EPA Plans To Waive Some Compliance Requirements Amid Coronavirus Crisis (wsj.com) 108
The Environmental Protection Agency is planning to waive compliance requirements and deadlines for a range of industries, including oil refiners, water utilities and sewage plants, as it seeks to help businesses affected by the coronavirus pandemic, according to Trump administration officials. From a report: The biggest change likely will be to waive or postpone coming deadlines to switch to cleaner-burning summer-grade gasoline, according to administration officials and a business lobbyist. Several states have already issued waivers or said they won't enforce them, an analyst said. And many have asked EPA to step in to clarify nationally, according to one administration official. The EPA is preparing to act following an onslaught of requests from businesses and state regulators seeking help, according to the administration officials, who expect the decision to be announced this week. Any action is expected to be scrutinized by environmental groups concerned that the EPA and business groups will take advantage of the situation to skirt environmental regulations. Under President Trump, the EPA has moved to amend environmental policies that the White House views as overly harmful to business.
Morons. (Score:5, Insightful)
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The last place that you allow pollution from is large companies. They amount quickly overtakes society. Look at America in the 60s, China in the 90s, 00s, and now. If you are going to relax pollution to help businesses, do it on start-ups and small amounts of pollution.
Did you even read the summary? Or have any idea what you're talking about?
including oil refiners, water utilities and sewage plants,
How many startup sewage plants do you know about? How about startup water utilities?
There must be a few startup oil refineries though right?
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Far more than you, apparently. Try actually reading his post and try again?
Re: Morons. (Score:2)
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If you're obnoxiously obtuse, I suppose you could see it that way. It's not that this will turn the entire atmosphere polluted or whatever straw man you were going for. It means we could easily have more Super Fund sites or poisoned rivers. [ohiovalleyresource.org]
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Delaying the change over to summer-grade gasoline will create poisoned rivers? Really. Better tell those scientists.
Do you think they just dump the extra winter-grade gasoline into a river?
I was replying to this well known moron [slashdot.org] who claimed
The last place that you allow pollution from is large companies. They amount quickly overtakes society. Look at America in the 60s,
If that's who your willing to defend, be my guest.
Re:Moron (Score:2)
The last place that you allow pollution from is large companies. They amount quickly overtakes society. Look at America in the 60s, China in the 90s, 00s, and now. If you are going to relax pollution to help businesses, do it on start-ups and small amounts of pollution.
Did you even read the summary? Or have any idea what you're talking about?
including oil refiners, water utilities and sewage plants,
How many startup sewage plants do you know about? How about startup water utilities?
There must be a few startup oil refineries though right?
You're kind of backing up his point, you're suggesting there aren't any?
Then why are we easing regulatory burdens for large, established industries?
Does big oil need a bailout? At least have the balls to ask for it instead of beating around the bushes.
Never let a good crisis go to waste (Score:4, Insightful)
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It ain't just the Reps...the Dems too.
Heck, look at the house what all crap they were trying to squeeze into the virus aid bill.....funding for the Kennedy center?
Seriously?
I mean in a time of crisis, people out of work, pandemic....they add bullshit in there like that to a much needed stimulus bill that needs to move?
That one is the most outlandis
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>both sides
you guys only have 1 side: the billionaires side.
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Heck, look at the house what all crap they were trying to squeeze into the virus aid bill.....funding for the Kennedy center?
There was funding for the arts in both Senate and House bills, although in different amounts. The National Endowment for the Arts and Humanities for instance were proposed to receive $300 million each by Democrats and $100 million each by Republicans. Unless you are just getting your outrage from Bill Johnson's tweets (and probably Fox News' reporting on them) you should be able to realize there are 5.1 million jobs associated with arts and culture in 2017. The arts and humanities are not something to ignor
Re: Never let a good crisis go to waste (Score:1)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Rahm_Emanuel#2000s
Educate yourself.
Re: Never let a good crisis go to waste (Score:2)
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Some other governors have tried to shut down gun shops. A freedom-minded compromise is to allow both to remain open.
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According to ExxonMobil, there are at least 14 unique types of summer-grade fuel sold nationwide. While the majority of states fill up with conventional 9.0-psi RVP gasoline, refiners must produce blends that are oxygenated, to reduce carbon monoxide; reformulated, in 17 states, to further reduce ozone and smog-forming toxins; for California only; and more. It gets trickier with ethanol. Since 97 percent of all gasoline sold contains ethanol—and, according to the American Petroleum Institute, ethanol blended up to 10 percent results in gasoline with a 10.0-psi RVP—the EPA counts such blends, called E10, as meeting the 9.0-psi standard. But many states, including the entire Northeastern seaboard from Delaware to Maine, don’t cut ethanol any slack. So gasoline refiners must be creative to reduce summer gas volatility, and creativity is expensive.
https://www.caranddriver.com/n... [caranddriver.com]
Re: Morons. (Score:2)
Re: Morons. (Score:1)
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I do not mind a small amount of pollution to create a startup,
FFS you're clueless.
Who is going to create a startup petroleum refinery in the middle of a pandemic where everyone is sheltering in place?
If they're open enough to pollute... (Score:5, Interesting)
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I've no idea how much they may have automated, or how much the changeover requires more people than usual to come together to do the work. It may be the case that they have optimized day to day so that very few people are required to keep a facility open, except for the process to reconfigure.
It certainly warrants scrutiny to make sure it is not some excuse, but it's plausible that there is a good cause for this specific postponement. Fortunately, all the people staying home happens to give them some marg
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https://www.caranddriver.com/n... [caranddriver.com]
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There's tons of gas filling up tanks at refineries that is winter grade. What would you like them to do with it?
I guess they could just burn it.......
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There's tons of gas filling up tanks at refineries that is winter grade. What would you like them to do with it?
My understanding is that there is no such thing "tons of ... winter grade". Refineries produce 100% gasoline, then prior to shipping add various additives that make it winter or summer gas. Summer gas is more expensive, mostly due to mandate for ethanol content. Winter gas has less or none as in extreme cold it doesn't flow well.
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They can't change the productions facilities with a flip of the switch.
They actually shut down for days and a lot happens before they can come back up online with the different formulations.
it isn't just machines either...requires manpower which may be in short supply lately.
example (Score:4, Interesting)
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expect wall funding under the carpet (Score:2, Insightful)
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Not to defend Trump on this, but considering that Mexico is still not on lock-down [mexiconewsdaily.com], shit about to hit the fan big times over there. In two weeks there will be massive Mexican refugee caravans trying to go North to escape COVID. So a sturdy wall would have been very helpful to keep them out.
Joining massive caravan ... to escape viral epidemic.
Stop trolling please, it makes no sense that that motivation would cause that behavior.
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Not if the USA is ahead of Mexico on infections.I would expect more people to try and head where its hot as the virus doesn't do well over 80 degrees.
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?massive Mexican refugee caravans
peeeeeeeeep
arf arf woof
Cleaner-burning summer-grade gasoline (Score:1)
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It's a conservatives-driven trap (Score:5, Insightful)
This is all Old Playbook stuff: leverage a disaster/crisis situation to slide in things from your agenda; who's going to notice? Do it all quietly enough and no one will notice because they're all running around waving their arms in the air and screaming in terror over whatever.
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Can anyone clue me in? (Score:3)
What does one have to do with the other?
Pork profit. (Score:1)
Psychopaths smelling an opportunity.
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The tl;dr: The supply chain currently has an oversupply of winter gas due to no one using it. Regulations prevent winter gas from being sold after May 1st and summer gas from being sold before April 1st (which is why they didn't want to switch production over too early).
Shifting the May 1st deadline prevents the gasoline companies from having to burn the extra gas to make room for the summer grade one.
Sewage plants. (Score:1)
What could possibly go wrong?!
The country would be better (Score:1)
Re:Makes sense (Score:4, Insightful)
While surely *now* is not the time to worry about air pollution, if we return to work before the summer, air pollution will be something to worry about again.
The reason we have special summer formulated gas is that winter gas is more volatile, and contributes to smog. Smog kills people with compromised respiratory systems. So this particular regulatory stimulus package could increase the mortality rate from COVID-19.
Of course, if we're not returning to work until next winter, then this move makes perfect sense.
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I presume the thinking is that there may be risks or having to bring in some people and under the circumstances, it's ok to postpone that a couple of months, so long as it isn't skipped entirely. At least in my area, the fact there are 95% fewer cars on the road does a lot more for pollution than the change normally does anyway, so there is temporarily some margin to work with.
I don't work in that industry, but in my work even for some processes that 'should' be utterly safe to do remotely, they are being
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Well, that depends on how badly we screw up, but it'd have to be pretty bad. Excess deaths due to smog run around 30,000. If things get as bad as Italy we could top that.
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Don't forget to calculate the average road deaths that have been avoided in the stay-at-home period.
Re: Makes sense (Score:1)
Life kills!
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Life is a sexually transmitted disease with a 100% mortality rate.
Re: Makes sense (Score:2)
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I"m not sure I'd be laying money down just yet on Trump being defeated in the fall.
First, so many factors at play.
Right now...if you asked much of the US who would be running against Trump, you might get a significant number of people doing ...."err...what?"
With all the virus air time 25/7....the Dem presidentia
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Anyway, I hope all the new gun owners and those that saw that there realistically COULD come a point (and it still might come) that the police could not protect you and that you had to defend yourself...
That could be coming momentarily.
The police, and to some extent the courts, have been doing their best to reduce the jail/prison population, to avoid a disastrous runaway plague-in-the-prison scenario. Cite-and-release for all but the most egregious crimes, early release, or just letting them go. That mea
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Well, that's mostly if your're confronted outside your home.
If anyone sets a foot inside the house...they get shot.
There is no hesitation defending the inside of the home from a criminal.
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Unfortunately, you have to have already, firmly, decided you will if he makes one more aggressive move - BEFORE you produce and aim the gun. Otherwise you won't fire in time if you need to do so.
Well, that's mostly if your're confronted outside your home.
Actually, I was referring to a general tactical and reaction time issue. But if we count entering your home as "makes one more move", we're on the same page,
If anyone sets a foot inside the house...they get shot.
There is no hesitation defending the inside
Re:Makes sense, continued. (Score:2)
- Oregon: Court precedents have actually let people plug the unarmed perp retreating to his car - claiming it's reasonable to assume he might be going for a shotgun or rifle to plug you from beyond your range.
- Some states require you to retreat, even abandoning your children and leaving the house, unless cornered and unable to go further.
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Not a problem in New Orleans.
If you shoot the guy and he makes it out the door and dies in your yard, the cops will often ask if you want help dragging the body back over the door step before they take picture, just to give you a stronger case.
Re: Makes sense (Score:1)
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Its also a VERY good idea to have carry concealed insurance, not only if you CCW, but just also for home defense.
I went with CCW Save [ccwsafe.com]....they basically lawyer you up immediately after a shooting, and cover your expenses, bail you out of jail needed
Re: Makes sense (Score:1)
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Wow super great info, thanks!
Please CHECK IT YOURSELF. Don't trust my memory and interpretations. Also they keep changing the laws and how they enforce them and some of that was from a decade or more ago.
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For sure, it varies from state to state.
In general, in the south, you as the victim, especially in your own home are usually given the benefit of the doubt to begin with, unless it really looks fishy.
But even so, the link to the insurance is valid and covers all 50 states....and a good thing to have if you own firearms.
This policy
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Wrong, the alleged EPA was simply waiting for an excuse to lighten the regs. They won't coming off soon, they'll simply manufacture reasons why they cannot. Remember, Trump destroys everything he touches.
Re: Makes sense (Score:1)
If the regulations were actually important then they wouldn't be lifting them now.
We still have to follow laws like stopping at red lights. Why? It saves lives and keeps traffic flowing in the cross direction. We're lifting EPA refs. Why? Because they didn't do anything useful and made everything suck for no reason.
Good.
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Moderators -- I disagree with this poster too, but that doesn't make him a *troll*. We should listen to what people have to say even when it doesn't strike us as right.
It's actually worth considering whether a regulation like this is applicable, and whether in the circumstances it might be better to suspend it. I happen to think it's not a good idea, and I gave my reasons, but it is not somehow *trolling* to raise these points.
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Anyone who supports setting aside a pollution control law needs to gargle on the engine exhaust for a little while.
What if the law is ineffective and too costly? Considering that we know that bad laws exist, would you consider that some pollution control laws could also be bad laws?
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Hellnah. It's like wages: if your business can't pay a living wage, your business doesn't deserve to exist. If your business is dependent on poisoning the air and water - then fuck your business. Fuck it up its stupid ass.
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Re: Any law (Score:1)
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Argumentum absurdum. And no, you don't have to give up a modern lifestyle or materials along with mass pollution. You just have to pay more.
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I'll consider it after yearly hundreds of billions of subsidies to the oil/coal industries are abolished.
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Video evidence now please. Put up or shut up.
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I thought only the dullards on crappy political sites and Youtube comment sections were STILL dumb enough to be blaming Russia for every comment they don't like in the far future of 2020, but even Slashdot is infected with these useless morons.
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I thought only the dullards on crappy political sites and Youtube comment sections were STILL dumb enough to be blaming Russia for every comment they don't like in the far future of 2020, but even Slashdot is infected with these useless morons.
no more Russian trolls? [usatoday.com]
as always, Russian Trolls pretend there are no fake news peddlars on the right
There certainly are.
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Yep, they play for the same team.
Is that sarcasm? The military-industrial-corporate complex is run by fucking idiots. That's why we were already heading for a total repeat of the 2008 financial collapse before this virus hit.
Re: Let the Orange Man have his way (Score:1)
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Smarter? Since when is destroying the very planet you live on "being smart"?
When Federal agencies start waiving rules and regs (Score:2)
This is a tacit admission that these rules and regulations were causing delays and making things less efficient.
Look at how many regulations the FDA has had to waive in order to get test kits into production and drug trials into production. They have been a HUGE roadblock.
Of course their Not Invented Here is even more of a road block.