.

The technology is expensive and unproven, but it has long been a goal of coal producers and their supporters in Congress.

McConnell asked Trump to work with lawmakers to ensure long-term health benefits for retired coal miners, including at least 16,500 who face a loss of benefits at the end of April. Democrats, including Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, have made retention of coal benefits a top priority and criticized as inadequate a four-month extension McConnell and other GOP leaders pushed for in December.

 ?? ALEX WONG / GETTY IMAGES ?? U.S. Senate Majority Leader Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., (right) speaks during a news briefing after the Senate Republican weekly luncheon on Tuesday at the Capitol in Washington, D.C.
ALEX WONG / GETTY IMAGES U.S. Senate Majority Leader Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., (right) speaks during a news briefing after the Senate Republican weekly luncheon on Tuesday at the Capitol in Washington, D.C.

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