Trump Admin Makes It Easier for Coal Companies to Pollute in America Again

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The EPA, led by a former coal lobbyist, has rolled back rules for how coal companies discard of wastewater with pollutants including lead and arsenic

Photo: AFP via Getty Images On Monday, the Trump administration put in place new regulations for how coal-fired power plants must discard of wastewater tainted by pollutants including lead, selenium, and arsenic, relaxing the steps that power companies must take before this liquid is released into local waterways.

Environmental Protection Agency head Andrew Wheeler, himself a former coal lobbyist, praised the change as a way to “reduce pollution and save jobs at the same time.” But environmental advocates anticipate the change will expose the 1.1 million Americans who live within three miles of a coal plant that releases chemicals into a public waterway to a greater level of toxic chemicals.

For years, the EPA under Trump has made it easier for coal companies to pollute and keep older, dirtier plants online, with the justification that it would save enough money for the industry to employ more workers. But coal in the Trump era has faced a significant shock despite the president’s hand on the scale. Since Trump came into office, the industry, which employs around 50,000 non-seasonal workers, has lost 1,000 jobs.

Despite his efforts, the president has been unable to turn around an industry in which more than half of operating coal factories worldwide are already more expensive to run than to build new renewable plants. This year is expected to mark the first in which renewable energy surpasses that produced by coal in the United States, due in part to electric companies cutting back on unclean energy amidst low demand during the pandemic.

“We’ve ended the war on beautiful, clean coal and we’re putting our coal miners back to work,” Trump said on the campaign trail in 2016. “That you know better than anybody.” But that push to support coal companies has come at the expense of coal miners. In 2019, the administration cut a tax that halved the amount that firms had to pay to the Black Lung Disability Trust Fund, in an industry in which rates of black lung are on the rise.

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They should be ashamed.... don’t they want to drink clean water.... how about their children?

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