EPA Rules Top List of Corporate Pet Peeves

More than 200 companies and industry groups responded to an invitation from the new Republican leadership of the U.S. House of Representatives to list their pet regulatory peeves, with the Environmental Protection Agency coming in for the lion’s share of complaints.

On Monday, Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., the new chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, made public the responses he had received from corporate America. “This project should complement what President Obama has already called on his administration to do and in concert, lead to a robust and expansive discussion about what the best way forward is to stimulate our economy,” he said in a news release.

Obama last month signed an executive order calling for a government-wide review of regulations.

But Democrats and consumer-advocacy groups are questioning why Issa didn’t ask consumer groups about the benefits of regulations. “Mr. Issa says we’re just interested in finding out which regulations are problematic for business, but they’re not interested in finding out how they help save Americans’ lives and health,” Melanie Sloan, executive director of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, told Bloomberg.

More than 50 of those who responded to Issa expressed concerns about EPA rules to limit greenhouse-gas emissions. “It is a disaster to see our jobs eliminated in the coal mines for little or no environmental benefit,” a coal industry executive complained.

The complete corporate “wish list” totals nearly 2,000 pages, featuring submissions from such corporate giants as ConocoPhillips, Boeing Co. and Toyota Motor North America. Rules to tighten ozone standards would “have far-reaching effects on the economy and jobs,” said ConocoPhillips, the third- largest U.S. oil company, in its list citing more than two dozen rules.

Other complaints involved pesticide permits, air-pollution standards, and a proposed Energy Department rule that aims to conserve water by restricting use of multihead shower fixtures. Of the 111 regulations cited in the submissions, 57 were issued by the EPA.

Related Posts:
Reaching Out to Big Business, Obama Orders Sweeping Review of Regulations
Business ‘Wish List’ Asks House GOP Leaders to Scrap Regulatory Changes

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