Anti-Reg Trend Watch

The SBA Office of Advocacy recently released its report on the proceedings of a recent symposium on the Hill about the Regulatory Flexibility Act. Click here for the report, here for appendices. Of note:

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    Unmet Needs: Lead in Drinking Water

    A new GAO report reveals that there are significant gaps in our regulatory protections against lead in drinking water, with corresponding gaps in our knowledge about whether or not children and families are sufficiently protected:

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    Update: "Is Industry Pulling EPA's Strings?"

    On Jan. 23 Thomas Sullivan, chief counsel for advocacy with The Small Business Administration (SBA), contacted OMB Watch in response to "Is Industry Pulling EPA's Strings?", an article recently published in The Watcher that describes a troubling pattern of close cooperation and extensive communication between the SBA and the Environmental Protection Agency around reducing chemical reporting under the Toxic Release Inventory (TRI), in order cut down on governmental paperwork for companies. Sullivan asked that OMB Watch clarify that the 1997 investigation by SBA's Inspector General into possible unethical actions around the TRI by SBA lawyer Kevin Bromberg, who has previously advocated for an industry coalition on TRI, found no evidence of inappropriate action. During his conversation with OMB Watch, Sullivan acknowledged that all of the facts cited in the article about recent interactions between EPA and SBA are correct. The article has been updated to reflect SBA's request.

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    Risk Bulletin Advances Graham Anti-Reg Agenda

    From cost-benefit guidelines to the new draft policy on risk assessments, White House regulatory czar John Graham has steadily proceeded with a long-range plan laying the groundwork for dramatic limits on public safeguards.

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    Government Secrecy's Latest Victims: Whales

    According to documents released to the Natural Resources Defense Council, all references to the possibility that naval sonar may have caused 37 whales to swim ashore and die in North Carolina last year were deleted from a government report on the incident. The revelation came as the Department of the Navy nears the close of its public comment period on its plans to build an underwater sonar training range in the same North Carolina location.

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    EPA Gets an Earful on Plan to Reduce Toxic Reporting

    More than 70,000 citizens voiced opposition to the Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) proposals to cut chemical reporting under the Toxics Release Inventory (TRI), during the agency's public comment period that ended Jan. 13. Those speaking out against EPA's proposals included state agencies, health professionals, scientists, environmentalists, labor, Attorneys General, and even Congress, all of whom raised substantive concerns with the plan.

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    Circular A-4: Regulatory Analysis

    The White House circular governing regulatory impact analyses Download PDF

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    Ranking Regulatory "Investments" in Public Health

    From FY03 budget volumes: discussion of cost-effectiveness analysis, QALYs, and league tables for ranking regulatory safeguards Download PDF

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    Making Our Food Less Safe

    The Detroit Free Press reports on a new industry-led effort to ban state and local governments from limiting genetically engineered products in their communities. In response to local initiatives in towns and counties in California and New England that ban raising genetically-engineered crops, state legislatures in18 states have put forward proposals "that would bar towns and counties from enacting local legislation to regulate genetically engineered seed." Initiatives have already passed in 14 of the 18 states.

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    Pollution and CBA as Knowing Killing

    There is another brilliant contribution from scholar Lisa Heinzerling on regulatory policy issues. In her latest article, Prof. Heinzerling notes that "economic analysis has substantially succeeded in de-ethicizing environmental issues" that she wishes explicitly to "re-ethicize." The ethical norm she chooses to focus on is the prohibition against knowing killing. After a review of the norm as it is inscribed throughout the corpus of American law, Heinzerling observes that this norm animates our concern with pollution:

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