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Dems Target Law Allowing Trump to Nix Trove of Obama-Era Climate Rules

Published: May 18, 2017 |

Senator Cory Booker.

Senator Cory Booker.
[Click image to enlarge]

Senator Tom Udall.

Senator Tom Udall.
[Click image to enlarge]

Congressional Democrats are taking aim at a law that has allowed the Trump administration to roll back many of former President Barack Obama’s climate regulations.

Democratic Sens. Cory Booker of New Jersey and Tom Udall of New Mexico introduced the Sunset the CRA and Restore American Protections (or SCRAP) Act to eliminate the law President Donald Trump used to repeal dozens of his predecessor’s environmental rules.

The president has used the Congressional Review Act (CRA), a law passed in 1996 that makes it easier for lawmakers to repeal regulations from the executive branch. Congress only needs a simple majority to nix recently issued regulations, but it must act on the regulation within 60 days.

Booker and Udall’s proposal would allow federal agencies to reinstate rules that have already been struck down under the CRA, which has been used only once since 2001, when former President George W. Bush used it to repeal a Clinton-era labor rule.

Democrats argue Republicans are abusing the law.

“It’s like using a sledgehammer when a chisel is needed,” Udall said. “The CRA never should have been passed into law, and it’s past time to repeal it.”

Trump used the law to overturn environmental regulations like the Department of the Interior’s $1.2 billion stream protection rule affecting coal production, internet regulations, financial rules, and healthcare rules.

Right-leaning public policy group American Action Forum projects the CRA bills will eliminate 4.3 million hours of paperwork and $3.7 billion in compliance costs. Industry groups, meanwhile, estimate that slashing the regulations could save up to $36.2 billion in compliance costs.

The Senate is considering a CRA bill to wipe out rules on hydraulic fracturing on public lands. Eliminating the rule could save taxpayers $1.8 billion and eliminate 82,170 hours of paperwork, according to AAF.

Source: (May 16, 2017) The Daily Caller


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