Dear John,
I really am stunned that we need to defend established science. Vital environmental standards depend on sound science in the regulatory process. The American people overwhelmingly support these sensible public health protections, but we’re seeing a “throw the spaghetti against the wall” attempt to defeat them left and right.
Here’s the latest battle which ELPC, our colleagues at the Union of Concerned Scientists, and other allies are fighting: The Trump administration is quietly, secretly, and vigorously pursuing policies that will let political appointees simply toss away health studies if they don't like the results.
The Trump EPA’s "Strengthening Transparency in Regulatory Science"—an Orwellian title if there ever was one—proposal would enable federal agencies to ignore scientifically sound studies if the entire data set isn't made available to the public. That might sound reasonable on the surface, but it makes little sense in the real world of how sound scientific research is actually conducted. Privacy rules and patient protections prevent individual data from being released. Medical and public health studies use anonymous data to determine if and how air and water pollution, exhaust from cars and coal plants, and the impacts of climate change harm public health and safety. Check out ELPC Federal Legislative Director Ann Mesnikoff’s blog post to read more about this rule.
Think about how this plays out in the context of the current COVID-19 public health crisis. We know that it helps to stay six feet away from other people because of years of health data collection and analysis, epidemiological studies, and observations of how disease works. We also need to engage the scientific process ror better and more rapid COVID-19 tests.
ELPC is fighting back and playing to win when it comes to assuring that sound science forms the basis for setting sensible public health and environmental protection standards.
Some other quick ELPC updates from this past week:
- Air Quality Impacts Coronavirus Rates - Take a look at the new Harvard University T.H. Chan School of Public Health study of how COVID-19 mortality risk increases by 15% for every 1 ug/m3 PM2.5 air pollution. The health impacts of small particles (PM2.5) hit especially hard in lower-income communities of color in places like Chicago where ELPC’s handheld air quality monitors have shown high pollution levels in some specific areas. Our efforts to improve air quality are more important than ever.
- ELPC Received GuideStar’s Platinum Seal of Transparency for 2020. That’s the top-rating. GuideStar is a key platform for individuals, donors, and interested parties to learn more about our work. This highest-level Platinum rating provides public credibility that ELPC operates well. Good stuff for us.
- Challenging the Enbridge Line 3 Oil Pipeline from Going through the Headwaters of the Mississippi River: Here’s what ELPC Senior Attorney Scott Strand says about how low oil prices strengthen our argument before the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission that the Enbridge Line 3 oil pipeline is not needed. “[Oil] demand is gone, and it’s not going to snap right back up. There are long-term demand problems.”
- ELPC’s Annual Gala Dinner Is Rescheduled for September 10th at the Radisson Blu Hotel in downtown Chicago. Buy your tickets here.
Thank you for your engagement and support for ELPC’s effective advocacy in these extraordinary times. I mean it!
Best wishes, stay healthy, and be well,
Howard A. Learner
Executive Director
Environmental Law & Policy Center
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