The Trump administration has granted more than 180 polluting facilities nationwide a two-year pause on compliance with Clean Air Act rules. All they had to do was email an inbox set up to route these requests from the EPA to the White House.
In approving these exemptions, the White House didn’t seek input from EPA scientists. Instead, the administration cited authority under the Clean Air Act that had never before been used. Few requests appear to have been denied.
Roughly 250,000 people live within a mile of these facilities, according to EPA and Census Bureau data. Exacerbating historical disparities, about 54% of these people are non-white.
The pause in compliance is part of a much larger strategy to unwind the Clean Air Act, buying time for the administration to deconstruct large portions of the legislative framework regulating the nation’s air quality.
And while the law largely governs toxins, the rollback has also undermined action on climate change, including repealing the legal theory used to classify greenhouse gas emissions like carbon dioxide as regulated pollutants.
In response to ProPublica’s questions, an EPA spokesperson said the agency “played no role” in the approvals, and that requests were forwarded to the White House. A White House spokesperson said in a statement: “The President has provided regulatory relief from certain burdensome Clean Air Act requirements due to national security concerns that critical industries would no longer be able to operate under such stringent standards.”
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The Trump administration has granted more than 180 polluting facilities nationwide a two-year pause on compliance with Clean Air Act rules. All they had to do was email an inbox set up to route these requests from the EPA to the White House.
In approving these exemptions, the White House didn’t seek input from EPA scientists. Instead, the administration cited authority under the Clean Air Act that had never before been used. Few requests appear to have been denied.
Roughly 250,000 people live within a mile of these facilities, according to EPA and Census Bureau data. Exacerbating historical disparities, about 54% of these people are non-white.
The pause in compliance is part of a much larger strategy to unwind the Clean Air Act, buying time for the administration to deconstruct large portions of the legislative framework regulating the nation’s air quality.
And while the law largely governs toxins, the rollback has also undermined action on climate change, including repealing the legal theory used to classify greenhouse gas emissions like carbon dioxide as regulated pollutants.
**Here’s our full story:** [https://www.propublica.org/article/clean-air-act-exemptions-trump-emails](https://www.propublica.org/article/clean-air-act-exemptions-trump-emails)
In response to ProPublica’s questions, an EPA spokesperson said the agency “played no role” in the approvals, and that requests were forwarded to the White House. A White House spokesperson said in a statement: “The President has provided regulatory relief from certain burdensome Clean Air Act requirements due to national security concerns that critical industries would no longer be able to operate under such stringent standards.”