'Ideology Trumping Science':
Independent Advisory Board Says Trump EPA Is Ignoring Scientific Evidence as It
Shreds Regulations
Former members of the agency's
Science Advisory Board say EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler is
"sidelining" the panel.
A federal panel of independent
scientific experts says the EPA has flouted the panel's guidance in its efforts
to roll back a number of Obama-era regulations, resulting in an agency push
that will affect public health for millions of Americans without the consideration
of environmental science.
The EPA's Science Advisory
Board (SAB) wrote in four
draft reports published online Tuesday that the agency's published
revisions to at least four regulations "conflict with established
science," according
to the Washington Post.
Although two-thirds of the
SAB's current members are Trump appointees, Juliet Eilperin wrote in the Post, the
panel "found serious flaws" in the proposed changes to rules
governing pollution, gas mileage, and how regulations are written.
The revisions and regulatory
rollbacks in question include:
a reversal of a rule that
limits the use of pesticides and other chemicals near waterways, which the SAB
says "neglects established science" that has shown how contamination
from such toxins can pollute drinking water
a reduction in mileage targets
for vehicles, which was decided based on "implausible" economic
analyses
the rollback of the Mercury
and Air Toxics Standards (MATS), which the EPA pushed after performing a flawed
cost-benefit analysis, failing to consider the public health benefits and
savings that would result from controlling mercury pollution
the EPA's push to exclude
certain scientific studies from policy-making, saying the change "could
easily undercut the integrity of environmental laws, as it will allow
systematic bias to be introduced."
H. Christopher Frey, an
environmental engineering professor at North Carolina State University who
served on the board for six years, told the Post that
EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler is "sidelining the Scientific Advisory
Board."
"He obviously has an
ideological agenda of pursuing regulatory rollbacks, and the science is not
always going to be consistent with that ideological agenda," Frey said.
The EPA's marginalizing of the
board as it rolls back regulations "looks like ideology trumping
science," tweeted Kathleen Rest, executive director of the Union of
Concerned Scientists.
The SAB's new reports about
the EPA's rollbacks call into question "to what degree these suggested
changes are fact-based as opposed to politically motivated," Steven
Hamburg of the Environmental Defense Fund, who served on the board until last
September, told the Post.
No comments:
Post a Comment