Texarkana Gazette

White House moves to weaken EPA rule on toxic compounds

- By Ellen Knickmeyer

WASHINGTON — The Trump White House intervened to weaken one of the few public health protection­s pursued by its own administra­tion, a rule to limit the use of a toxic industrial compound in consumer products, according to communicat­ions between the White House and Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

The documents show that the White House Office of Management and Budget formally notified the EPA by email last July that it was stepping into the crafting of the rule on the compound, perfluoroa­lkyl and polyfluoro­alkyl substances, used in nonstick and stain-resistant frying pans, rugs, and countless other consumer products.

The White House repeatedly pressed the agency to agree to a major loophole that could allow substantia­l imports of the PFAS-tainted products to continue, greatly weakening the proposed rule. EPA pushed back on the White House demand for the loophole, known as a “safe harbor” provision for industry.

Pushed again in January, the agency responded, “EPA opposes proposing a safe harbor provision, but is open to a neutrally-worded request for comment from the public" on the White House request.

The rule is one of the few concrete steps that the Trump administra­tion has taken to deal with growing contaminat­ion by PFAS industrial compounds. The EPA has declared dating back to 2018 that consumer exposure to the substances was a “national priority” that the agency was confrontin­g “aggressive­ly.”

Delaware Sen. Tom Carper, the ranking Democrat on the Environmen­t and Public Works Committee, who obtained the documents revealing the White House interventi­on, and public-health advocates say the White House action was led by Nancy Beck, a former chemical industry executive now detailed to President Donald Trump’s Council of Economic Advisers.

In a letter sent Friday to the EPA, Carper charged the White House pressure amounts to unusual interventi­on in what had been the EPA’s in-house efforts to regulate imports tainted with the compound. Trump has nominated Beck to lead the Consumer Product Safety Commission, a government panel charged with protecting Americans from harm by thousands of kinds of consumer goods.

Asked about the White House actions, EPA spokeswoma­n Corry Schiermeye­r said in an email that “consulting with other federal agencies on actions is a normal process across government," and that “EPA is often required to engage in an interagenc­y review process led by OMB."

“It is routine for the agency to receive input from all of our stakeholde­rs, including our federal partners," Schiermeye­r wrote.

The EPA did not respond to a question about whether Beck led the White House interventi­on. Emails sent for comment to the White House, the White House Office of Management and Budget and Beck were not immediatel­y answered.

Carper obtained pages of back-and-forth proposed changes, redline drafts and other communicat­ions between the White House Office of Management and Budget, the EPA and others on the draft rule. No authors are listed in many of the final rounds of White House edits, drafts and proposals and EPA's responses.

Carper wrote to EPA Administra­tor Andrew Wheeler on Friday to object to the White House push for weakening of the rule, newly revealed in the documents. Carper said it appeared that Beck, who was moved to the White House from a top regulatory job at the Trump EPA, “sought to make it more difficult for EPA to use its authority ... to protect Americans from these harmful substances.”

While thousands of kinds of PFAS compounds are still in use in the United States, the new EPA rule would set up agency oversight of imports of products that use a few kinds of the compounds that manufactur­ers agreed to phase out in this country starting in 2006. Those versions remain in production in some parts of the world.

In addition to the safe harbor loophole, another change sought by the White House would raise the technical bar for EPA to consider blocking any of the tainted products.

The agency agreed to rewrite the rule to include a third White House request, narrowing the range of imported products that would fall under the rule.

 ?? Associated Press ?? ■ A label states that these pans do not contain PFAS, perfluoroa­lkyl and polyfluoro­alkyl substances. The White House has intervened to weaken one of the few public health protection­s pursued by its own administra­tion. Documents released Friday show the White House stepped in to limit the scope of a pending rule that would target imports of products tainted with PFAS, used in nonstick and stain-resistant frying pans, rugs, and countless other consumer products.
Associated Press ■ A label states that these pans do not contain PFAS, perfluoroa­lkyl and polyfluoro­alkyl substances. The White House has intervened to weaken one of the few public health protection­s pursued by its own administra­tion. Documents released Friday show the White House stepped in to limit the scope of a pending rule that would target imports of products tainted with PFAS, used in nonstick and stain-resistant frying pans, rugs, and countless other consumer products.

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