
Letter to Sen. Lieberman on OIRA Administrator Graham's Efforts to Weaken Regulatory Protections
by Guest Blogger, 7/2/2002
A coalition of non-profit environmental, health, and safety organizations wrote a letter to Senator Lieberman expressing concern over OIRA Administrator John Graham's apparent collaboration with industry lobbyists to develop a strategy to weaken dozens of environmental, health, labor and other regulatory protections.
AFL-CIO o AMERICAN FEDERATION OF STATE, COUNTY & MUNICIPAL EMPLOYEES o AMERICAN RIVERS o CENTER FOR SCIENCE IN THE PUBLIC INTEREST o CLEAN WATER ACTION o DEFENDERS OF WILDLIFE o EARTHJUSTICE LEGAL DEFENSE FUND o ENDANGERED SPECIES COALITION o FRIENDS OF THE EARTH o INTERNATIONAL UNION, UNITED AUTOMOBILE, AEROSPACE & AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENT WORKERS OF AMERICA, UAW o LABORERS INTERNATIONAL UNION OF NORTH AMERICA o LEAGUE OF CONSERVATION VOTERS o MINERAL POLICY CENTER o NATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL TRUST o NATIONAL PARTNERSHIP FOR WOMEN & FAMILIES o NATURAL RESOURCES DEFENSE COUNCIL o OMB WATCH o PHYSICIANS FOR SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY o PUBLIC CITIZEN o SIERRA CLUB o U.S. PIRG
December 6, 2001
The Honorable Joseph Lieberman
Chair, Senate Governmental Affairs Committee
United States Senate
Washington, D.C. 20510
Re: OIRA Administrator John D. Graham's Efforts to Weaken Regulatory Protections
Dear Senator Lieberman:
We write to express our deep concern over recent reports and documents alleging the involvement of Office of Management and Budget (OMB) officials, specifically Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) Administrator John Graham, in an apparent collaboration with industry lobbyists to develop a strategy to weaken dozens of environmental, health, labor and other regulatory protections. We ask that you, as the Chair of the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee, request that OMB provide to your committee all meeting logs, notes, documents, calendars and other records pertaining to any meeting or communication between OMB officials and outside lobbyists to determine whether such an effort to roll back existing federal regulations occurred. In addition, we ask you to make these activities the subject of oversight hearings by your Committee, particularly as your Committee considers reauthorization of the Paperwork Reduction Act.
A December 4 article in the Washington Post, "Business Lobbyists Asked to Discuss Onerous Rules," indicates that OIRA Administrator Graham may have requested that Republican House committee staff convene a meeting of industry trade group lobbyists - including representatives of the National Association of Manufacturers, the National Federation of Independent Businesses, and the American Farm Bureau - to discuss a strategy of "sunsetting" rules on public health, public safety, the environment, and worker's rights by invoking provisions of the Paperwork Reduction Act. In preparation for this meeting, OMB staff gave House committee staff a printout of regulations that have one million or more paperwork burden hours. From this, House staff compiled a list of fifty-seven regulations as "possible sunset review candidates." That list, attached, involves programs cutting across nine federal agencies, including:
- Environmental Protection Agency's clean air program to update pollution controls on outdated facilities (called New Source Review), water quality clean up plans (known as "TMDLs"), and toxic chemical release reporting;
- Department of Labor's regulations on the Family and Medical Leave Act and Davis-Bacon Act, as well as fifteen health and safety regulations under the Occupational Safety and Health Act;
- Department of Agriculture's regulations regarding the use of restricted pesticides;
- Department of Health and Human Service's regulations on food labeling, investigational new drugs, and applications to market new drugs;
- Nuclear Regulatory Commission's regulations for licensing facilities.
