23 things
Congress could defund in Interior and Environment, by Robert Romano, 7/7/15
This week, the House of
Representatives is taking up the appropriations bill for the Department of the
Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies. This is an opportunity for
Congress to exercise its constitutional power of the purse through policy
riders that can help limit the size and scope of government.
To that end, Americans for Limited
Government suggests the following areas where House members might look to offer
amendments to curb what has been a department run amok.
1. Defunding EPA Carbon Endangerment
Finding. In 2009, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) issued the carbon
endangerment finding that held carbon dioxide to be a harmful pollutant under
the terms of the Clean Air Act. It has been used to justify punitive
regulations, particularly against producers of coal electricity, to reduce
carbon emissions — all without any vote in Congress. It should be defunded,
along with any rule that restricts or limits the emissions of carbon dioxide of
any motor vehicle, combined heat and power plants or plants for the generation
of power or for the production of heat, including the new and existing power
plant rules.
2. Defunding UN Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change. Since 1988, the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change has been responsible for promoting the man-made global warming
hypothesis that the EPA now bases its punitive carbon restriction regulations
on. Congress could send a strong message by taking away funds to participate in
the forum any longer.
3. Defunding Northern Spotted Owl
protection under Endangered Species Act. In 1990, the northern spotted owl was
listed as a threatened species under the Endangered Species Act. That designation
has since obliterated the logging industry in California, Oregon and
Washington, and now the radical environmentalists want to expand the territory
protecting the owl. We propose the opposite. Congress could deny funds to
protect any land the owl resides on so loggers can get back to logging.
4. Defunding ethanol mandate.
Congress adopted the Renewable Fuel Standard in 2005 and expanded it in 2007,
with the EPA now requiring so-called renewable fuel including corn-based
ethanol to be blended into transportation fuel. It is simply a corporate
handout to ethanol producers that presumes ethanol would not otherwise be sold
without a government mandate. Congress could deny funds to make any rule that
ethanol be included in the blending of gasoline for commercial sale.
5. Defunding removal of lands for
energy production purposes without reporting and energy production offsets
elsewhere. Instead sitting aside waiting for the EPA to take energy off the
table and out of markets, Congress can be proactive and require that no land be
removed for energy production until a public report on the amount of energy
potential of those lands is issued by the Energy Information Agency, and other
public lands containing an equivalent or higher amount of energy potential are made
available for energy production.
6. Defunding any litigation pursued
under new and existing power plants rule. The heart of the EPA’s strategy for
ensuring compliance with its carbon emissions restrictions is via litigation
against energy producers. Congress could strike a blow by defunding carrying
forth any litigation under Standards of Performance for Greenhouse Gas
Emissions From New Stationary Sources: Electric Utility Generating Units and
under Carbon Pollution Emission Guidelines for Existing Stationary Sources:
Electric Utility Generating Units under the Clean Air Act or any substantively
similar rule that limits emissions of carbon dioxide from existing fossil
fuel-fired electric generating units, including, primarily, coal- and natural
gas-fired units.
7. Defunding the Green Climate Fund.
Since 2010, the UN Green Climate Fund has been redistributing funds to
developing countries, supposedly to combat man-made global warming. Congress
could deny funds for this purpose.
8. Defunding the EPA Social Cost of
Carbon assessment tool. Congress could deny any funds from being used to
utilize the Social Cost of Carbon or any other tool to estimate of the economic
damages associated with a small increase in carbon dioxide emissions, the value
of damages avoided for a small carbon dioxide emission reduction, changes in
net agricultural productivity, human health, or property damages from increased
flood risk.
9. Cut EPA general counsel’s office
by 30 percent. Just like it sounds. Do not allow no more than $40 million be
used to pay for personnel in the Office of the General Counsel of the
Environmental Protection Agency.
10. Defunding surveillance cameras
in national parks. Congress could block any funds from being used to purchase,
install, or maintain any surveillance cameras in national forests and other
public lands administered by the U.S. Forrest Service.
11. Zero funding the National
Endowments for the Arts and Humanities. Somehow, we suspect there would be
still be arts and humanities in the U.S. without national endowments set up for
that purpose. As such, Congress could zero fund both of these agencies to carry
out any part of the National Foundation on the Arts and the Humanities Act of
1965.
12. Defunding light bulb ban. In
2007, Congress passed the Energy Independence and Security Act, which was to
phase out certain types of incandescent light bulbs. But we don’t have to say
goodbye to Thomas Edison’s most famous invention just yet. Congress could block
funds from being used to implement or enforce section 430.32(x) of title 10,
Code of Federal Regulations; or to implement or enforce the standards
established by the tables contained in section 325(i)(1)(B) of the Energy
Policy and Conservation Act (42 U.S.C. 6295(i)(1)(B)) with respect to BPAR incandescent
reflector lamps, BR incandescent reflector lamps, and ER incandescent reflector
lamps.
13. Barring sue and settle
arrangements under the Clean Air Act, the Clean Water Act, and the Endangered
Species Act. The EPA escalation of sue and settle cases to change the law
through federal court rulings threatens to shut down America’s coal producers
and other entrepreneurs and compromise our electric grid. Operating hand
in hand with radical environmentalist groups that are willing participants in
the scam, sue and settle not only endangers the economy, but also the
constitutional separation of powers. Congress could deny any funds from being
used for paying legal fees or damages under cases in which the government is a
party arising those laws and put a stop to it.
14. Protecting ANWR from Obama
executive action. Better safe than sorry. Obama asked Congress to designate
portions of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) as wilderness, but
Congress has not acted. And we all know what that means. Where Congress won’t
act, Obama will, so Congress can get ahead of another usurpation by blocking
funds from being used to from suddenly claiming ANWR is wilderness.
15. Defunding Special Envoy to get
Keystone XL approved. Can we just get this pipeline approved already? Perhaps
the Secretary of State and Office of the Special Envoy for Climate Change would
notice if the salaries of employees were not permitted to be paid in an amount
exceeding $1.00 per pay period until the Secretary of State issues a permit for
the construction of the Keystone XL pipeline that shall have effect for a
period lasting no less than 10 years.
16. Defunding EPA activities that
impose additional, extralegal requirements for approving mine permits. Congress
could deny funds from being used in defending the government’s position in the
Pebble Limited Partnership versus Environmental Protection Agency case that is
blocking gold and copper from being mined in Alaska.
17. Defunding EPA rules on burning
wood. But what if it gets cold? Congress may want to consider blocking funds
from being used by the EPA to enforce the “New Source Performance Standards for
Residential Wood Heaters” or any other rule that that restricts the use of wood
burning as a heat source, fireplaces, and for cooking.
18. Reporting on Climate Impacts of
Forest Fires. When you engage in proper timbering of our nation’s forests, it
can help prevent forest fires. As such, Congress should require the EPA to
report on the climate impacts of the forest fires that the agency through its
regulation is causing.
19. Defunding Navigable Waters Rule.
The EPA thinks it can regulate every pond and puddle in America. But not if
Congress steps in. It could block funds from being used to implement Definition
of “Waters of the United States” Under the Clean Water Act or any other
rule that attempts to define waters of the United States under the Clean Water
Act.
20. Defunding Delta Smelt protection
and all actions to divert water away from farmers in the San Joaquin delta of
California under Endangered Species Act. Water is a big problem in California
right now, and for farmers whose lands depended on irrigation waters from the
San Joaquin delta, it got a whole lot worse when the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service decided to start protecting the Delta Smelt. Congress should block
funds from being used to divert water from the San Joaquin delta away from
agriculture farmland under the guise of protecting the Delta smelt under the
Endangered Species Act.
21. Defunding Boiler MACT
regulations. Congress could block funds from being used to enforce the Boiler
MACT regulations.
22. Defunding additional national
monument designations. There’s probably enough national monuments by now.
Congress could defund any more from being created under the Antiquites Act of
1906.
23. Defunding no-take zones or
marine sanctuaries designations. There’s probably enough no-take zones and
marine sanctuaries already, too. Congress could block funds be used to create
any more no-take zones or marine sanctuaries in U.S. waters under the National
Wildlife Refuge Administration Act, the National Park Service Organic Act, the
Wilderness Act, the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act,
the Coastal Zone Management Act, the National Marine Sanctuaries Act or any other
act, executive order, rule, regulation, policy, or initiative.
Robert Romano is the senior editor
of Americans for Limited Government.
http://netrightdaily.com/2015/07/23-things-congress-could-defund-in-interior-and-environment/
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