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GOP, Big Business Deregulation 'Wish List' Targets EPA, Other Protections
House Republicans are scrutinizing a wide array of existing and proposed Obama administration regulations in areas as diverse as the environment and Wall Street, and they are taking guidance from industry groups that say the rules threaten jobs.
Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif, the new chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Issa scheduled a hearing Thursday, Feb. 10, 2011, to let business representatives vent their frustration with government regulations. David Doniger, director of climate policy at the NRDC, said Issa effectively asked companies: "Send me your Christmas list, and I'll see what I can do."(AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta, File) Responding to solicitations from Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.), businesses have asked Congress to roll back or preempt more than 150 rules governing their industries, according to documents obtained by The Washington Post.
In many cases, businesses are seizing the opportunity to reopen regulatory debates that they previously lost. In his new role as chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, Issa will begin a series of hearings Thursday, an effort aimed at fulfilling the new GOP House majority's goal of making federal regulations friendlier to business.
The Post reviewed more than 200 letters and reports that businesses sent to Issa targeting regulations across the federal government. The rules under scrutiny include familiar issues suchas greenhouse gas emissions, health-care reform and the landmark Wall Street overhaul. But the committee also will examine more obscure regulations. For instance, makers of some cleaning products that remove mold and mildew have asked the committee to reconsider rules that require their products to be registered as pesticides under the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act.
Among those pushing for changes are some of Washington's most powerful interest groups.
The Business Roundtable, a coalition of chief executive officers from major corporations, voiced concern about a swath of requirements, including executive pay disclosures. Smaller interests have also weighed in, such as the Kitchen Cabinet Manufacturers Association, which flagged a regulation restricting formaldehyde in pressed wood.
In December, as he prepared to assume the chairmanship of the oversight panel, Issa asked industry groups to identify regulations that "have negatively impacted job growth." He said the probe is "a starting point for the broader discussion that will unfold about the regulatory barriers to job creation.
These aren't judgments or recommendations from a congressional committee, but rather information from job creators about regulations they see as flawed and harmful to job creation and economic recovery."
In their responses to Issa, many of the industry groups broadly said that government regulations would cost jobs but did not back up their claims with evidence.
Issa's committee can turn a spotlight on the regulations, but it does not have the power to overturn or change them.
The regulatory scrutiny poses a test for President Obama as he prepares for a 2012 reelection campaign in which jobs and the economy will be major issues. The administration and congressional Democrats could choose to draw a contrast with Republicans by defending regulations intended to protect public health and safety, environmental quality and consumer and investor interests. Or they could seek common ground with the business community.
The White House has tried to strike a balance, as Obama and his new chief of staff, former corporate executive William M. Daley, have begun a campaign to patch up relations with the corporate world.
On Monday, Obama will deliver a speech at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. And the president recently issued an executive order calling for a government-wide "look back" to modify, streamline and eliminate excessive regulations.
"If there are rules on the books that are needlessly stifling job creation and economic growth, we will fix them," said Jen Psaki, deputy White House communications director. "But we have a responsibility to protect the health and safety of the American people, and rolling back regulations that ensure access to clean drinking water, protect children from lead poisoning and put in place a safe and secure financial system on the heels of the worst financial crisis in a generation is not a responsible approach to governing."
Over the past month, the administration withdrew proposals for two new regulations that businesses opposed. One would have strengthened workplace noise standards and the other would have required employers to record their workers' musculoskeletal injuries. Both were flagged in letters to Issa.
In their letters, business leaders express alarm about the slow pace of the economic recovery and what they characterize as the growing role government is playing in the private sector.
"Business owners remain on edge regarding the tidal wave of federal government regulation that has been advanced or proposed over the past two years. . . .The pain of the harsh recession was intensified and lengthened by this hyper-regulatory environment," Karen Kerrigan, president of the Small Business and Entrepreneurship Council, wrote in a Jan. 12 letter to Issa.
Murray Energy, a coal-mining company in Alledonia, Ohio, that employs 3,000 people, told Issa that the Environmental Protection Agency's greenhouse gas and clean air rules, those existing and those proposed, "must be stopped immediately."
"Jobs and lives are being destroyed by Mr. Obama and his out-of-control, radical U.S. EPA and his appointees to it," chairman and chief executive Robert E. Murray wrote. He concluded: "America, our industry and jobs, are under siege by Mr. Obama and his U.S. EPA."
Issa did not solicit comments about government regulations from traditional critics of the corporate world, including environmental groups, consumer advocates and labor unions.
In an interview Sunday, Rep. Elijah Cummings (Md.), the ranking Democrat on the committee, voiced frustration that Issa's staff had not yet provided him with copies of the letters.
"We, too, are anxious to address regulations that might be out-dated or may be having an unreasonable impact on the production of jobs," Cummings said, but he added that Congress must weigh industry's desire to repeal regulations with environmental and public safety concerns.
"If just getting rid of regulations was the easy way to create jobs, it would've been done. These are very complex issues. . . .It's one thing to have a job, and it's another thing to know that there are regulations in place to make sure that you come home at the end of the day, that you're not harmed, and that American people are kept safe. That's the balance."
David Doniger, director of climate policy at the Natural Resources Defense Council, said Issa effectively asked companies: "Send me your Christmas list, and I'll see what I can do."
"They don't seem to be interested in finding out what's true, what's real," Doniger said. He added that if Issa "really wanted to know what was going on, you would ask both sides to come in and tell you the facts."
Issa's spokesman, Kurt Bardella, said Issa's outreach was directed intentionally only at job creators. The committee welcomes input from any other stakeholders, he said.
Many of the business groups zeroed in on existing and anticipated rules by the EPA. The long list of targeted environmental regulations include those limiting emissions from industrial boilers, pollution in the Chesapeake Bay and chemical discharges from Appalachian mountaintop coal mining.
At least 13 industry groups targeted the EPA's proposed first attempt to regulate coal ash, the waste created by coal-burning power plants. The issue gained national attention in 2008 when a coal-ash holding cell ruptured near Knoxville, Tenn., sending 5.4 million cubic yards of toxic sludge into a nearby river and countryside.
More than two dozen groups said a proposal to require utilities, manufacturers and refiners to use the most efficient technology with industrial boilers and solid waste incinerators would be unduly costly. The American Forest and Paper Association said the regulation would cost companies in the forest-products industry more than $6 billion and put "tens of thousands of jobs at risk due to mill closures."
Businesses also said new fuel efficiency standards intended to curb greenhouse gas emissions from automobiles were hurting their ability to create jobs. The Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers wrote in a Jan. 11 letter to Issa that meeting 2012-2016 fuel efficiency standards would cost the industry more than $50 billion.
Shane Karr, a vice president of the association, wrote that other new regulations involving ethanol, fuel economy labeling and rearward visibility "have the potential to impose significant additional costs on the car-buying public, and therefore also bear careful scrutiny."
Other industries opposed changes stemming from the sweeping 2010 Wall Street regulatory overhaul passed in the wake of the financial crisis.
For example, the Business Roundtable objected to a requirement that corporations disclose how the chief executive's pay compares to that of the typical employee. Computing the ratio would be "very difficult and expensive," the group said, and warned that companies could shed jobs to game the system.
"It could potentially cause companies to take actions that result in less employment, such as outsourcing, to produce better ratios," the group wrote in its Jan. 7 submission to Issa.
Also under scrutiny is a Federal Aviation Administration plan to combat pilot fatigue by mandating more rest time between shifts. The proposal came after fatigue was cited as a likely factor in the February 2009 crash of Colgan Air Flight 3407 near Buffalo.
In a letter to Issa, Nicholas E. Calio, president of the Air Transport Association, an airline trade group, wrote that the FAA "failed to link their specific regulatory changes to targeted improvements."
But not every business group wrote to Issa with a wish list. The American Cleaning Institute, a trade association for manufacturers of soaps, detergents and household cleaning products, said that it already had addressed issues with regulatory agencies "through normal channels."
"We believe our concerns will be addressed," the group's president, Ernie Rosenberg, wrote to Issa on Jan. 13. "Toward that end, ACI does not have a specific matter to bring to the attention of the committee at this point in time."
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27 Comments so far
Show AllCorporate Heaven
If you took the republican quotes from this article
and attributed them to the democrats
you would be closer to
the truth.
The democrats are probably breathing a sigh of relief
catching their breath, as it were, as it is,
the illusion is
secure.
The rule-making and study-producing burdens the Dodd-Frank Act imposes on the SEC are putting the SEC in an impossible bind. They don't have the resources to meet the congressionally-mandated deadlines, many of the deadlines would themselves be unrealistic even if the SEC had the manpower and many of the legislative goals are naive and unrealistic. There was a need for reform legislation, but the Democrats rammed this statute through without adequate consideration just to get a legislative "win" on the board. The "win" will turn out really to be a "loss", particularly for the SEC, which cannot comply with what the Congress naively asked for.
This "deregulation will create jobs" is a bald faced lie.
Regulation provides jobs. Good ones. Who do you think makes all pollution control equipment and projects, and does all that environmental, occupational, and consumer product testing?
The savings from dirty air and water and our continued trajectory toward an unlivable hot planet, will only be more money for the rich. Why would a corporation expand their payroll when they can simply pocket the savings from deregulation?
How many jobs did the Republicans 'create' with Bush tax cuts for the filthy rich?
How many jobs has Obama created for the filthy poor?
Exactly.
Both in foreign and domestic policy, Obama is indistinguishable from Bush.
If business can't figure out a way to do business in an environmentally responsible way, then they shouldn't be doing it in the first place. What a bunch of winers!!! It's all one way for them, isn't it? Terminal $$ickness.
It's not 'business' they're interested in.
Is that winners, whiners, or wieners?
The definition of "jobs" by Republicans is cheap labor and bigger profits. They would have the average American eating gruel, living in squalor and working like slaves. Where will the poor bastards sleep once "business" has purchased our roads and there is no place to sleep out of the weather without paying a toll?
Obama is as predictable as the sun rising in the East. He will go out and give a lofty speech, we will be totally mesmerized by his eloquence, the MSM will report on what a profound and inspiring speech it was, and how dedicated he is to the Middle Class and creating jobs. Obama will go back to the White House, meet in secret with the Republican power brokers, and give away the store in the name of "compromise and bi-partisanship." That is his modus operandi. You can count on it.
The message is clear: Kill the planet for profit. Our species is fighting a losing battle to corporate greed. You can have corporate capitalism or a viable planet, but not both.
Great example of how the D/R dictatorship works. The "bad cop" faction presents more kleptocratic, destructive, insitutionally corrupt proposals; the D faction then feigns outrage, and then ends up voting with the R faction.
Happens every time.
Yet we the sheeple are so afflicted with Stockholm Syndrome, we continue to believe that voting for the D/R dictatorship will somehow serve our interests. Well folks hows that working out lately?
There is no such thing as left or right in US politics, there is no such thing as two parties. We live in the most expensive and sophisticated propaganda state in history. Apparently, the Oligarchy get what they pay for.
Instead of D or R after the political whore's name, it will be "K" for Kleptocrat
Lol, you can't make this stuff up:
the Business Roundtable objected to a requirement that corporations
disclose how the chief executive's pay compares to that of the typical employee.
Computing the ratio would be "very difficult and expensive," the group said, and
warned that companies could shed jobs to game the system.
"It could potentially cause companies to take actions that result in less employment,
such as outsourcing, to produce better ratios," the group wrote in its Jan. 7 submission
to Issa.
I mean, does that make any sense at all to anyone? Talk about a heaping pile of bullshit.
When you weild the power that the "Business Roundatble" does, you don't have to make any sense.
You know, reading this stuff would be great for people with low blood pressure (it would go up in a hurry).
These corrupt reptiles have no honor and no decency. I wish they would all just die.
I think all CEO's, all of congress, the white house and the supreme idiots at the court would benefit from being duct taped for a year with just a small hole in the duct tape to feed through a straw.
I have some even more creative ideas for the brass at the pentagon but I can't post it here. :>)
To the American people he's Darrell Ice-ya.
Bill Maher goes too easy on this fascist guest
Bill Maher is a Zionist. Too bad George Carlin passed. Carlin had more intelligence in his little finger than Maher ever had.
I like Bill Maher, he's brilliant but he is a Zionist. Though lately after "Religulous" I think he's starting to come around. In Hollywood one criticism of Zionists could easily get you Mel Gibsoned so he won't dare be politically incorrect where Israel is concerned.
I hear you, just ask Helen Thomas or Norm Finkelstein about that.
To be fair, although no Carlin, I have to admit Maher has made me laugh more than once.
The deregulation set in motion by Ronald Reagan, expanded by Bill Clinton, exploded by W. Bush drove the AmeriKKKan economy into the worst recession since the 1930s.
Now, we have the current president, Barry along with his henchmen, Geithner, Daly, et al continuing the looting of the treasury.
God damn these son of bitches!
The Democrats can't complain about the Republicans, since they are just doing what the Dems did over the past two years. Obama's administration is the most secret in our history, second only to Bush's. Shame on them both. Neither deserves a future vote for any office.
Enough of this "deregulation" talk! What we need is even tougher regulations than what we have already. Even the Democrats in Congress are too weak-kneed; what we need are a bunch of realists who have the guts to pass the kind of regulations that are necessary to keep our country from going into the drink.
Dear mr. issa;
It would be nice to hear what the citizens had to say. You know, like go to Harriman Tenn. and ask the citizens what they feel about flyash. Did you forget that disaster already?
Interesting comment too small business person group Re:" saving jobs and lives." hmmm, we haven't had any job growth for a deacde or so, what jobs were you going to save?
Saving "lives," that's an interesting thought, considering how people In PA are having trouble with their drinking water, and Wyoming too can't drink their water! A lot of little towns all over America keep producing austic, kids asthmatic kids and kids with cancer at such young ages. So, darryl, do you think that maybe pollutants in the air, water, food could be a cause? What exactly do you eat, and where do you get your water?
Auto manufacturing group: that's another weird one. I'm not sure how this works..because, well, are ANY cars made here any more? I also heard that the Detroit expatriets are making cars for the overseas people with better mileage. Is that true, and if so why would it be different here?
Oh darryl, you are doing the work for those who elected you, aren't you. Follow the money, but it really does bother me, mr. issa, that my one vote just can't keep up with those corporate people .Are you going to modify the Constitution by eliminating the DNA vote, just to make it official?
Although, mr. issa, since you can only recommend, why are you even doing this? Don't you have more pressing work to do in Congress to benefit ALL the people in the nation?
The corporations are like little children having a temper tantrum. Give us deregulation or we will not create jobs.I would like to see a report listing all corporations especially the defense industry and sports industry with the amount of tax money they receive every year. The Welfare Kings demand tax breaks and deregulation while they support presidents who will send U.S. young people into harms way in unjust wars. This is how corporations keep their profits up. Counterproductive wars and sports to keep the masses minds occupied and off the illegal and immoral wars that use up weapons and increase their profits making more weapons. Millions of dollars spent on military equipment probably the most expensive drones $30 million for one drone.Hundreds of millions of tax dollars spent on sports arenas. What about shared sacrifice, during this tightening of the belts( laying off government workers) for education, health care, food security, housing,job training.