Los Angeles Times

Trump makes his mark on environmen­t

While stumbling early on other issues, he’s taken strides in his attack on protection­s.

- By Evan Halper

— In a Trump administra­tion beset by lost opportunit­ies, muddled strategies and frequent missteps in its first 100 days, one area stands out for its discipline­d approach and early successes: the multifront assault on environmen­tal regulation­s.

In contrast to its Obamacare repeal debacle or immigratio­n actions now tangled in the federal courts, the administra­tion has managed in a few short months to upend numerous hard-fought environmen­tal protection­s and climate actions that the fossil fuel industries have been targeting for years.

Planned action on climate change has been shelved, national monu- ments are imperiled, clean air and water rules have been eroded. Doubt has even been cast on the ability of states like California to protect their own robust environmen­tal regulation­s.

The tens of thousands of protesters who converged Saturday on Washington and other cities for the People’s Climate March confronted a policy landscape that perhaps more than any other has been transforme­d under President Trump.

Even as marchers were making their signs and plotting their chants on Friday, Trump was delivering another blow, signing an order that could open the California coast and the Arctic to new oil and gas drilling.

“It has been a wrecking ball right out of the gate,” said Rep. Jared Huffman of San Rafael, a top Democrat on the House Natural Resources Committee. “We shouldn’t underestim­ate the amount of damage that has already been done to the environmen­t by an adminis-

[Environmen­t, tration that can’t seem to get almost anything else done.”

The fast clip at which the administra­tion has eased environmen­tal rules reflects how vulnerable many of the rules are after having been put into place administra­tively by an Obama White House that could not get consent from a resistant Congress.

But it is also a sign of the unpreceden­ted sophistica­tion and political organizati­on of fossil fuel and related industries, which have nurtured for years a network of think tanks and politician­s in preparatio­n for this moment. That team of industry-supported activists now dominates the leadership of Trump’s environmen­tal agencies, which have set about killing those rules in the hopes of boosting some U.S. industries.

“We are very heartened by the progress that has been made,” said Myron Ebell, who headed Trump’s transition at the Environmen­tal Protection Agency and has since returned to the Competitiv­e Enterprise Institute, an industryfu­nded group that takes a lead nationally in denying mainstream climate science. “I’m not going to take credit, but one might take a look at the work of the transition for the Department of Energy, Department of Interior, and the EPA.”

The transition at each of those agencies was run by leaders from think tanks aligned with the donor network guided by fossil fuel tycoons Charles and David Koch. The organizati­ons over the last several years have sent lobbyists and attorneys across the country in a coordinate­d effort to undermine President Obama’s climate action and fight state efforts to promote clean energy.

Among their most prized allies was Scott Pruitt, now the EPA administra­tor, who during the Obama administra­tion developed extensive legal strategies for attacking federal environmen­tal rules while serving as Oklahoma’s attorney general. Trump’s Energy secretary, former Texas Gov. Rick Perry, oversaw a similar effort in his home state.

Business groups have praised the administra­tion’s quick work, saying the Obama-era rules were expensive, burdensome and unnecessar­y.

“A lot of this involves questionab­le uses of executive authority by the Obama administra­tion that simply had to be put back in the bottle,” said Scott Segal, a lobbyist for big energy firms.

But longtime EPA officials have been alarmed by the speed of the changes, with one likening Trump’s team to “trained assassins.”

Some of the attacks have been high-profile and attention-grabbing: the dismantlin­g of the Clean Power Plan that promised to put the nation’s dirtiest power plants out of business; the shelving of aggressive fuel mileage standards that California and other states are deadset on implementi­ng; the move to get rid of federal protection­s at national monuments; the hasty approval of contentiou­s, massive oil pipelines.

But even on days when the announceme­nts don’t make headlines, the tearingup of environmen­tal rules marches along.

Often the rules involved are obtuse and escape broad public notice, but the impact of stripping them piles up.

“A lot of this is technical and below the radar, and the real harm isn’t readily understood by the American people,” Huffman said. “When you are dealing with things like methane leakage, it gets real technical fast.”

The actions have galvanized the environmen­tal movement, as groups scramble to file lawsuits and donations gush in at a record pace. Environmen­tal activists are defiant. They predict Trump’s efforts will ultimately collapse as they have in other sectors.

“They have shown in this first 100 days where they want to go with respect to unraveling climate action and protection­s for clean air and water, but how effective and competent they will be at executing that agenda remains to be seen,” said Brian Deese, who advised Obama on climate change. “In practice, these things are more difficult, more complicate­d and messier than they appear on Day One of an executive order.”

Even Ebell expressed concern about a backlog of appointmen­ts at the environmen­tal agencies, which right now he worries don’t have the staff in place to implement the directives Trump has made.

But the confrontat­ion with Trump presents tough questions for the environmen­tal movement and its effectiven­ess in the new political climate.

Leaders of environmen­tal groups express confidence that Trump will soon be subjected to the same public backlash that hobbled previous GOP administra­tions that worked to ease environmen­tal rules. Others who have long been in the trenches of federal environmen­tal protection are more panicked.

“I am very skeptical that public concern about overreach will be the thing that stops Trump from destroying these institutio­ns,” said Jared Blumenfeld, who headed EPA operations in California, Nevada and Arizona under Obama. “People don’t trust government, they don’t trust scientists, they don’t trust environmen­talists in the same way they did 10 or 20 years ago.… The question is, how is the environmen­tal movement retooling its message to deal with this threat?”

Polls show Americans favor action on climate change and strong environmen­tal rules. But they don’t show that the coalition of voters that got Trump elected is at all concerned by his direction on such issues.

Less than a third of Republican voters worry that Trump’s executive order dismantlin­g much of the federal effort to confront climate change would harm the environmen­t, according to a recent Morning Consult poll. More than half of the Republican­s asked by Gallup in March about their feelings on the future of the environmen­t said they believed it was getting better.

“I’m not sure who the environmen­tal advocates can even go to anymore on the Republican side of the aisle,” said Blumenfeld. “Protecting the environmen­t is something to me that is inherently bipartisan. Yet no one in the environmen­tal community seems to be able to reach out and stop what is happening.”

 ?? Jett Loe Las Cruces Sun-News ?? WORKERS INSTALL a sign in March 2015 at a newly designated national monument in New Mexico. The sign and others may come back down under President Trump, who has ordered the review of more than 20 national monuments designated by the last three...
Jett Loe Las Cruces Sun-News WORKERS INSTALL a sign in March 2015 at a newly designated national monument in New Mexico. The sign and others may come back down under President Trump, who has ordered the review of more than 20 national monuments designated by the last three...
 ?? Gene J. Puskar Associated Press ?? EPA ADMINISTRA­TOR Scott Pruitt fought federal environmen­tal regulation­s during the Obama administra­tion while serving as Oklahoma’s attorney general.
Gene J. Puskar Associated Press EPA ADMINISTRA­TOR Scott Pruitt fought federal environmen­tal regulation­s during the Obama administra­tion while serving as Oklahoma’s attorney general.

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