As the country focuses on how to address the COVID-19 pandemic, many federal government agencies are moving forward with non-COVID-related policy actions.  Notably, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) recently published an updated proposed rule with a stated goal of increasing transparency in science at the agency. However, despite its specified purpose, this proposal would undermine sound science and put Americans’ health and the environment at risk. How? It would restrict the use of the best available science in the EPA’s policymaking. Decisions affecting millions of people could be based on inadequate information that fails to include well-supported studies by expert scientists.  

This is not the first time we’ve highlighted the danger of this proposal. For nearly two years, the American Lung Association has partnered with the Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research (MJFF) to lead a coalition of health, medical, academic and scientific organizations informing the EPA about concerns with this proposal on science. In July 2018, efforts resulted in a letter from nearly 70 groups citing concerns with the proposal’s impact on the integrity of science and patient privacy, as well as a press conference that included representatives from MJFF and the Lung Association. 

Our two organizations are again teaming up to lead a similar letter in opposition to the supplemental notice of proposed rulemaking.

“We joined with The Michael J. Fox Foundation and dozens of other groups to shine a spotlight on the harms of EPA’s proposed ‘censoring science’ rule,” said American Lung Association National President and CEO Harold P. Wimmer. “If the EPA enacts this rule, their use of the best science will be severely limited, likely resulting in pollution limits that do not adequately protect public health.”

In November 2019, MJFF CEO Todd Sherer, PhD, testified on Capitol Hill before the U.S. House Committee on Science, Space and Technology. He and five other witnesses testified that the rule did not accomplish its stated goal of increasing the use of good science at the agency.  

“If the proposed rule were enacted, patient privacy would be at great risk, and thousands of studies would be excluded from the EPA’s evaluation process when it comes to policymaking,” Dr. Sherer said. “The EPA must continue to balance the need for scientific integrity, and research transparency, with its duty to protect the health of all Americans.”

At the American Lung Association, we believe transparency is critical in research, but the EPA’s efforts seek to solve a problem that simply doesn’t exist. The scientific research that the EPA uses already undergoes a long-established, transparent review process. This rule proposed by the EPA wouldn’t improve transparency, it would censor the science the agency uses in its decisions—and ignore research that shows that air pollution harms health. The likely result: weak limits on air pollution that fail to reflect the science and fail to protect health. 

Please take a moment to sign our petition to tell the Trump Administration not to censor science, and abandon this dangerous proposed rule.

Asthma Educator Institute
, | Jul 11, 2015