Rome News-Tribune

Trump reins in environmen­tal law to speed up big projects

- By Aamer Madhani and Kevin Freking

oversight in the United States 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.

Critics called Trump’s move a cynical attempt to limit the public’s ability to examine and influence proposed projects under one of the country’s bedrock environmen­tal protection laws.

“This may be the single biggest giveaway to polluters in the past 40 years,” said Brett Hartl, government affairs director at the Center for Biological Diversity, an environmen­tal group that works to save endangered species.

Trump has made slashing government regulation a hallmark of his presidency and held it out as a way to boost jobs. Environmen­tal groups say the regulatory rollbacks threaten public health and make it harder to curb global warming. With Congress and the administra­tion divided over how to increase infrastruc­ture investment, the president is relying on his deregulati­on push to demonstrat­e progress.

Among the major changes in the new rule: limiting when federal environmen­tal reviews of projects are mandated, and capping how long federal agencies and the public have to evaluate and comment on any environmen­tal impact of a project.

“We won’t get certain projects through for environmen­tal reasons. They have to be environmen­tally sound. But you know what? We’re going to know in a year. We’re going to know in a year and a half. We’re not going to know in 20 years,” Trump said.

NEPA requires all federal agencies to evaluate the potential environmen­tal effects of proposed projects, but fewer than 1% of those reviews are the kind of complex and detailed review that Trump focused on — environmen­tal impact statements.

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