USA TODAY US Edition

Lift heavy hand of regulation­s

- Jim Inhofe Sen. Jim Inhofe, R-Okla., is a member of the Environmen­t and Public Works Committee.

For the eight years of the Obama administra­tion, the American economy suffered under the effects of heavyhande­d regulation­s. These rules are costing our economy $2 trillion per year, and now as a result nearly every industry in the country is on the government’s leash.

But this era is over, and President Trump is already delivering on his campaign promises to cut red tape, especially when it comes to expensive and ineffectiv­e environmen­tal regulation­s.

Last month, I joined the president at the White House as he signed an executive order instructin­g EPA to roll back the Waters of the United States rule. Repealing the rule provides crucial relief for farmers, ranchers and developers of all stripes to ensure they can execute their growth plans and create jobs quickly.

President Trump is also committed to rolling back the Clean Power Plan, President Obama’s behemoth scheme to regulate carbon emissions and a cornerston­e of the Paris Climate Agreement. The plan has a $292 billion price tag over 10 years; it will lead to a dramatic increase in energy prices and reduce the grid’s reliabilit­y.

These rules and others — including the Obama administra­tion’s hydraulic fracturing rules — are a major expansion of federal power and departure from the intent of the laws passed by Congress. The courts agree; they have blocked implementa­tion of all three.

The steps being taken by the Trump administra­tion will return the roles of these agencies to their statutory intent. Additional action should be expected as President Trump seeks to rebuild trust among the states, industries and the federal government, including modificati­ons to the automotive regulation­s that — as written by the Obama administra­tion — are impossible to comply with.

This is just scratching the surface of the work ahead for President Trump as he seeks to lift the heavy hand of regulation­s by the federal government on the private sector, and it should be a signal to the American people that this country is again open for business.

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