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EPA's regulatory burden largest in history

Published in Blog on July 17, 2017 by Convention Of States Project

The Environmental Protection Agency now imposes nearly 200 million hours of paperwork to comply with its regulations, as new rules have skyrocketed under the Obama administration.

A new report released by the American Action Forum, a center-right policy institute, found complying with the agency’s rules now requires 188 million paperwork hours, the equivalent of 95,000 Americans working full time for a year.

“Years of regulatory accumulation, especially under the Obama administration have pushed EPA’s paperwork burden to its highest level in history,” the report, written by Sam Batkins, said. “Year after year of new regulatory costs have not only translated into shuttered power plants, but also new reporting and recordkeeping requirements. EPA’s paperwork burden now stands at 188 million hours.”

“To put this in perspective, it would take more than 94,200 employees working full-time (2,000 hours a year) to complete one year of EPA paperwork,” the report continued. “The agency’s burden has surged 23 percent since 2009 and 34 percent since 2002.”

The report found the EPA’s increase in paperwork burdens is not due to its new major regulations, but to new requirements for regulations already on the books.

“The agency has been busy: the Clean Power Plan, Fuel Efficiency Standards, the Ozone Rule, and Waters of the United States,” the report said. “However, none of these measures imposed especially large reporting and recordkeeping costs; a majority of the burdens were in the form of capital costs.”

“The anatomy of record paperwork is a combination of lesser-known new requirements and massive upward revisions of existing paperwork collections,” the report said.

The EPA has added millions of paperwork hours to regulations for its spill prevention, its National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System, and the National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants. [...]

“In an administration that continues to collect regulatory records: most expensive year of regulation, highest number of major rules, and priciest single regulation, EPA’s paperwork plaudit only adds to the list,” the report concluded. “Although the agency is primarily known for the capital costs it imposes on industry, many of which are passed on to consumers, its paperwork burden shouldn’t be overlooked. With four major rules under review now, it’s likely 188 million hours isn’t the agency’s red tape ceiling.”

Click here to read more from the Washington Free Beacon.

The federal government only knows how to do one thing: expand, both in terms of size and power. The EPA is the perfect example, but there are others. Fortunately, there is a way to stop and even reverse the expansion. An Article V Convention of States can propose constitutional amendments that shrink the size and jurisdiction of the federal government. Click here for more information.

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