The Environmental Protection Agency
has overstepped its legal authority by imposing a regulatory agenda on
the states, environmental officials at the state level testified
Wednesday to a Senate committee.
Randy Huffman, cabinet secretary at
the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection, testified that
the EPA’s flood of environmental regulations since President Barack
Obama took office in 2009 chipped away at the Founding Fathers’ intent
of “cooperative federalism” between the national and state governments.
Instead of consulting state
regulators when establishing new policies, Huffman said, EPA bureaucrats
increasingly are imposing regulations through what is called federal
guidance.
“There’s two problems with this: EPA
guidance further eliminates state discretion, and it allows them to
avoid the accountability and transparency of rulemaking,” Huffman
testified before the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works.
When Congress passed the Clean Air
Act more than 40 years ago, Huffman said, lawmakers put states in charge
of establishing procedures to meet federal standards. In fact, over 95
percent of the environmental regulatory duties in the U.S. are carried
out by the states, he said, citing the Environmental Council of the States.
The West Virginia official said
Congress placed the primary responsibility with the states because
lawmakers knew that state authorities would be more knowledgeable of
local environments than D.C. bureaucrats. Rather than following
congressional intent, he said, EPA regulators seized authority from the
states.
“In the past seven years, states have
been forced to digest more of these federal takeovers … than were ever
served in the prior three federal administrations combined 10 times
over,” Becky Keogh, director at the Arkansas Department of Environmental
Quality, testified.
Keogh said the EPA’s Clean Power
Plan, regulations on the coal industry designed to cut carbon emissions,
is illustrative of the diminishment of state sovereignty.
“The reality is that states are more pawn than partner,” she said.
Sen. Jim Inhofe, R-Okla., who chairs
the Committee on Environment and Public Works, noted that the amicus
brief he and 33 other senators along with 171 House members filed against the plan last month at the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals.
In the court papers, the lawmakers
argued that the plan violates the Clean Air Act by coercing states to
implement the EPA’s policies.
In early February, the Supreme Court
halted the EPA’s implementation of the Clean Power Plan until legal
challenges from more than two dozen states, four state agencies, and
dozens of industry groups made their way through federal appeals court.
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