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Mitt Romney Wants to Force EPA to Lie to Americans About Whether the Air is Safe to Breathe

What is it with Mitt Romney and his penchant for lying to Americans about air pollution?

NRDC Action Fund director, Heather Taylor wrote about him lying to an Iowa audience this week with the falsehood that the Environmental Protection Agency wants to regulate farm dust. It’s a lie that he has repeated before in an effort to frighten farmers and deceive voters.

It turns out Romney has also vowed to change the Clean Air Act to require EPA to lie to Americans about whether the air is clean and healthy to breathe. Romney wants to eliminate the exclusive health basis that has been the foundation for our landmark clean air law for over 40 years. Romney’s approach would force EPA to depart from scientifically-grounded, health-protective standards and respond instead to cost complaints by industry lobbyists and political interference by White House economists.

In the process, he would overturn a unanimous Supreme Court decision authored by Justice Antonin Scalia that ruled clean air standards must be based on what is necessary to protect Americans’ health, based on medical science rather than industry cost complaints.

As I have noted previously:

For over 40 years the Clean Air Act has required the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to set honest air quality standards that are “requisite to protect the public health” with an “adequate margin of safety.”  Clean Air standards must be honestly based on the best health science and medical understanding concerning how much pollution is harmful to humans. Standards may not be weakened or distorted by political or other non-medical factors.

The New York Times recently reported however, that Romney supports eliminating the longstanding health foundation for clean air standards. Instead he wants compliance costs by polluting industries to factor into determining clean air standards. This would pervert the question of how much air pollution is unhealthy for humans to breathe as a matter of the best scientific and medical understanding, letting economic factors force EPA to depart from truly protective air quality standards.

Romney’s approach is the same dirty agenda pushed by Tea Party Republicans in the House of Representatives, which passed a bill this year to dramatically weaken clean air protections following this very playbook.

I have described what the House Republicans’ bill would mean if it became law:

The bill would force the head of EPA to adopt unhealthy clean air standards for smog pollution if someone decides it costs too much to set healthy standards. The legislation then would compel EPA to misrepresent those unhealthy air quality standards to Americans as sufficient to achieve “clean air.”

This is no different from Congress forcing doctors to lie to patients about their correct diagnoses if some government bureaucrat or economist or insurance company says it costs too much to treat the honestly diagnosed illness.

The American Lung Association has rightly dubbed this bill the “Gasp Act,” and ALA opposes it along with many other medical organizations. Fortunately the Senate and President Obama oppose the legislation too, so the Tea Party’s House bill has stalled. That could change if the GOP takes over the Senate and Romney becomes president.

It’s ironic that Romney condemns so-called “death panels” that do not exist under President Obama’s healthcare law, then turns around and pushes a process under the Clean Air Act in which bureaucrats and economists and politicians get to decide that some lives are not worth saving or protecting because it allegedly costs industry polluters too much.

Romney wants to replace a clean air process with dirty air panels that will deny health protections to Americans if the safeguards don’t pass a politicized cost-benefit calculation that the Clean Air Act has abhorred for over 40 years.

Lying during the campaign is a terrible thing. But it’s so much worse that Romney is running on actual policies to weaken clean air protections and require EPA to lie to all Americans about whether our air is safe to breathe.

 

 

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Mitt Romney’s Toxic Politics

This week Mitt Romney dove quite publicly into the choppy waters of environmental policy for the first time as the presumed GOP presidential nominee. He flailed and sank to a new low.

On the eve of a Senate vote on whether to repeal life-saving mercury and toxic air pollution standards for power plants, Mr. Romney issued a statement saying he opposed the safeguards—putting him squarely on the side of the polluters.

Luckily the majority of Senators didn’t listen to Mr. Romney, and the dirty measure failed to pass — with five Republicans among those voting down the repeal. But Mr. Romney’s decision to enter this debate shows just how captive he is to corporate polluters and extreme Tea Party special interests. When it comes to environmental policy, Mr. Romney has yet to move a millimeter toward the middle, whatever his apologists may be predicting.

His position on these standards certainly won’t help ordinary Americans. The safeguards he opposed will protect children and the unborn against mercury and lead pollution that permanently damages their developing brains and nervous systems. They will also reduce more than 80 other toxic air pollutants from power plants including arsenic, cancer-causing dioxins, acid gases and heavy metals. Cutting down on these pollutants will prevent up to 11,000 premature deaths, nearly 5,000 non-fatal heart attacks and 130,000 asthma attacks every year by reducing dangerous air pollution emitted by power plants that burn coal and oil.

By suddenly speaking out against these safeguards, Mr. Romney flip-flopped from positions he had taken as Massachusetts Governor. Back then, he spoke in unequivocal terms about the destructive impact of mercury pollution and supported sharp reductions in the amount of mercury pollution power plants can spew.

But this week, Mr. Romney did more than reverse course and turn his back on the facts he had previously embraced.  He defended his new position with deceptive half truths. The first misleading statement he made was that the new standards will cost more than $1,500 for every one dollar reduction in mercury pollution. 

In reality, the Mercury and Air Toxics Standards deliver up to $90 billion in annual benefit to the American people. For every $1 spent by industry to comply, the standards will deliver up to $9 in economic and health benefits to Americans.

How did Mr. Romney manage to concoct a different number? By focusing only on one pollutant: mercury. Romney was ignoring the nearly 80 other hazardous air pollutants that the health standards will reduce, including arsenic, lead, dioxins, heavy metals, acid gases and deadly soot pollution. Installing the pollution control equipment required to reduce all of these toxic air pollutants from power plants, as the Clean Air Act and courts require, will necessarily reduce significant amounts of many forms of dangerous air pollution that causes asthma attacks, heart attacks and strokes, and even premature deaths. Those pollution reductions are where the standards’ enormous health and economic benefits come from. It is those benefits that the Romney statement dishonestly chose to ignore.

Mr. Romney’s argument did not even pass a basic logic test. His cost-benefit criticism was the equivalent of saying a car costs $15,000 for every $10 spark plug you receive. But in reality you get the whole car for your money — just as Americans receive the overwhelming health benefits from reducing all toxic air pollution, not just mercury pollution, from power plants. And with the Mercury and Air Toxics Standards delivering benefits to the public that outweigh industry compliance costs by a factor of nearly 10 to 1, it’s like the American people are getting a $15,000 car for only $1,500. And that includes the spark plug.

Second, Mr. Romney claimed that EPA “admits” that it is trying to block the construction of any new coal plants. This is patently false, and indeed, the new standards can be attained using equipment that coal plants are able to deploy and are using today.  I hope reporters will challenge Mr. Romney to back up this claim with evidence, because the truth is EPA has never claimed what Mr. Romney charged.

This just raises the valid question why Mr. Romney feels the need to resort to falsehoods. If he has the courage of his political convictions to condemn important health safeguards like these, then he should be able to defend his position with uncomfortable truths rather than convenient untruths.

And finally there is the question of Mr. Romney condemning health standards that will protect children and the unborn.

Mr. Romney is a pro-life politician. One of Mr. Romney’s fellow pro-life Republicans in Congress, Rep. John Shimkus of Illinois, also strongly opposes the mercury and air toxics standards. He has voted to abolish the standards. Concerned by this stance, some pro-life evangelical Christian groups criticized Mr. Shimkus and pointed out that part of being pro-life should mean protecting the unborn from the brain and nerve damage caused by neurotoxic mercury pollution. Rep. John Shimkus (R-IL) retorted that “[t]he life in pro-life denotes not quality of life but life itself.”

Does Mr. Romney believe this too? Does he not care whether children enjoy a “quality of life” free from permanent brain and neurological damage that contribute to learning disabilities?

Mr. Romney hasn’t addressed the sweeping consequences of blocking safeguards against mercury and toxic air pollution—what it would do to pregnant women worrying about their babies, children struggling in school, grandparents suffering from cardiac disease, or the other millions of Americans breathing in this dangerous pollution. But the White House and most Senator recognize what’s at stake here, and they stood up for these vital safeguards.

The fact that Romney took a stand for corporate polluters instead reveals what kind of president he would be. He would not represent the interests of ordinary Americans who expect the law to protect their health. He would cave to the conservative extremists in his own party, the Tea Party, and corporate polluters.

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