STATEMENT OF ADMINISTRATION POLICY
H.R. 3797 – Satisfying Energy Needs and Saving the Environment (SENSE) Act
(Rep. Keith Rothfus, R-PA, and six cosponsors)
The
Administration strongly opposes H.R. 3797, which would threaten the
health of Americans by requiring changes to the Environmental Protection
Agency's (EPA) Cross-State Air Pollution Rule (CSAPR) and the Mercury
and Air Toxics Standards (MATS) for electric generating units (EGUs)
that use coal refuse as their main fuel source. Specifically, H.R. 3797
would restrict the market-based approach currently used to allocate
sulfur dioxide emission allowances issued under the CSAPR, thereby
raising the costs of achieving the pollution reduction required by the
rule. The bill also would undermine the emissions limits for hazardous
acid gases from those established under the MATS, leading to increased
health and environmental impacts from increased emissions of hydrogen
chloride, hydrogen fluoride, other harmful acid gases, and sulfur
dioxide.
CSAPR
and MATS protect the health of millions of Americans by requiring the
reduction of harmful power plant emissions, including air toxics and
emissions that contribute to smog and fine particle pollution. The
pollution reductions from CSAPR and MATS will prevent thousands of
premature deaths, asthma attacks, and heart attacks. An important
feature of the CSAPR is its trading program which allows power plants to
meet emission budgets in different ways, including by trading emissions
allowances between emission sources within a State and some trading
across States. This market-based approach reduces the cost of
compliance while ensuring reductions in air pollution for citizens
across the CSAPR region.
H.R.
3797 would create an uneven playing field by picking winners and losers
in CSAPR compliance. The bill establishes a special market of CSAPR
allowances for EGUs that burn coal refuse and prohibits the trading of
allowances allocated to coal refuse EGUs, which would interfere with and
manipulate market conditions. By doing so, H.R. 3797 would: (1)
economically advantage coal refuse EGUs over other EGUs by giving them
allowances that would otherwise have been allocated to others; (2)
reduce compliance choices for other State units; and (3) distort the
economic incentives of coal refuse EGUs to reduce emissions. Further,
the allowances allocated to coal refuse EGUs would be unavailable for
use by any other sources, resulting, in the aggregate, in less efficient
and more costly CSAPR compliance. Additionally, H.R. 3797 would
interfere with existing opportunities under the CSAPR for each State to
control the allocation of allowances among its EGUs.
If the President were presented with H.R. 3797, his senior advisors would recommend that he veto the bill.
H.R. 4596 – Small Business Broadband Deployment Act
(Rep. Walden, R-OR)
The
Administration is strongly committed to a free and open Internet, and
thus ensuring that no party can restrict the best access or to pick
winners and losers in the online marketplace for services and ideas.
Essential to this policy is ensuring that no cable or phone company can
act as a gatekeeper, restricting what Americans can do or see online.
That is why the Administration supports the Federal Communication
Commission's decision in February 2015 to issue an Open Internet order
providing strong, clear, carefully designed rules that prevent broadband
providers from favoring certain Internet content over others.
H.R.
4596, the Small Business Broadband Deployment Act, would extend a
temporary exemption for small businesses from the Open Internet order's
enhanced disclosure rules for five years and expand the definition of a
small business. The Administration does not oppose House passage of
H.R. 4596 in
its current form, as reported by the House Energy and Commerce
Committee. The Administration, however, will not support any attempt to
undermine the important consumer and economic protections in the Open
Internet order that are supported by millions of Americans. The
Administration looks forward to continued conversations with the
Congress to help ensure a free and open Internet.
Source: The White House, Office of Management and Budget
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