STATEMENT OF ADMINISTRATION POLICY
H.R. 1734 – Improving Coal Combustion Residuals Regulation Act of 2015
(Rep. McKinley, R-WV, and 44 cosponsors)
The
Administration strongly opposes H.R. 1734, because it would undermine
the protection of public health and the environment provided by the
Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA’s) December 2014 final rule
addressing the risks posed by mismanaged impoundments of coal ash and
other coal combustion residuals (CCR). The 2008 failure of a coal ash
impoundment in Kingston, Tennessee, and the 2014 coal ash spill into the
Dan River in Eden, North Carolina, serve as stark reminders of the need
for safe disposal and management of coal ash.
EPA’s
rule articulates clear and consistent national standards to protect
public health and the environment, prevent contamination of drinking
water, and minimize the risk of catastrophic failure at coal ash surface
impoundments. H.R. 1734 would, however, substantially weaken these
protections. For example, the bill would eliminate restrictions on how
close coal ash impoundments can be located to drinking water sources.
It also would undermine EPA’s requirement that unlined impoundments must
close or be retrofitted with protective liners if they are leaking and
contaminating drinking water. Further, the bill would delay
requirements in EPA’s final CCR rule, including structural integrity and
closure requirements, for which tailored extensions are already
available through EPA’s rule and through approved Solid Waste Management
Plans.
While
the Administration supports appropriate State program flexibility, H.R.
1734 would allow States to modify or waive critical protective
requirements found in EPA’s final CCR rule. Specifically, H.R. 1734
authorizes States to implement permit programs that would not meet a
national minimum standard of protection and fails to provide EPA with an
opportunity to review and approve State permit programs prior to
implementation, departing from the long-standing precedent of previously
enacted Federal environmental statutes.
Because
it would undercut important national protections provided by EPA’s 2014
CCR management and disposal rule, the Administration strongly opposes
H.R. 1734. If the President were presented with H.R. 1734 as drafted, his senior advisors would recommend that he veto the bill.
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