Los Angeles Times

Democrats look to flip Trump rules

Congress has limited time to undo some policies, including one on methane, approved before his term ended.

- By Sarah D. Wire Times staff writer Anna M. Phillips contribute­d to this report.

WASHINGTON — Congress has a very short window to reverse regulation­s approved by President Trump’s administra­tion before he left office, and at least two are expected to get Senate votes in the coming weeks.

Like its predecesso­rs, the administra­tion approved dozens of so-called midnight regulation­s in the final weeks before Trump left office Jan. 20. President Biden halted some that hadn’t gone into effect yet. Others are on hold because of legal challenges.

But Congress also has a tool to overturn regulation­s: the Congressio­nal Review Act.

What is the Congressio­nal Review Act?

First, it’s important to understand that Congress rarely tells federal agencies exactly how to implement the laws it passes. Instead, it historical­ly has left it to agencies to flesh out those details by writing thousands of rules and regulation­s.

But over time, it became clear that the details could be highly important to how a regulation was interprete­d and enforced. Aware of how much power it had handed agencies, Congress in 1996 gave itself the authority to overturn rules approved by federal agencies.

Each new rule must be presented to Congress, and lawmakers get 60 days to object. A new Congress also gets time to review rules approved in the last 60 days of the previous Congress.

How often has it been used?

Until recently, very rarely. At the start of 2017, it had been used just once.

But Republican­s used it 16 times when President Trump took office to undo Obama-era regulation­s.

Among them: a regulation ordering the Social Security Administra­tion to submit informatio­n on disability recipients to the National Instant Criminal Background Check System if they met certain “mental impairment” criteria; requiremen­ts that companies annually disclose any payments made to foreign government­s related to the commercial use of oil, natural gas or minerals; a rule that clarified which industries and companies could regularly conduct drug tests for unemployme­nt applicants; and a regulation that restricted coal companies from dumping mining waste into streams and waterways.

Now Trump’s rules face overturnin­g?

Some, yes. The act gives Congress a set amount of time to review and to overrule any regulation finalized by an agency. Currently, Congress can examine any regulation finalized between Aug. 21, 2020, and Jan. 20, 2021. The George Washington University Regulatory Studies Center estimates that 1,490 rules were approved by the Trump administra­tion during that window and could be challenged.

But the process is available for only the first 60 legislativ­e days of the new Congress. Depending on breaks, etc., that deadline should come in mid-May.

The Congressio­nal Review Act challenges are not subject to a filibuster in the Senate. That means the 48 Democrats and two independen­ts who tend to vote with them can pass the resolution without Republican support.

Are Democrats going to do it?

Seems so. Resolution­s to overturn six regulation­s were filed this year, but only a few will probably get a vote in even one chamber.

In March, Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) announced that the Senate would consider overturnin­g rules that change how methane emissions are regulated, and on what informatio­n the federal government has to provide to companies regarding discrimina­tion settlement­s.

What is the methane resolution?

The methane resolution, whose author is Sen. Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.), would in effect reinstate the Obama administra­tion’s regulation that placed restrictio­ns on the emission of methane, a potent planet-warming gas often emitted from leaks at drilling sites and oil and gas facilities. Rep. Diana DeGette (D-Colo.) filed the House companion version.

The rollback by the Trump administra­tion, which was finalized last year, lifted requiremen­ts that oil and gas companies find and fix those leaks. Though many domestic oil companies praised Trump’s move, some global producers tried to distance themselves from the decision out of concern that it would make it difficult for them to market gas as a cleaner fuel than coal.

Methane receives less attention than carbon dioxide, which makes up most of the nation’s greenhouse gas emissions, but it’s a serious threat. Methane absorbs far more heat than carbon dioxide, and its emissions are rising. Scientists have said that reducing methane leaks — as well as venting and flaring of natural gas — could be one of the fastest ways to slow climate change.

And the other rollback about discrimina­tion?

The second resolution expected to get a vote, sponsored by Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.), would repeal a Trump-era regulation from the Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission.

The changes required the EEOC to provide more informatio­n to companies during the “conciliati­on,” or settlement, process, particular­ly regarding how and why it determined there were violations of federal anti-discrimina­tion law. Murray and Rep. Robert C. Scott (D-Va.), who filed the House companion resolution, said in a news release that the rule gives employers an unfair advantage in settling claims and could lead to unmasking whistleblo­wers.

Any other regulation­s being targeted?

In the House, representa­tives are pushing to overturn a Department of Health and Human Services rule passed the day before Trump left office that would give the agency five years to review thousands of regulation­s. The agency currently has more than 18,000 regulation­s. Any regulation­s not reviewed by that time would expire. They do not have a Senate sponsor yet.

Biden delayed its implementa­tion until 2022 to give ongoing lawsuits over the rule a chance to end.

Other resolution­s include rejecting a Treasury Department regulation that Democrats say allows predatory lenders to evade state interest rate caps. Congressio­nal leaders haven’t promised votes on those resolution­s.

Why isn’t the act used more often?

There are a few reasons. Practicall­y, the act really comes into play only when there is a new president, particular­ly from the opposite party.

The repeal of a rule by Congress must be signed by the president, and a president probably wouldn’t sign a challenge to a regulation passed by his own administra­tion. So unless a vetoproof majority of both the House and Senate oppose the rule, there’s only a small window right when a new president comes into office when it makes sense to try.

Even when control of the White House flips to a new party, the first few months of a president’s first term tend to be the most legislativ­ely prolific, and House and Senate leaders normally aren’t going to dedicate much time during that precious window toward undoing rules put in place by the last administra­tion.

The 117th Congress has had a lot on its plate so far. Along with the Cabinet confirmati­on hearings and votes that mark a new administra­tion, the Senate held an impeachmen­t trial. And the House and Senate negotiated and passed a $2-trillion COVID-19 economic aid bill.

The second reason it isn’t used much is that the wording of the original law makes Congress’ actions in this area pretty permanent.

If Congress’ objection passes both the House and Senate and the president signs it, a new rule may not be issued in “substantia­lly the same form” as the disapprove­d rule unless it is specifical­ly authorized by a subsequent law.

But the 1996 law doesn’t define what “substantia­lly the same form” means, and the law prohibits the courts from reviewing any decision made by Congress under the Congressio­nal Review Act. So Congress has been leery about using it.

For much of the law’s history, Congress has used it more as a threat to get agencies to modify rules or regulation­s they don’t like before they are finalized.

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? SENATE leader Charles E. Schumer says the chamber will weigh overturnin­g methane emissions rules.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times SENATE leader Charles E. Schumer says the chamber will weigh overturnin­g methane emissions rules.

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