AP Says Administration "Unleashes New Rules;" Mostly Finds Examples of Rules Not Unleashed
Center for Progressive Reform 2012-12-14
Summary:
Cross-posted from ThinkProgress.
"Election over, administration unleashes new rules," trumpeted an Associated Press story this week.
What are these newly unleashed rules? Perhaps the big food safety rules that have been stalled for more than a year have gone through? Rules limiting greenhouse gas emissions from new and existing power plants? Long-awaited rules to protect coal miners' safety?
Not quite. In fact, the AP strained to come up with just tiny examples: "[T]he Environmental Protection Agency has proposed rules to update water quality guidelines for beaches and other recreational waters and deal with runoff from logging roads."
The recreational waters standard was a welcome development, but not particularly consequential or abrupt. EPA was required by law to issue the recreational water standards by 2005; it has issued them now only after being ordered by a court to do so. And as the agency explained in its press release, "The criteria released today do not impose any new requirements; instead, they are a tool that states can choose to use in setting their own standards."
As for the rule earlier this month on runoff from logging roads, it's not what you might imagine: it says that EPA will not be regulating pollution from logging roads. That regulation was issued in an incredibly short period of time; it took only three months from the agency proposing a rule to issuing its final "rule." If only the Administration were so aggressive with protective rules.