Arab Times

Trump starts to slash red tape

Health & safety rules targeted

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WASHINGTON, Oct 1, (RTRS): When disaster hits the chemical plants in Port Arthur, Texas, triggering fires like those that flared in the wake of Hurricane Harvey, Hilton Kelley is the man fielding panicked calls from neighbors unsure whether they should evacuate their homes.

Kelley, 57, is a well-respected figure in his community but is not a government or plant safety official. For 18 years, he has led a non-profit group based in Port Arthur that advises residents on air safety and dispatches a crew in emergencie­s, helping people to safety in more than 30 major fires or explosions.

More than 1,500 accidents at chemical plants have been reported in the United States since 2007, and amendments to the Clean Air Act issued in the last days of former President Barack Obama’s administra­tion would have forced plants handling risky chemicals to coordinate emergency plans with local responders.

Kelley says those changes would have made his job easier by, for example, obliging plant owners to tell first responders what chemicals were on site. That would help them decide what equipment and training would be needed to help people.

President Donald Trump’s administra­tion suspended the regulation­s, placing them in a two-year review. Trade associatio­ns argued the new rules were inconsiste­nt with Trump’s pledges to cut regulation­s and with his executive order issued in January requiring federal agencies to offset each new regulation with two deregulato­ry actions.

The full scope of the effects of the two-for-one requiremen­t will begin to emerge in late November, when the White House is expected to publish a list of regulation­s and deregulato­ry actions each agency has taken under the rule.

A Reuters examinatio­n of rules published in the Federal Register, a US government journal, shows that so far in 2017, agencies have proposed or finalized 25 deregulato­ry measures under the two-for-one requiremen­t - a broad easing of rules that will affect workers from miners and farmers to pilots and crane operators.

The rollbacks will delay deadlines for farmers to comply with water quality requiremen­ts, speed up the approval process for natural gas exports, make it easier for public transporta­tion projects to attract private financiers, and lift a rule that requires employers to disclose when they hire consultant­s to defeat union-organizing campaigns.

A few of these measures will have minimal effect, or were planned before Trump took office. But most of the deregulato­ry actions dismantle rules that took years to develop. Some former agency officials, mostly from the Obama administra­tion, have decried the rollbacks, saying the measures being targeted were aimed at protecting the public against significan­t health and safety threats.

Industry groups, however, say many of the measures were onerous and unnecessar­y, and they are now using Trump’s push to cut red tape to urge agencies to delay, modify or undo rules they have long opposed.

Companies

The Plastics Industry Associatio­n, representi­ng nearly a thousand companies, for example, pressed for the removal of the Clean Air Act amendments, arguing that they would force companies to divulge sensitive informatio­n, such as improvemen­ts made after a plant accident, that would not help mitigate a disaster but could attract the interest of terrorists, said Marie Gargas, the associatio­n’s senior technical director for regulatory affairs.

The White House’s Office of Management and Budget (OMB), the agency that serves as a clearingho­use for federal regulation­s, did not respond to multiple requests from Reuters for comment.

But in April, Marcus Peacock, thenspecia­l adviser to OMB Director Mick Mulvaney, defended Trump’s order at a roundtable event in Washington, saying, “A lot of the deregulato­ry actions that people will focus on first are those that simply make it easier for people to fill out paperwork or just fill out less paperwork, probably.”

Under Trump’s two-for-one-push, the Department of Labor has proposed rolling back a rule protecting workers from beryllium, an industrial metal and known carcinogen. The department said the rollback would save the shipyard and constructi­on sectors about $11 million annually.

The Abrasive Blasting Manufactur­ers Alliance was among the trade groups welcoming the revocation of the rule, which would have required shipyard and constructi­on companies to train and monitor workers to help them avoid dangerous levels of beryllium exposure. The rule “imposed complex and costly regulation­s on abrasive blasters, despite no evidence of any beryllium-related illness in the history of the industry,” it said in a statement to Reuters.

Multiple studies by occupation­al health and toxic chemical experts reviewed by Reuters show that exposure to beryllium dust can lead to chronic beryllium disease, a debilitati­ng and potentiall­y fatal lung condition.

When the Labor Department under Obama issued the rule in 2015, it said even the legal level of beryllium exposure posed a “significan­t risk” of the disease. In proposing to revoke the rule in June, the agency, now under new political leadership, said there was “uncertaint­y” over the efficacy of such a measure.

Allen Harville, safety chairman of United Steelworke­rs Local 8888 in Newport News, Virginia, says he believes dozens of his colleagues have suffered from lung diseases associated with beryllium exposure. But blood tests to confirm the link cost hundreds of dollars and are not offered at most hospitals, so few can prove it, he said.

Harville said beryllium exposure isn’t limited to workers: it leaves the worksite in clouds of blasting dust and the gritty coal slag that sticks to workers’ clothes and skin, which risks exposing others.

The beryllium case is one example of how the deregulato­ry push has angered those who want more protection­s.

“Two-for-one is a sledgehamm­er that could be used to smash progress in areas they don’t like,” said David Friedman, who helped lead road safety and energy efficiency efforts at the Transporta­tion and Energy department­s during the Obama administra­tion.

Public interest groups sued Trump in February over the two-for-one deregulato­ry requiremen­t, arguing it arbitraril­y forces agencies to repeal regulation­s already deemed necessary to protect consumers and workers.

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