The Trump administration is rushing to approve
dozens of eleventh-hour policy changes…
“Six days after President Donald Trump lost his bid for
reelection, the U.S. Department of Agriculture notified food safety groups that
it was proposing a regulatory change to speed up chicken factory processing
lines, a change that would allow companies to sell more birds. An earlier USDA
effort had broken down on concerns that it could lead to more worker injuries and
make it harder to stop germs like salmonella.
“Ordinarily, a change like this would take about two years to go
through the cumbersome legal process of making new federal regulations. But the
timing has alarmed food and worker safety advocates, who suspect the Trump
administration wants to rush through this rule in its waning days.
“Even as Trump and his allies officially refuse to concede the
Nov. 3 election, the White House and federal agencies are hurrying to finish
dozens of regulatory changes before Joe Biden is inaugurated on Jan. 20. The
rules range from long-simmering administration priorities to last-minute
scrambles and affect everything from creature comforts like showerheads and
clothes washers to life-or-death issues like federal executions and international
refugees.
“They impact everyone from the most powerful, such as oil
drillers, drug makers and tech startups, to the most vulnerable, such as
families on food stamps, transgender people in homeless shelters, migrant
workers and endangered species. ProPublica is tracking those regulations as
they move through the rule-making process.
“Every administration does some version of last-minute
rule-making, known as midnight regulations, especially with a change in
parties. It’s too soon to say how the Trump administration’s tally will stack
up against predecessors. But these final weeks are solidifying conservative
policy objectives that will make it harder for the Biden administration to advance
its own agenda, according to people who track rules developed by federal
agencies.
“‘The bottom line is the Trump administration is trying to get
things published in the Federal Register, leaving the next administration to
sort out the mess,’ said Matthew Kent, who tracks regulatory policy for
left-leaning advocacy group Public Citizen. ‘There are some real roadblocks to
Biden being able to wave a magic wand on these.’
“In some instances, the Trump administration is using shortcuts to
get more rules across the finish line, such as taking less time to accept and
review public feedback. It’s a risky move. On the one hand, officials want to
finalize rules so that the next administration won’t be able to change them
without going through the process all over again. On the other, slapdash rules
may contain errors, making them more vulnerable to getting struck down in
court.
“The Trump administration is on pace to finalize 36 major rules in
its final two months, similar to the 35 to 40 notched by the previous four
presidents, according to Daniel Perez, a policy analyst at the George
Washington University Regulatory Studies Center. In 2017, Republican lawmakers
struck down more than a dozen Obama-era
rules using a fast-track mechanism called the Congressional Review Act.
“That weapon may be less available for Democrats to overturn
Trump’s midnight regulations if Republicans keep control of the Senate, which
will be determined by two Georgia runoffs. Still, a few GOP defections could be
enough to kill a rule with a simple majority.
“‘This White House is not likely to be stopping things and saying
on principle elections have consequences, let’s respect the voters’ decision
and not rush things through to tie the next guys’ hands,’ said Susan Dudley,
who led the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs in the Office of
Management and Budget at the end of the George W. Bush administration. ‘One
concern is the rules are rushed so they didn’t have adequate analysis or public
comment, and that’s what we’re seeing.’
“The Trump White House didn’t respond to requests for comment on
which regulations it’s aiming to finish before Biden’s inauguration. The Biden
transition team also didn’t respond to questions about which of Trump’s parting
salvos the new president would prioritize undoing.
“Many of the last-minute changes would add to the heap of changes
throughout the Trump administration to pare back Obama-era rules and loosen
environmental and consumer protections, all in the name of shrinking the
government’s role in the economy. ‘Our proposal today greatly furthers the
Trump administration’s regulatory reform efforts, which together have already
amounted to the most aggressive effort to reform federal regulations of any
administration,’ Brian Harrison, the chief of staff for the Department of
Health and Human Services, said on a conference call with reporters the day
after the election. Harrison was unveiling a new proposal to
automatically purge regulations that are more than 10 years old unless the
agency decides to keep them.
“For that proposal to become finalized before Jan. 20 would be an
exceptionally fast turnaround. But Harrison left no doubt about that goal. ‘The
reason we’re doing this now is because,’ he said, ‘we at the department are
trying to go as fast as we can in hopes of finalizing the rule before the end
of the first term.’…
“[T]he Environmental Protection Agency is on the cusp of
finalizing several rules that would make it harder to justify pollution
restrictions or lock in soot levels for
at least five years. The agency wants to keep the soot standard unchanged over
the objections of independent scientific advisers and despite emerging evidence
that links particulate pollution to additional coronavirus deaths. An EPA
spokesman declined to comment on the timing of these rules…
“The White House is close to completing several rules that would
extend Trump’s record of restricting immigration and make the changes harder
for the Biden administration to reverse. The pending rules would make it more
difficult to claim asylum by excluding people with criminal convictions (even
those that have been expunged), drastically shortening the application time and
giving immigration judges more latitude to pick and choose what evidence to
consider. The departments of Justice and Homeland Security didn’t respond to
requests for comment.
“Some rules read like Trump’s stump speeches translated into
policy legalese. The Department of Energy is racing to loosen efficiency standards
for showerheads and laundry machines, evoking
Trump’s recurring bits about bathroom water pressure.
‘Do you ever get under a shower and no water comes out?’ Trump said at an
October rally in Nevada. ‘And me, I want that hair to be so beautiful.’
“Notably, the trade group representing washer manufacturers
actually opposes the
administration’s proposal, saying it’s unnecessary because many machines
already have short-cycle options. The proposed rule is supported by
small-government advocates such as the Competitive Enterprise Institute. Water and electric companies warn
it could lead to higher consumption and waste. The Energy Department didn’t
respond to a request for comment.
“The administration is also bucking business groups with proposals
to restrict high-skilled immigration; in October, the departments of Homeland
Security and Labor unveiled regulations to raise wage and education
requirements for H-1B visas, which are often used in the information-technology
industry. (The proposal drew opposition from the Small Business Administration,
saying the higher costs would stifle innovation and growth.) But while raising
the wage scale for skilled immigrants, the administration is pushing a
different new rule to lower wages for ‘low-skilled’ immigrant farmworkers.
“A spokesperson for U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
(part of DHS) told ProPublica that ‘Any delay in responding to an economic
emergency and high unemployment in a way that protects American workers and
ensures the H-1B program is administered consistent with statutory requirements
could cause real harm to the U.S. economy.’ The Department of Labor didn’t
respond to requests for comment.
“Other rules are more clearly accommodating powerful business interests. A rule completed on Nov. 13 would restrict pension managers from considering social and environmental impacts (known in the industry as ESG) when choosing investments. Another Labor Department rule would make it easier for companies like Uber to withhold benefits by classifying workers as independent contractors instead of full employees. Both proposals had a truncated public comment period of only 30 days. A spokesman said the agency considers all comments regardless of how long the period lasts and that the department is working to complete all regulations on its agenda…
“The Trump administration is also pressing ahead with opening up
more federal lands to oil and gas development, despite low prices, sluggish
demand and complaints from environmental groups that drilling would encroach on
wildlife habitats and national parks. Bids are starting at just $2 an acre for
more than 445,000 acres of public land with leases for sale to energy companies
through the Bureau of Land Management, according to data from EnergyNet.com.
“The leases could expand dramatically as the BLM finalizes a plan to allow oil and gas drilling on an additional 6.8 million acres of the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska, a habitat for bears, musk oxen, caribou and birds. Spokespeople for the BLM didn’t respond to a request for comment. Separately, the Interior Department will open up drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. The agency is spending 30 days asking companies for bids, and then sales need another 30 days to take effect — just enough time to beat the clock before the inauguration.
“An Interior Department spokesman said the agency is taking ‘a
significant step’ to implement Congress’ direction in the 2017 Republican tax
bill to start drilling in ANWR. ‘The department will continue to implement
President Trump’s agenda to create more American jobs, protect the safety of
American workers, support domestic energy production and conserve our
environment,’ the spokesman, Conner Swanson, said. He didn’t say whether the
leases would be done by Jan. 20.
“Leases that have not yet been issued would be easier for the
Biden administration to drop, but even finalized leases could be withdrawn if
officials decide they were improperly issued or too environmentally dangerous,
according to Erik Grafe, an attorney with Earthjustice in Anchorage.
(Leaseholders might argue they deserve to be compensated.)
“In addition, even once leases are issued, companies need permits
and authorizations before actually taking action on the ground, Grafe said.
Those steps would take more time and face legal challenges. Earthjustice and
other groups are already suing to
block the Arctic drilling program as a whole. ‘We have been protecting this
place forever,’ said Bernadette Demientieff, executive director of the Gwich’in
steering committee representing indigenous hunting communities in northeast
Alaska. ‘This fight is far from over, and we will do whatever it takes to
defend our sacred homelands’” (ProPublica).
Isaac Arnsdorf is a reporter at ProPublica covering national
politics. Lydia DePillis, Dara Lind, Lisa Song, Jake Kincaid, Doris Burke, Annie Waldman and Zipporah Osei contributed reporting. ProPublica is a
nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power.
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