A new may throw both current and future clean air and water laws into question.
the draft proposal.
It would require scientists to disclose their raw data before the Environmental Protection Agency considers using them to create new public health regulations.
The agency argues this will make the science behind important environmental rules more transparent. But that raw data can include things like patient names and medical records, which are confidential.
And unlike a similar proposal in 2018, this new draft is retroactivemeaning if an old clean air or water rule is backed by a study that doesnt have raw data, it could potentially be thrown out.
Public health experts warned that studies that have been used for decadesto show, for example, that mercury from power plants impairs brain development, or that lead in paint dust is tied to behavioral disorders in childrenmight be inadmissible when existing regulations come up for renewal, the 啦勳鳥梗莽 Lisa Friedman reports.
Michael Halpern, deputy director of the Center for Science and Democracy at the Union of Concerned Scientists, says the draft proposal is one of the broadest attacks on science by the Trump administration yet.
You put an impossible standard on previous research that essentially excludes it from consideration and makes it much easier for the EPA to justify decisions that dont protect public health, Halpern said.
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