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Rep. Mike Honda

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Republicans Double Down on Big Coal and Big Oil, Killing Clean Air and Clean Water

Posted: 09/20/2012 11:53 am

It isn't your fault if you tune into the House of Representatives floor proceedings this week and mistakenly think you're watching Groundhog Day. During the last week Republicans will call the House into session before the November elections, Speaker Boehner and Majority Leader Cantor have chosen to bypass the important issues that the American public is asking for action on -- a comprehensive jobs package, a bipartisan Farm Bill, dealing with the looming fiscal cliff and sequestration -- in order to once again consider several extreme anti-environment and anti-public health bills that have already passed the House before but which will never pass the Senate or be signed into law by President Obama.

The American people have made it clear how they feel about these policies, and yet here the Republicans go again. For example, earlier this month, Appalachian citizens, environmental advocates and faith community leaders alike came together in Washington DC to fight against the continued injustice of mountaintop removal coal mining practices in Appalachia, which for too long has contaminated water supplies in Appalachia, endangering the health of families who live in the region and taking steps backward for the health and prosperity of our nation.

Yet Republicans press forward to do not the business of the people, but the business of the polluters. Since January 2011, House Republicans have amassed the most anti-environment record in the history of Congress. During this period, the House has voted over 300 times on the floor to block environmental regulations, weaken environmental laws and stop environmental research, and H.R. 3409 may well be the single worst anti-environment bill to be considered in the 112th Congress.

While almost 2,000 miles of Appalachian streams have been filled by mountaintop removal coal mining, polluting water supplies for local residents and endangering public health, H.R. 3409 would prevent the Obama Administration from issuing any rule to protect streams from mountaintop removal mining waste. H.R. 3409's overly broad language would, in fact, block Interior Department action from issuing ANY new rules regarding coal mining or reclamation for 15 months, no matter how minor.

Despite the catchy title given to the bill by House Republicans, H.R. 3409 is about far more than coal. H.R. 3409 denies the findings of climate scientists by repealing EPA's scientific finding that greenhouse gasses endanger public health and the environment. Having thus dispatched with the threat of global climate change, the bill would nullify the broadly supported emissions standards to reduce carbon pollution from model year 2017-2025 vehicles; repeal California's authority to regulation carbon pollution from motor vehicles; bar EPA from requiring power plants and refineries to reduce carbon pollution; and eliminate existing requirements for large sources to disclose their carbon pollution.

H.R. 3409 replaces the Clean Air Act's top priority of achieving air safe enough to breathe with standards that are based on industry costs. It rolls back protections that require power plants to reduce emissions of mercury and other toxics pollutants and replaces the EPA process for setting toxic air pollution standards with an unproven, indefensible method. The bill will also set off a "race to the bottom" on water quality standards by eliminating EPA's ability to apply minimum federal water quality standards to protect human health if weaker state standards are in place, as well as EPA's authority to object to state discharge permits that fail to meet Clean Water Act standards.

While it may feel like Groundhog Day, H.R. 3409 is really an early Christmas present to Big Coal and Big Oil at the expense of the American people and their health and safety. H.R. 3409 will create uncertainty for businesses and undermine the development of clean energy technology, and it should be defeated.

Rep Michael Honda (CA-15) represents Silicon Valley and is a member of the House Budget and Appropriations Committee.

 

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It isn't your fault if you tune into the House of Representatives floor proceedings this week and mistakenly think you're watching Groundhog Day. During the last week Republicans will call the House i...
It isn't your fault if you tune into the House of Representatives floor proceedings this week and mistakenly think you're watching Groundhog Day. During the last week Republicans will call the House i...
 
 
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09:00 PM on 09/21/2012
Bye bye Appalachian Mountains, bye bye water, bye bye coastal waters, bye bye flora and fauna, bye bye breathable air, and welcome mucho $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ in Romney's campaign coffers!
11:38 AM on 09/21/2012
Coal is being replaced by natural gas at a fantastic rate in the US. Far cleaner, less CO2 per energy output. Unfortunately China and India are using more, kinda negating the benefits here.
06:07 PM on 09/20/2012
This bill is pathetic and ridiculous. Despite the economic problems and the upcoming elections, there should be no bigger problem being addressed than our country's negative environmental impact. None of the other issues matter if we no longer have a planet we can live on.

And this bill wants to remove what regulations exist? Its sponsors should be worse than ashamed!

From the Virgina Declaration of Rights, 1776:
"That government is, or ought to be, instituted for the common benefit, protection, and security of the people, nation or community...no man, or set of men, are entitled to exclusive or separate emoluments or privileges from the community, but in consideration of public services."

Translation? The government doesn't exist to subsidize special interests; it exists to SERVE the PUBLIC INTEREST.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BeauBoi
Imagine there's no Heaven...
05:09 PM on 09/20/2012
The GOP needs to go. I have never voted strictly "one party" but you can I will be voting straight Democrat for the foreseeable future. The GOP has dropped any guise of being for the people who elected the and chosen to visible support companies who are lining their campaign coffers instead. It is shameful! They need a serious Time Out and We the People are gonna give it to them!
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artleads
Let's have a national retreat.
05:53 PM on 09/21/2012
We don't have to hate the GOP to see that they need a time out to regroup and see how they can deal more constructively with US and global crisis.
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Saijanai
Micro bio? We don't need no stinkin' micro bio...
02:10 PM on 09/22/2012
It would be interesting to see how strongly correlated specific Republicans who are opposed to the very concept that humans can affect the world in apocalyptic ways is with those same Republican's stance on abortion and other Fundamentalist issues.

My guess is that they are the same group of people. Belief that God is the only one who is able to destroy the planet seems to go hand-in-hand with other radical beliefs (abortion (evoked miscarriage) is punishable by a fine in the OT to compensate the father -this is hardly punishment for murder- and isn't even mentioned in the NT).
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Lesley Anne
04:46 PM on 09/20/2012
My favorite Republican ads so far are the coal miners who were forced to appear in the pro-Romney video and the manager with the hard hat pretending to be one of the workers, complaining about Obama's policies. What gripes me about Republicans, one of the many things, is that they rail against Dems blaming them for creating debt for "our children" when they don't seem to care about creating an uninhabitable planet for the same offspring. Clean water, clean air, worker safety mean nothing to them. It's all about the bottom line. They want freedom to pollute our brains out, they don't want to clean it up, and they fight tooth and nail to be allowed to do it. More Republicans in office means more pollution, and I mean that in the broadest possible terms.
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realsurfin
Pardon me, can you help out a fellow American
02:58 PM on 09/20/2012
we need to get rid of the GOP congress for this election cycle
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Sagrimore
They can never take my panache
03:46 PM on 09/20/2012
We could set up special "Republicans Only" water fountains in the Capital Building that have the toxic chemical content as Appalachian streams . . .
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realsurfin
Pardon me, can you help out a fellow American
08:24 AM on 09/21/2012
Now there is a plan I can get behind
08:50 PM on 09/21/2012
I'll put up the cash to build it!