[[ How to contaminate a dart board:  Put a picture of Obama on
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[image: Description: New York Post] <http://www.nypost.com/>Updated: Mon.,
Oct. 11, 2010, 5:11 AM [image: Description: home]

*How Obama is invading your home*

By BEN LIEBERMAN

*Last Updated:* 5:11 AM, October 11, 2010

*Posted:* 2:44 AM, October 11, 2010

The Obama administration isn't satis fied giving the American public vast
things we don't want — from stimu lus packages to bailouts to ObamaCare:
It's a small-scale nuisance, too — witness its attempt to redesign home
appliances.

In the pipeline are dumb regulations for almost everything that plugs in or
fires up in your home.

Just weeks after taking office, the president ordered the Energy Department
to speed up the process of issuing harsh new energy-efficiency standards for
appliances. Since then, the agency boasts, it "has issued or codified new
efficiency standards for more than 20 different products," and still more
are on the way.

These regulations are sure to raise the price of appliances — often by more
than consumers are ever likely to earn back in the form of energy savings.
And some will make the product perform well.

The administration is meddling with every room in the house:

The basement:New standards are in the works for water heaters and furnaces.
For water heaters, the Energy Department estimates price hikes from $67 to
$974, depending on size and type.

The bathroom:The same 1992 law that gave us those awful low-flush toilets
also restricted the amount of water showerheads could use to 2.5 gallons per
minute. Some consumers who disliked the resulting weak trickle opted for
models with two or more showerheads, each using the maximum 2.5 gallons. But
Team Obama has now eliminated this "loophole" by requiring that the total
flow must comply with the limit.

The kitchen: Think remodeling a kitchen is expensive now? Pending
regulations target refrigerators, dishwashers, microwaves, ovens and ranges.


For refrigerators (at least), this is a clear case of overkill. The American
fridge has already been hit by several rounds of tighter standards, with
each new rule saving less energy than the last — but boosting the price and
compromising performance and reliability. Even the Energy Department admits
that most consumers will lose money on its latest refrigerator regulation.

The laundry room:New standards are on the way for washers and dryers. When
the last clothes-washer regulation hit in 2007, Consumer Reportslamented
that several ultra-efficient models "left our stain-soaked swatches nearly
as dirty as they were before washing" and that "for best results, you'll
have to spend $900 or more." The Obama rules will probably mean even worse
news.

Any air-conditioned room:Both central air conditioners and window units are
scheduled for new regulations. When the Energy Department rolled out its
last round of central-AC rules back in January 2001 (one of those
last-minute Clinton administration "midnight" regulations), it admitted that
many homeowners would never recoup the added up-front costs. The new
standards will follow the same "logic" — and thus should make for another
lousy deal.

The Obama regulations come on top of all the past ones, including the worst
one of all — the Bush-era requirement that will effectively ban incandescent
light bulbs starting in 2012.

In nearly every case, consumers who want more efficient appliances — or
those compact fluorescent light bulbs — are free to buy them. Energy-use
labels tell you everything you need to know to make comparisons. All the
federal rules do is is to force the government's preferred choice on
everyone.

Government "of the people, by the people, and for the people" is busy
enacting a bunch of things the people don't want, including these appliance
regulations. Add them to the growing list of Obama (and Bush) measures ripe
for repeal.

Ben Lieberman is an associate fellow in environmental policy with the
Competitive Enterprise Institute, in Washington, DC.

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