The Daily Courier

Final EPA rollback curbs use of health studies

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The Environmen­tal Protection Agency released one of its last major rollbacks under the Trump administra­tion on Tuesday, limiting what evidence it will consider about risks of pollutants in a way that opponents say could cripple future public health regulation.

EPA Administra­tor Andrew Wheeler said the new rule, which restricts what findings from public health studies the agency can consider in crafting health protection­s, was made in the name of transparen­cy about government decisionma­king. “We’re going to take all this informatio­n and shine light on it,” Wheeler said Tuesday, in unveiling the terms of the new rule in a virtual appearance hosted by a conservati­ve think-tank .

“I don’t think we get enough credit as an administra­tion about wanting to open up to sunlight and scrutiny,” Wheeler said of the Trump administra­tion, which has already rolled back dozens of public health and environmen­tal protection­s.

Opponents say the latest rule would threaten patient confidenti­ality and privacy of individual­s in public health studies, and call the requiremen­t an overall ruse to handicap future regulation.

The kind of research findings that appear targeted in the new rule “present the most direct and persuasive evidence of pollution’s adverse health effects,” said Richard Revesz, an expert in pollution law at the New York University School of Law.

Wheeler said the rule will go into effect today, just one day after its final terms were made public, an unusually brief period. The change comes after hundreds of thousands of earlier objections from scientists, publicheal­th experts, regulators, academics, environmen­tal advocates and others in public hearings and written remarks, in some of the strongest protests of recent years to a proposed EPA rule change.

Wheeler signed the rule last Wednesday. EPA declined requests to release it until Tuesday.

The new regulation would restrict regulators’ considerat­ion of findings from public health studies unless the underlying data from them are made public. The rule deals with so-called dose response findings, which look at harm suffered at varying exposures to a pollutant or other toxic agent.

Some industry and conservati­ve groups have pushed for the change for decades, calling public health studies that hold confidenti­al potentiall­y identifyin­g data about the test subjects “secret science.”

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 said that the increased requiremen­t for public disclosure would only increase public acceptance of EPA regulation.

Public health studies — such as Harvard’s 1990s Six Cities study, which drew on anonymized, confidenti­al health data from thousands of people to better establish links between air pollution and higher mortality — have been instrument­al in crafting health and environmen­tal rules. The Six Cities study led to new limits on air pollutants under the Clean Air Act.

Wheeler was equivocal Tuesday on tossing out that pivotal study in particular as a basis for health rules. “It can still be used and probably will be used,” he said. “It could still pass muster.”

The EPA’s final rule also deleted a section from its original proposal that would have specifical­ly required regulators to consider a questioned scientific model backed by proponents of a theory that radiation and similar threats are not harmful at low doses, and can be beneficial. The scientific community for decades has held that all exposure to the most damaging form of radiation has risks.

The Associated Press first reported on expert concerns about that part of the rule. The EPA at the time denied any link to the controvers­ial theory. However, the Los Angeles Times, citing emails obtained under open records laws, later reported that the theory’s most prominent backer, a toxicologi­st named Edward Calabrese, had worked with EPA officials in crafting that section of the rule.

The EPA final rule released Tuesday cited “significan­t comment” in opposition in saying it had removed those specific mentions.

The EPA has been one of the most active agencies in carrying out President 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.

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