Advocates of strong public health protections responded with alarm to a Monday night New York Times report on the Environmental Protection Agency’s new draft proposal for the Trump administration’s drawn-out effort to dramatically scale back the scientific research that can be used in government policymaking.

“Let’s call this what it is: an excuse to abandon clean air, clean water, and chemical safety rules,” said Andrew Rosenberg, director of the Center for Science and Democracy at the Union of Concerned Scientists. “This is a blatant removal of well-established science from the policymaking process, to the benefit of polluters and at a huge cost to the marginalized communities who face the biggest threat from pollution.”

The draft proposal (pdf), titled “Strengthening Transparency in Regulatory Science,” would force the agency to only consider research that discloses all raw data, including private medical files. It follows a similar proposal unveiled by former EPA chief Scott Pruitt in April 2018 that provoked nearly 600,000 comments from the public, the majority of which were critical.

Pruitt’s successor as EPA administrator, ex-lobbyist Andrew Wheeler, delayed the prior proposal, purportedly to consider concerns from environmental and public health groups. However, the new version “headed for White House review and obtained by The New York Times shows that the administration intends to widen its scope, not narrow it.”

According to the Times:

One key example of scientific research that wouldn’t be permissible for government use under the EPA proposal is a 1993 Harvard University project known as the Six Cities study, which connected air pollution to premature deaths and subsequently informed nationwide air quality policies.

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