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Eye on OIRA: Coal Ash Meetings Up to 42, or More Than Half of All OIRA Meetings on EPA Rules

Fans of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy have long celebrated the number 42 as the “answer to the ultimate question of life, the universe, and everything.” Now, the number 42 also happens to be the number of meetings that OIRA has hosted regarding EPA’s pending coal ash rule, as it works toward developing the Obama Administration’s answer to the ultimate question of how to regulate the disposal of this toxic waste.

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OIRA Meetings on Coal Ash, as of April 5, 2010

(Click links to see attendees and examine documents presented to OIRA staff.)

Parties Supporting EPA Proposal (13)

Parties Opposing EPA Proposal (29)

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Those 42 meetings represent just over half of the 80 meetings OIRA has hosted regarding its review of all of the EPA’s proposed and final rules. In total, OIRA has held 142 meetings on pending rules during the Obama Administration. The meetings regarding the coal ash rule comprise 30% of those meetings (42/142)—by far the largest percentage for any one rule. Of course, when OIRA hold meetings to discuss general topics—such as the role of cost-benefit analysis in regulatory policy—it does not post similar notices.

Most of the recent coal ash rule meetings have involved public interest groups, though the vast majority of meetings still involved industry representatives who opposed EPA’s proposed rule. The real problem, though, isn’t the ratio of meetings involving parties opposed to the rule to meetings involving parties in favor of the rule. (After all, it’s not as if public interest groups will achieve some victory by having an equal number of meetings as industry representatives.) Instead, the real problem is that OIRA is hosting this many meetings regarding a single rule in the first place—all before EPA has published a proposed rule, which will be subject to public comment by any and all parties (as required by law).

An Administration Official claimed in January that OIRA is required by Executive Order to meet with every stakeholder that asks for a meeting, but nothing in Executive Order 12866—which defines OIRA’s regulatory review responsibilities—supports this claim.

OIRA should immediately release the rule back to EPA, the body that Congress has charged with the responsibility of soliciting and considering public input on the substance of environmental regulations like this one.

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James Goodwin | April 5, 2010

Eye on OIRA: Coal Ash Meetings Up to 42, or More Than Half of All OIRA Meetings on EPA Rules

Fans of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy have long celebrated the number 42 as the “answer to the ultimate question of life, the universe, and everything.” Now, the number 42 also happens to be the number of meetings that OIRA has hosted regarding EPA’s pending coal ash rule, as it works toward developing the […]

Ben Somberg | April 2, 2010

CPSC and HUD: Defnitely Remove that Drywall. And Wiring, and Gas Pipes, and…

The Consumer Product Safety Commission and the Department of Housing and Urban Development released “interim remediation guidance” today for those affected by contaminated drywall (release, full guidance). CPSC had also recently released new lab test results showing high sulfur emissions from certain drywall samples. The agencies conclude: Based on scientific study of the problem to […]

Holly Doremus | April 1, 2010

EPA Drops the Hammer on Mountaintop Removal

Cross-posted from Legal Planet. Last week, I reported on EPA’s proposed veto of a Clean Water Act section 404 permit for a major mountaintop removal coal mining project in West Virginia. My view at the time was something along the lines of two-and-a-half cheers. I wrote that it was very good news, but didn’t articulate […]

William Buzbee | April 1, 2010

Climate Legislation Federalism Choices: Reflections After Murkowski, Brown and in Anticipation of the Forthcoming Kerry-Graham-Lieberman Bill

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Shana Campbell Jones | March 31, 2010

Big Chicken Plays Chicken Little in Maryland While Assaulting Academic Freedom and Access to Justice in the Meantime

The proverbial poop has hit the fan in Maryland this month after two environmental groups – the Assateague Coastal Trust and the Waterkeeper Alliance – sued Perdue Farms, Inc. and Hudson Farm, a Perdue-contract chicken factory farm in Berlin, Maryland, for violating the Clean Water Act. Water sampling from ditches next to Hudson Farm found […]

James Goodwin | March 29, 2010

50 OIRAs? Another State (New Jersey) Drinks the Regulatory Review Kool-Aid

It’s official: Centralized regulatory review is trickling down to the states. Last month, in one of his very first actions as the newly elected Governor of New Jersey, Chris Christie issued a pair of sweeping executive orders (no. 1 and no. 2) mandating centralized review of all state agency regulations to ensure that they are […]

Holly Doremus | March 26, 2010

EPA Proposes to Veto Mountaintop Removal Project

Cross-posted from Legal Planet. EPA’s seesaw on mountaintop removal mining continues. Last time I wrote about this topic it was to note EPA’s approval of the Hobet 45 project. Today, EPA announced that it is proposing to veto the Spruce No. 1 project, as it had threatened last fall. Should EPA follow through on its […]

Holly Doremus | March 26, 2010

If Not at Yucca Mountain, then Where?

Cross-posted from Legal Planet. Last August, Dan announced “The Death of Yucca Mountain,” pointing to a news story in which Senator Harry Reid ( D – Nev.) declared that he had dealt a fatal blow to plans to store high-level radioactive waste in a repository there. The Department of Energy sought to pull the plug […]

David Driesen | March 24, 2010

Incorporating the Best of Cantwell-Collins into KGL: Don’t Forget the Missing Instrument

Last week, Senators Kerry, Graham, and Lieberman (KGL) reportedly released an 8-page outline for a bill mitigating climate disruption that they are crafting in order to try to break the deadlock that has heretofore blocked legislation in the Senate. ClimateWire reported that the KGL bill would incorporate ideas from the bill introduced by Senators Maria […]