From the NYT:
“A
Regulatory Rush by Federal Agencies to Secure Trump's Legacy”
Facing the
prospect that President Donald Trump could lose his reelection bid, his Cabinet
is scrambling to enact regulatory changes affecting millions of Americans in a
blitz so rushed it may leave some changes vulnerable to court challenges. The
effort is evident in a broad range of federal agencies and encompasses
proposals like easing limits on how many hours some truckers can spend behind
the wheel, giving the government more freedom to collect biometric data and
setting federal standards for when workers can be classified as independent
contractors rather than employees. In the bid to lock in new rules before Jan.
20, Trump’s team is limiting or sidestepping requirements for public comment on
some of the changes and swatting aside critics who say the administration has
failed to carry out sufficiently rigorous analysis. Some cases, like a new rule
to allow railroads to move highly flammable liquefied natural gas on freight
trains, have led to warnings of public safety threats.
Every
administration pushes to complete as much of its agenda as possible when a
president’s term is coming to an end, seeking not just to secure its own legacy
but also to tie the hands of any successor who tries to undo its work. But as
Trump completes four years marked by an extensive deregulatory push, the
administration’s accelerated effort to put a further stamp on federal rules is
drawing questions even from some former top officials who served under
Republican presidents. “Two main hallmarks of a good regulation is sound
analysis to support the alternatives chosen and extensive public comment to get
broader opinion,” said Susan Dudley, who served as the top White House
regulatory official during the George W. Bush administration. “It is a concern
if you are bypassing both of those.” Administration officials said they were
simply completing work on issues they have targeted since Trump took office in
2017 promising to curtail the reach of federal regulation. “President Trump has
worked quickly from the beginning of his term to grow the economy by removing
the mountain of Obama-Biden job-killing regulations,” Russell Vought, director
of the White House Office of Management and Budget, which oversees regulatory
policy, said in a statement.
If Democrats
take control of Congress, they will have the power to reconsider some of these
last-minute regulations through a law last used at the start of Trump’s tenure
by Republicans to repeal certain rules enacted at the end of the Obama
administration. But the Trump administration is also working to fill key
vacancies on scientific advisory boards with members who will hold their seats
far into the next presidential term, committees that play an important role in
shaping federal rule-making. Few of the planned shifts have drawn more scrutiny
and criticism than a Labor Department proposal to set federal standards for
defining when a worker is an independent contractor or an employee, a step that
could affect millions of workers. The issue has come to a boil as states like
California have tried to push companies like Uber and Lyft to classify workers
as employees, meaning they would be entitled to benefits such as overtime pay
and potentially health insurance, a move that the companies have challenged. The
proposed Labor Department rule creates a so-called economic reality test, such
as whether workers set their own schedules or can earn more money by hiring
helpers or acquiring new equipment. The department, in the proposed rule, said
it cannot predict how many workers may see their status change as a result of
the new definitions because of “uncertainties regarding magnitude and other
factors.” But it is nonetheless pushing to have the rule finished before the
end of Trump’s first term, limiting the period of public comment to 30 days,
half the amount of time that agencies are supposed to offer. That has generated
letters of protest from Senate Democrats and 22 state attorneys general. “Workers
across the country deserve a chance to fully examine and properly respond to
these potentially radical changes,” said a letter organized by Sen. Patty
Murray, D-Wash., and signed by 16 other Democratic senators.
The departments
of Labor and Homeland Security are using a tactic known as an interim final
rule, more typically reserved for emergencies, to skip the public comment
period entirely and to immediately enact two regulations that put much tougher
restrictions on work visas for immigrants with special skills. The rule change
is part of the administration’s long-standing goal of limiting immigration. The
Homeland Security Department is also moving, again with an unusually short
30-day comment period, to adopt a rule that will allow it to collect much more
extensive biometric data from individuals applying for citizenship, including
voice, iris and facial recognition scans, instead of just the traditional
fingerprint scan. The measure, which the agency said was needed to curb fraud,
would also allow it for the first time to collect DNA or DNA test results to
verify a relationship between an application for citizenship and someone
already in the United States. A third proposed new Homeland Security rule would
require sponsors of immigrants to do more to prove they have the financial
means to support the individual they are backing, including three years’ worth
of credit reports, credit scores, income tax returns and bank records. Anyone
who accepted welfare benefits during the previous three years would be unable
to sponsor an immigrant unless a second person agrees to do so. The agency is
limiting public comment on that change to 30 days as well.
Unlike most of
the efforts the administration has pushed, the rules intended to tighten
immigration standards would expand federal regulations instead of narrowing
them. They also come at a considerable cost, estimated to be more than $6
billion just for the new demands related to immigrants’ biometric data and
proof of financial capacity for those sponsoring immigrants. The Environmental
Protection Agency, which since the start of the Trump administration has been
moving at a high speed to rewrite federal regulations, is expected to complete
work in the weeks that remain in Trump’s term on two of the nation’s most
important air pollution rules: standards that regulate particulates and ozone
that is formed based on emissions from power plants, car exhaust and other
sources. These two pollutants are blamed for bronchitis, asthma, lung cancer
and other ailments, causing an estimated 7,140 premature deaths a year in the
United States, according to one recent study. The agency is proposing to keep
these standards at their current levels, provoking protests from certain health
experts and environmentalists who argue that the agency is obligated to lower
the limits after new evidence emerged about the harm the pollutants cause. Scott
Pruitt, who served as the EPA administrator in the first 17 months of Trump’s
tenure, set as a goal before he left office to get these new standards adopted
by December 2020, even though the agency had previously expected they would not
be finished until 2022. The agency also is rushing to complete a series of
regulations that will almost certainly make it harder for future
administrations to tighten air pollution and other environmental standards,
including a limit on how science is used in rule-making and a change to the way
costs and benefits are evaluated to justify new rules.
Trump has
played a direct role in pushing to accelerate some regulations. Among them is a
provision finished this summer, nicknamed “bomb trains” by its critics, that
allows railroads to move highly flammable loads of liquefied natural gas on
freight trains. Trump signed an executive order last year directing the
Transportation Department to enact the rule within 13 months — even before it
had been formally proposed. The change was backed by the railroad and natural
gas industry, which has donated millions of dollars to Trump, after
construction of pipelines had been blocked or slowed after protests by
environmentalists. But the proposal provoked an intense backlash from a diverse
array of prominent public safety officials. Among them were groups representing
thousands of mayors, firefighters and fire marshals nationwide and even the
federal government’s own National Transportation Safety Board, which
investigates fatal transportation accidents. The gas is stored in 30,000-gallon
rail tanks at minus 260 degrees to keep it compressed. But if accidentally
released during an accident, it would rapidly expand by nearly 600 times as the
temperature rises and cause what is known as a “boiling liquid expanding vapor
explosion” that if ignited could not be quickly extinguished, potentially
resulting in widespread injury or death if it occurs in a populated area, the
firefighters warned. “It is nearly certain any accident involving a train
consisting of multiple rail cars loaded with LNG will place vast numbers of the
public at risk while fully depleting all local emergency response forces,”
Harold Schaitberger, president of the International Association of Fire
Fighters, wrote in a letter opposing the proposal.
The Transportation
Department still adopted the rule and rejected proposed speed limits for the
trains, generating a petition for a court review by 14 states and the District
of Columbia. “Studies on how to safely transport liquefied natural gas by rail
are still ongoing, and this administration has rushed to implement a rule that
will needlessly endanger people’s lives and threaten our environment,”
Michigan’s attorney general, Dana Nessel, said. Even while the challenge is
underway, the Transportation Department has moved to enact another rule easing
safety standards — in this case, removing a requirement intended to limit the
number of hours truck drivers are allowed behind the wheel and to mandate rest
periods. Certain drivers who carry agricultural products would now be exempt
from this federal mandate in a standard that would again be adopted as an
“interim final rule,” meaning it would be put in place before any public
comment is accepted, under the plan announced by the agency. “Fatigued truck
drivers remain a stubbornly high cause of fatal highway accidents,” said James
Goodwin, a lawyer at the Center for Progressive Reform, a nonprofit group that
tracks regulatory actions. “The law permits agencies to take shortcuts when
there are extraordinary circumstances that call for them. That is not present
here.”
^ Since we
basically know what Trump and his minions are doing now hopefully the next President
(whether this January or after 4 more years) will be able to go through and make
the necessary changes that will keep us safe. Trump and his family seem to
forget that whether he is voted out of office in January 2021 or 4 years after
that – when he can not legally run again – the next President, Congress or both
can go after him and his family for whatever they did while he was in office.
The only way to avoid all all of that - including the possibility of going to
jail - is for Trump to resign and have the new President (Mike Pence) pardon
Trump and his family. That is what Ford did for Nixon. ^
https://news.yahoo.com/regulatory-rush-federal-agencies-secure-142525366.html
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