A.G. Underwood Leads Coalition Of 23 States, Counties, And Cities In Opposing Trump EPA Plan To Censor Agency Science 

 News from the New York Attorney General's Office 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 17, 2018

Attorney General's Office Press Office / 212-416-8060
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A.G. UNDERWOOD LEADS COALITION OF 23 STATES, COUNTIES, AND CITIES IN OPPOSING TRUMP EPA PLAN TO CENSOR AGENCY SCIENCE 

AG Underwood: If the Trump EPA Doesn’t Abandon this Cynical, Dangerous, and Illegal Proposal, We’ll See Them in Court 

Proposed Pruitt-Era Rule Limiting Scientific Evidence that Can Be Used to Protect Health and Environment is “Arbitrary And Capricious, Violates Federal Law, and Contains Clear Errors” – and “Makes Little Sense as a Matter Of Science” 

Proposal Yet Another Attempt By Trump Administration to Undermine Foundation of EPA’s Environmental And Public Health Protections 

NEW YORK – New York Attorney General Barbara D. Underwood, leading a 23-member coalition of states, counties, and cities, today called on Acting Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Andrew Wheeler to withdrawal his predecessor’s “harmful and deeply flawed” proposal to censor science at the Agency. The call was part of detailed legal and technical comments submitted by the coalition on former EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt’s proposed “Strengthening Transparency in Regulatory Science” rule. 

That proposed rule would exclude from EPA decision making any scientific studies, models, and other important information that have been validated by peer review simply because not all underlying data are available to the public. The coalition charges that, in addition to making “little sense as a matter of science,” the proposal is “arbitrary and capricious, violates controlling federal law, and contains clear errors in reasoning.” The coalition affirms that they “stand ready to pursue legal remedies should EPA persist in this misguided effort.” 

“The so-called Science Transparency Rule has nothing to do with science and everything to do with special interests,” said Attorney General Underwood. “Instead of ensuring that the EPA uses the best available science in its decision making, the proposed rule would do the opposite: censor, exclude, and undermine science at the expense of our health and environment. This rule would open the Trump EPA's door even wider for politics and corporate interests to drive decisions – and is nothing more than a cynical, dangerous, and illegal attack on the very foundation of our environmental and public health laws. If the EPA doesn’t abandon this science censorship plan, we’ll see them in court.”

The comments were led by Attorney General Underwood and New Jersey Attorney General Gurbir Grewal and signed by the Attorneys General of New York, New Jersey, California, Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Washington, and the District of Columbia; the Secretary of the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection; and the Attorneys of King County (WA) and the cities of Chicago, Los Angeles, New York, Oakland, Philadelphia, and San Francisco.

In the comments, the coalition argues that the EPA is legally prohibited from adopting the proposed rule because it directly conflicts with statutory requirements regarding the EPA’s consideration of scientific information.  No federal environmental statute directly allows – or even suggests – that the EPA can ignore the “latest” or “best” or “appropriately designed and conducted” scientific studies whenever the underlying data are not public. As prominent scientific organizations have noted, peer review of scientific evidence is routinely performed despite the underlying data not being publicly available, as there are often very good reasons – such as the protection of personal privacy and confidentiality, and proprietary interests and property rights – why some research data simply cannot be made fully available. 

By compromising EPA’s ability to use the latest, best available, and generally-accepted science, the coalition contends that the proposed rule would violate the very federal laws that EPA is required to uphold – including the Safe Drinking Water Act, the Clean Water and Air Acts, the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act, Toxic Substances Control Act, and other core environmental and public health statutes. 

The coalition also contends that the proposal fails to meet the most fundamental of legal requirements for a valid rulemaking under the federal Administrative Procedure Act (APA), as it is too vague, conclusory, and conditional to allow for meaningful public participation. For example, the actual parameters of the rule are unclear, the alternatives under consideration are open-ended, and critical information, such as its actual cost, is entirely missing. Further, the coalition charges that the EPA’s failure to consult with scientific experts – including its own internal science advisory board – conflicts with the APA’s fundamental requirement that an agency developing a proposed rule consult with persons having expertise regarding the subject matter of the proposal.    

The comments also push back against the EPA’s assertions that the proposed rule would not affect New York and other states. EPA standards and regulations are of fundamental importance to states, and actions that limit the science used to set standards and regulations directly impact them. For example, EPA standards – such as National Ambient Air Quality Standards – not only form the backbone of New York’s efforts to ensure the quality of our air, water, and land, and protect the health, safety, and welfare of our residents, but also serve as a backstop to prevent pollution from out-of-state sources from undercutting our efforts. Even those states that are not statutorily required to apply federal standards may not always have the institutional capacity to develop their own standards and thus, must rely on the standards set by the EPA. 

In May 2018, New York, leading a coalition of Attorneys General from eight states, wrote to then Administrator Pruitt, urging him to withdraw the proposed rule. The letter urged him to convene a process to consult with the National Academy of Sciences and other independent scientists and science organizations before deciding whether any of the proposed changes to the Agency’s use of scientific evidence were in order.

Earlier this week, Attorney General Underwood led a coalition of 13 Attorneys General and State Agencies in calling on EPA to drop its proposed overhaul of how the Agency values environmental and public health protections.  Coupled with that effort, and former Administrator Pruitt’s directive forbidding many of the most qualified experts to sit on EPA science advisory panels, EPA’s science censorship proposal is part of the Trump Administration’s continued effort to undermine the foundations of EPA’s public health and the environment protections. 

This matter is being handled for Attorney General Underwood by Special Assistant Attorney General Gavin McCabe, Chief Scientist Jodi Feld, Environmental Scientist Linda Wilson, and Policy Advisor Peter C. Washburn. The Environmental Protection Bureau is led by Bureau Chief Lemuel M. Srolovic and is part of the Division of Social Justice, which is led by Executive Deputy Attorney General for Social Justice Matthew Colangelo.