Trump Has Repealed Hundreds Of Obama-Era Regulations Michael Bastasch 12:07 PM 07/20/2017
While President Donald Trump struggles to push through health care reform, his administration has successfully withdrawn hundreds of Obama-era regulations, according to the latest federal regulatory agenda.
The White House Office of Management and Budget’s (OMB) “Unified Agenda” now lists “deregulatory actions” taken by federal agencies. So far, the Trump administration has withdraw 469 regulations proposed in the Obama administration’s final regulatory agenda in 2016.
On top of that, federal agencies delayed 282 regulations going through the rule making process and halted rulemaking for another 109 regulations. OMB also reports a 50 percent drop in “economically significant” regulations — rules costing $100 million or more.
“Government is using muscles it hasn’t used in a really long time, exposing and removing redundant and unnecessary regulation,” OMB Director Mick Mulvaney said in a statement.
Trump signed an executive order in January, ordering federal agencies to cut two existing regulations for every new regulation they pass. Left-wing environmental groups quickly challenged the order, but Trump’s been busy implementing policies to cut back on federal rules.
The Washington Examiner’s Paul Bedard reported Trump has so far exceeded his goal of repealing two regulations for every new one written. The administration has repealed regulations at a ratio of 16 to one.
Federal agencies have created task forces to identify regulations ripe for repeal, and Trump himself continued to sign executive orders and legislation to rollback regulations.
Trump has paid special attention to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Interior Department, both of which have seen rules repealed outright or put under review.
Most recently, EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt notified state governors in June he would delay for a year the agency’s 2015 rule for ozone pollution.
Pruitt said there’s “insufficient information” to fully implement the 2015 rule on its current timeline, but environmentalists interpreted it as the first step to repealing the standard.
The administration has also taken aim at restrictions on offshore drilling put in place by the Obama administration. Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke recently announced his agency would rewrite the previous administration’s five-year drilling plan.
Zinke also said Trump would open up Arctic Ocean waters to drilling President Barack Obama himself ordered be “permanently” made off-limits to energy development.
Current Unified Agenda of Regulatory and Deregulatory Actions
The Trump Administration's Unified Agenda of Regulatory and Deregulatory Actions provides an updated report on the actions administrative agencies plan to issue in the near and long term. Prepared by the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, this Agenda represents the beginning of fundamental regulatory reform and a reorientation toward reducing unnecessary regulatory burden on the American people.
By amending and eliminating regulations that are ineffective, duplicative, and obsolete, the Administration can promote economic growth and innovation and protect individual liberty.
Fulfilling longstanding principles to review and assess existing regulations, the Agenda includes the withdrawal and reconsideration of numerous regulatory actions. Agencies have committed to careful assessment of the costs and benefits of each regulatory and deregulatory action, and to prioritizing the maximization of net benefits of regulations. The Agenda recognizes that reform will take time and require rigorous analysis, public input, and careful consideration of a variety of important legal and social values. To this end, the Agenda provides greater information and transparency about regulatory actions proposed by agencies.
Executive Orders 13771 and 13777 require agencies to reduce unnecessary regulatory burden and to enforce regulatory reform initiatives. As a step in the right direction, the first five months of this Administration produced quantifiable annualized cost savings estimated at $22 million, compared to $6.8 billion in annualized costs due to rules finalized during last five months of fiscal year 2016.
The Agenda represents ongoing progress toward the goals of more effective and less burdensome regulation and includes the following developments:
Agencies withdrew 469 actions proposed in the Fall 2016 Agenda;
Agencies reconsidered 391 active actions by reclassifying them as long-term (282) and inactive (109), allowing for further careful review;
Economically significant regulations fell to 58, or about 50 percent less than Fall 2016;
For the first time, agencies will post and make public their list of "inactive" rules-providing notice to the public of regulations still being reviewed or considered.