https://www.orlandosentinel.com/classified/cars-trucks/sns-auto-california-13-other-states-sue-trump-over-revoking-authority-to-set-car-emissions-standards-20190920-story.html
California, 13 other states sue Trump over revoking authority to set car
emissions standards
Sep 20, 2019  Anna M. Phillips  Los Angeles Times

[image]  California attorney general Xavier Becerra speaks during a news
conference at the California justice department on September 18, 2019 in
Sacramento, California. California Gov. Gavin Newsom, California attorney
general Xavier Becerra and California Air Resources Board Chair Mary Nichols
held a news conference in response to the Trump Administration's plan to
revoke California’s waiver to establish vehicle emissions standards for
greenhouse gas emissions and standards to require manufacturers to sell zero
emissions vehicles. Under the federal Clean Air Act, California is allowed
to set its own vehicle emissions standards that are at least as protective
as the federal government’s standards. The state has received 100 waivers
from the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for higher standards than
federally mandated over the past 50 years. (Justin Sullivan/Getty
Images/TNS)
California attorney general Xavier Becerra speaks during a news conference
at the California justice department on September 18, 2019 in Sacramento,
California. California Gov. Gavin Newsom, California attorney general Xavier
Becerra and California Air Resources Board Chair Mary Nichols held a news
conference in response to the Trump Administration's plan to revoke
California’s waiver to establish vehicle emissions standards for greenhouse
gas emissions and standards to require manufacturers to sell zero emissions
vehicles. Under the federal Clean Air Act, California is allowed to set its
own vehicle emissions standards that are at least as protective as the
federal government’s standards. The state has received 100 waivers from the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for higher standards than federally
mandated over the past 50 years. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images/TNS) (Justin
Sullivan / TNS)

WASHINGTON — A coalition of states led by California filed a lawsuit Friday
against the Trump administration, challenging its decision to revoke a rule
that empowers the state to set tougher car emissions standards than those
required by the federal government.

The lawsuit seeks to defend California and the 13 other states that follow
its car pollution rules from the administration's latest effort to loosen
environmental regulations. It maintains that the special waiver the state
has relied on for the past 50 years to set its own standards is not only
lawful, but essential to protecting California's air quality and preventing
the worst effects of climate change.

Twenty-three state attorneys general joined the lawsuit, as did the cities
of New York and Los Angeles. The list includes states that have adopted
California's more stringent car emissions rules, such as New Jersey, New
York, Pennsylvania, Washington and Oregon. It also names several states —
Michigan, Wisconsin, and North Carolina — that voted for Trump in 2016.

The administration's plan to revoke the waiver is likely to set off years of
legal battles that could eventually land at the U.S. Supreme Court.
California Attorney General Xavier Becerra said in a statement Friday that
the administration was attempting to resurrect previously unsuccessful legal
arguments to justify its position.

"Two courts have already upheld California's emissions standards," Becerra
said in a statement. "Yet, the Administration insists on attacking the
authority of California and other states to tackle air pollution and protect
public health."

The lawsuit, California v. Chao, was filed against the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration, which has been working with the Environmental
Protection Agency on a proposal to weaken fuel efficiency standards put in
place under the Obama administration.

These regulations require automakers to build increasingly efficient
vehicles so that by 2025 the nation's cars and trucks would average more
than 50 miles per gallon. Under Trump, the agencies have proposed freezing
mileage targets at about 37 miles per gallon for cars after 2020.

While the announcement of that rollback was initially supposed to coincide
with the administration's effort to dismantle California's standards, the
two were ultimately separated. A few months after California spurned the
White House by secretly negotiating a deal with four major automakers to
increase fuel efficiency and reduce emissions, the administration decided to
fast-track plans to revoke the state's authority to set stricter standards.

At a news conference Thursday at EPA headquarters in Washington,
Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao said the administration was stripping
California of its power to set auto emissions rules because the state's
regulations made new cars unaffordable.

"We will not let political agendas in a single state be forced on the other
49," Chao said.

The administration has argued that lower car prices will encourage drivers
to replace their older vehicles with safer, more efficient ones — an
assertion California leaders and independent scientists have refuted.

In fact, even the EPA's experts have written that the Trump administration's
proposal would be "detrimental to safety, rather than beneficial."

This has led critics to speculate that the administration's assault on
California's waiver has more to do with scoring political points against a
frequent adversary than improving driver safety.

California has sued the administration repeatedly over its agenda of
dismantling Obama-era environmental and public health regulations. Federal
judges have sided with California and environmental groups in cases
concerning air pollution, pesticides and the royalties that the government
receives from companies that extract oil, gas and coal from public land.

California's special authority to go further than the federal government in
regulating auto pollution dates back to the 1960s, when Los Angeles was
enveloped in a thick layer of smog that state officials came to see as a
public health crisis. By the time the 1970 federal Clean Air Act took
effect, the state had already enacted its own tailpipe emission controls.

Concerned that each state would pass different regulations, Congress decided
that the EPA would set vehicle pollution standards for the nation. But it
carved out an exception for California, saying that the EPA would be
required to grant the state a waiver to set its own rules, provided they
were at least as stringent as the federal ones. Other states could choose to
follow either California's regulations or those set by the EPA.

Because of its unique power to set emissions rules, California has served as
a laboratory for tough new auto pollution regulations and has worked to
promote the adoption of electric vehicles. The administration's action
jeopardizes the state's mandate that automakers sell more zero-emission
vehicles and plug-in hybrids and raises new doubts about whether it will be
able to meet its goal of having more than 1 million of the vehicles on the
road by 2025.

Lawyers and environmental policy experts said the administration's move is
unprecedented.

"EPA has never revoked any of the 50+ waivers that it has granted to
California and there is no legal basis for doing so," said Jeff Alson, a
former EPA senior engineer and policy adviser who retired in 2018.
[ ©2019 Los Angeles Times  orlandosentinel.com]

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