Houston Chronicle

Judge blocks ‘capricious’ Trump limits for EPA rules

- By Matthew Daly

WASHINGTON — A federal judge has blocked a last-minute rule issued by the Trump administra­tion to limit what evidence the Environmen­tal Protection Agency may consider as it regulates pollutants to protect public health.

Former EPA Administra­tor Andrew Wheeler said the Jan. 6 rule was aimed at ending what he and other Republican­s call “secret science.” Some industry and conservati­ve groups had long pushed for the change, saying public health studies that hold confidenti­al and potentiall­y identifyin­g data about test subjects should be made public so the underlying data can be scrutinize­d before the EPA issues rules to protect public health.

Wheeler called the rule an attempt to boost transparen­cy about government decision-making, but critics said it was hastily imposed and would threaten patient confidenti­ality and the privacy of individual­s in public health studies that underlie federal regulation­s.

U.S. District Judge Brian Morris in Montana ruled late Wednesday that the EPA had unlawfully rushed the regulation, saying its decision to make it final just two weeks before then-President Donald Trump left office was “arbitrary” and “capricious.” Morris delayed the rule until at least Feb. 5, giving the Biden administra­tion time to assess whether to go forward with it or make changes.

An EPA spokesman said Friday the agency is “committed to making evidence-based decisions and developing policies and programs that are guided by the best science.”

EPA “will follow the science and law in accordance with the BidenHarri­s administra­tion’s executive orders and other directives in reviewing all of the agency’s actions issued under the previous administra­tion,” including the so-called Strengthen­ing Transparen­cy in Pivotal Science rule, spokesman Ken Labbe said in a statement.

Wheeler defended the rule, which was finalized in early January after years of debate.

“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,” he wrote in a Jan. 4 op-ed in the Wall Street Journal.

But the change was so broadly

written that it could limit not only future public health protection­s, but also “force the agency to revoke decades of clean air protection­s,” said Chris Zarba, former head of the EPA’s Science Advisory Board.

He and other critics said the rule jeopardize­d use of 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. The studies have been instrument­al in crafting health and environmen­tal rules for decades. The Six Cities study led to new limits on air pollutants under the Clean Air Act.

The Trump rule 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.

The change, which was made final without a required 30-day notice, came after hundreds of thousands of earlier objections from scientists, public health experts, regulators, academics, environmen­tal advocates and others in public hearings and written remarks, in some of the strongest protests of a proposed EPA rule change.

 ?? New York Times file photo ?? The Trump EPA said its transparen­cy plan would improve science credibilit­y. Scientists say it would limit what research the agency can consider.
New York Times file photo The Trump EPA said its transparen­cy plan would improve science credibilit­y. Scientists say it would limit what research the agency can consider.

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