Join us.

We’re working to create a just society and preserve a healthy environment for future generations. Donate today to help.

Donate

In April, CPR released a paper that looked at 12 critical rulemaking activities that we urged the Obama administration to finish by June 2012. The new regulatory agendas released by the agencies earlier this month show that instead of moving forward, the agencies are often slowing down.  Contrary to the “tsunami” of regulations that the Chamber of Commerce claims is hampering economic recovery, this is a molasses flow that will delay life-saving public protections for workers, air breathers and water drinkers. 

One rule that was on track in April is now definitely off track: an update to the National Ambient Air Quality Standard (NAAQS) for particulate matter. Another rule that was on track is now probably off track: the Power Plant New Source Performance Standards for limiting greenhouse gases were pushed back from May 2012 to Jun 2012, which is the deadline we identified to complete rules in Obama’s first term (after that point, re-election politics will likely stifle any continued efforts to finish important rulemakings, and, in any event, rules completed after that point risk being overturned under the Congressional Review Act if Republicans are able to win both houses of Congress and the White House in the 2012 elections).

All or parts of eight of the rulemaking activities highlighted in the paper have been severely delayed since the paper was released in April:

Portions of two other rulemaking activities we highlighted in our report have also been slightly delayed since April:

And the best the agencies can do for the remaining rules is not to slow the timeline down any further:

It’s not clear why all of these rules have been delayed. Perhaps the Obama Administration is bowing to pressure from regulated industries and their conservative allies in Congress. Perhaps the agencies have lacked the resources to continue moving forward on these critical safeguards, having been distracted and delayed by the misguided look-back exercise required under Obama’s new Executive Order on regulation. Considering the benefits these rules would confer in terms of reduced greenhouse gas pollution, avoided emissions of toxic air pollutants, protection of wetlands and marginal waters, more accountability for serial offenders at mines, and safer workplaces, the Obama administration should be racing to finish these rules, not pushing them back.