STATEMENT OF ADMINISTRATION POLICY
H.R. 4775 – Ozone Standards Implementation Act of 2016
(Rep. Olson, R-TX, and 43 cosponsors)
The
Administration strongly opposes H.R. 4775, the Ozone Standards
Implementation Act of 2016, because it would significantly undermine
Clean Air Act (CAA) protections, would block efforts to reduce harmful
ground-level ozone pollution in communities across the country, and
could delay future scientific reviews for other harmful pollutants.
Ozone
pollution, also known as smog, has been linked to a range of adverse
health effects which can lead to missed work and school days, increased
hospital admissions, and premature deaths from respiratory and
cardiovascular causes. H.R. 4775 would delay implementation of the 2015
ozone health standard that will otherwise improve air quality for
millions of Americans. This would result in people living in areas with
unhealthy ozone levels for at least an additional 10 years. The bill
also would unnecessarily extend deadlines for science-based reviews of
all National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) from 5 to 10
years—delaying for 5 years the requirement that the latest science
inform our air pollution standards. Further, the bill would make other
detrimental changes to the NAAQS core protections—most significantly
allowing a fundamental shift away from the principle that the standards
should be based solely on public health and welfare considerations. As a
result, H.R. 4775 would jeopardize progress toward cleaner air and
significantly delay health benefits worth billions of dollars for
millions of Americans, including those most vulnerable—children, older
adults, and people with asthma.
As
required by the CAA, the Environmental Protection Agency sets primary
air quality standards that protect public health with an "adequate
margin of safety," including the health of at-risk groups. These
science-based air standards, which undergo rigorous public review and
comment, have a proven record of success. They have resulted in cleaner
air which has helped all Americans live longer, healthier lives in a
growing economy. In fact, since 1970, emissions of key pollutants have
decreased by nearly 70 percent while the economy has tripled in size.
H.R. 4775 would undermine the vitally important environmental and health protections of the CAA. If the President were presented with H.R. 4775, his senior advisors would recommend that he veto the bill.
Source: Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget
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