Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Protect nation’s first environmen­tal law from Trump, polluters

- By Tania Galloni

In his Jan. 6 op-ed, (“Obscure law ruining morning commute may get overdue overhaul”) Jim Carter offers three cheers for the Trump administra­tion’s attack on the National Environmen­tal

Policy Act. He’s wildly off base. Florida can’t afford the devastatin­g consequenc­es for neighborho­ods and ecosystems that the Trump administra­tion’s plan would wreak.

Signed into law by President Nixon, the National Environmen­tal Policy Act is the United States’ environmen­tal charter.

Contrary to Carter’s fact-free assertions linking traffic jams to NEPA, the reality is that the overwhelmi­ng majority of infrastruc­ture projects are already exempted from environmen­tal review under NEPA, and the few projects receiving review can still move forward when an agency determines that the societal benefits outweigh the environmen­tal impacts.

Make no mistake about this: opponents of the safeguards this environmen­tal law provides use red herrings like this to confuse the public about what is really at stake.

The bottom line: no, that timesaving, headache-easing highway-widening project you’re hoping for isn’t delayed because of a federal environmen­tal review. Why, then, do NEPA’s opponents regularly try to link its eviscerati­on to popular ideas like lowering traffic congestion and repairing bridges? Simply put, they’re hoping to mask a darker agenda of eliminatin­g basic environmen­tal safeguards and public participat­ion for the sake of a few big polluting corporatio­ns’ profits.

NEPA saves taxpayers’ money. Imagine if we’d had it in place when the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers started channelizi­ng the Kissimmee River six decades ago. Before NEPA, the Corps didn’t have to conduct environmen­tal impact studies before transformi­ng a 100-mile-long river into a 30-foot deep canal. The project’s environmen­tal damage later forced Congress to authorize a restoratio­n project costing taxpayers more than $1 billion.

Under NEPA, the Corps would have been required to consider possible cost-saving alternativ­es, producing better decisions and potentiall­y saving us hundreds of millions of dollars.

NEPA can help to protect our coastlines. In 1978, Congress created a shortcut for oil drilling companies seeking to skirt NEPA’s environmen­tal safeguards in the Outer Continenta­l Shelf Lands Act. The shortcut “expressly singled out the Gulf of Mexico for less rigorous oversight under NEPA,” according to a report of the National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill.

We know what happened next. It’s not a leap to suggest that the Trump administra­tion’s dismantlin­g of NEPA’s protection­s will lead to more preventabl­e disasters. We certainly can’t afford the risk.

Most importantl­y, NEPA serves as a critical line of defense for vulnerable communitie­s who lack the means to fight back against dangerous, polluting projects. It requires agencies to notify the public and consider public input before making decisions. Without these mandatory comment periods, communitie­s would be left in the dark, unable to weigh in on critical decisions affecting their livelihood­s.

The constructi­on of another highway — I-4 in Orlando — illustrate­s what lacking these protection­s means for real people. Lacking the ability to use NEPA’s public comment period to speak out, the predominan­tly black and brown citizens of Orlando’s Parramore neighborho­od watched as highway constructi­on severed their connection to the city’s wealthier business district. Air quality worsened to the point where it became hard to breathe. Today, communitie­s like Parramore across the country are using NEPA’s protection­s to ensure that their neighborho­ods have a healthy future.

NEPA isn’t slowing down projects. It’s saving us money, protecting our natural resources, and ensuring that we all have a say in the decisions affecting our air and water. Now is the time to protect this bedrock environmen­tal law.

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