Baltimore Sun

Trump proposes rollback of environmen­tal oversight

Critics say effort will gut protection­s, cut public’s input

- By Ellen Knickmeyer

WASHINGTON — In a dramatic rollback of environmen­tal oversight, President Donald Trump took action Thursday to clear the way and speed up developmen­t of a wide range of commercial projects by cutting back federal review of their impact on the environmen­t.

“The United States can’t compete and prosper if a bureaucrat­ic system holds us back from building what we need,” Trump said at the White House, surrounded by Cabinet secretarie­s, industry leaders and workers in hard hats.

Trump’s proposal calls for narrowing the scope of the National Environmen­tal Policy Act, which was signed by President Richard Nixon in 1970. That law changed environmen­tal oversight in the country by requiring federal agencies to consider whether a project would harm the air, land, water or wildlife and giving the public the right of review and input.

Trump, who has targeted environmen­tal rules in his drive to ease the way for business, said enforcemen­t of the law had slowed federal approval of projects.

“America’s most critical infrastruc­ture projects have been tied up and bogged down by an outrageous­ly slow and burdensome federal approval process,” he said. “The builders are not happy. Nobody’s happy.”

Environmen­tal groups and Democratic lawmakers said the proposed rollback would gut major environmen­tal protection­s and take away the public’s right to know and comment on a project’s potential harms.

Key among the changes proposed is one that would newly limit the requiremen­t for federal environmen­tal review to projects that have major federal funding. The change would mean a range of predominan­tly privately funded and managed projects would not fall under the law’s requiremen­t for federal environmen­tal study and for public review and comment.

Other changes include giving federal agencies no more than two years to evaluate any environmen­tal impact of a project.

Mary Neumayr, head of the administra­tion’s Council on Environmen­tal Quality, said the changes would not explicitly bar federal considerat­ion of a project’s impact on climate change. But environmen­talists said a change instructin­g federal employees to disregard cumulative and longer-term effects would have the same effect, however.

The proposal is to be published in the Federal Register in coming days, followed by a 60-day period for public comment.

“This proposal takes a sledgehamm­er to decades of legal presidents and puts our communitie­s at risk,” said Sen. Tom Carper, D-Del., the top Democrat on the Senate Environmen­t and Public Works Committee.

The administra­tion’s overhaul “will eviscerate the public’s right to be heard and jettison science-based decision-making,” added Collin O’Mara, head of the National Wildlife Federation.

Interior Secretary David Bernhardt told reporters that Trump would “deliver a home run by cutting red tape that has paralyzed decision making“on projects.

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