CoA Asks EPA to Delay Rule

New Materials Call Into Question EPA’s Fundamental Assumptions

Cause of Action joined the Institute for Liberty, Americans for Prosperity, and the Center for Rule of Law in asking the Environmental Protection Agency to reassess certain assumptions it made in its proposed rule entitled National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants From Coal and Oil-Fired Electric Utility Steam Generating Units and Standards of Performance for Fossil-Fuel-Fired Electric Utility, Industrial-Commercial-Institutional, and Small Industrial-Commercial-Institutional Steam Generating Units (“Utility MACT”).  (Read the Petition here)
A reliability assessment by Office of Electric Reliability (“OER”) of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (“FERC”) and other materials that became available after the close of public comment in this matter raise issues of central relevance to the rulemaking. These materials cast doubt on the fundamental assumptions underlying EPA’s “appropriate and necessary” finding, and major aspects of its proposed Utility MACT rule that impact electric reliability. They demonstrate in particular that EPA “entirely failed to consider an important aspect of the problem” before it, namely the proposed rule’s impact on regional and local electric reliability and the combined impact on reliability of EPA’s rulemaking agenda.

The groups asked the EPA to delay its rule-making timetable in order to digest the information they presented, as well as to consider the North American Electric Reliability Corporation’s (“NERC”) long-term reliability assessment due in November 2011, which will be the first cumulative assessment of EPA’s rulemaking agenda to evaluate the localized reliability impact of the proposed Utility MACT rule.

CoA Executive Director Daniel Epstein stated:

CoA’s concerns as petitioner focus on two issues: first, the costs and harms to jobs and second, the lack of transparency involved in the rule-making process.

As for the issue of costs, Senator Inhofe (R-OK) recently indicated that the EPA’s Utility MACT rule would risk plant closures, increase electricity rates, and destroy as much as 1.4 million current jobs.  Forty-percent of electric capacity in the United States is based on coal; the EPA rule, without re-opening comments to consider new facts, represents an assault on affordable energy.

Second, the EPA, by burying studies by the Office of Electric Reliability and FERC as well as impatiently avoiding the North American Electric Reliability Corporation study, ignores that electric reliability is a local issue and needs to be assessed at the regional and local levels to ascertain likely shortfalls and bottlenecks.  EPA has committed to a rushed rulemaking schedule that will not allow it to consider North American Electric Reliability Corporation’s report—which will be the first report by any organization to assess the local impact of EPA’s Utility MACT.

There are also transparency concerns involved, which relate directly to legal requirements that EPA rules present a “reasoned analysis.”  Senator Inhofe requested that EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson clarify the extent to which EPA has worked with a number of agencies on the issue of electric reliability. According to Senator Inhofe, “EPA has failed to collaborate with FERC to consider how Utility MACT will affect electric reliability. . . . FERC Commissioner Moeller went as far as to say that ‘the Commission has not acted or studied or provided assistance to any agency, including the EPA.’”

EPA reported this year that the Agency and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) were jointly modeling the potential for coal-fired power plant closures prompted by Utility MACT.  However, as FERC’s response to a May 17 letter from Senator Lisa Murkowski (R-AK), Ranking Member of the Senate Energy Committee, revealed, nothing as extensive as joint modeling has occurred.

Cause of Action is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, nonpartisan public interest firm that uses public policy and legal reform strategies to ensure greater transparency in government, protect taxpayer interests and promote civil and economic freedoms.

ACORN Gets Another $350,000 In American Taxpayers’ Money

Documents released this month by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development show that ACORN affiliate Affordable Housing Centers of America (AHCOA) received over $350,000 in Pennsylvania despite a Congressional ban on funding the organization.  According to a HUD press release, AHCOA received $350,030.64 “to provide counseling assistance relating to mortgage modification, avoiding potential mortgage scams, and assisting victims of scams.”  This comes on the heels of last week’s revelation that AHCOA received $300,000 from HUD in August and an earlier report that AHCOA received almost $80,000 in April.

The Daily Caller’s coverage of FTJ’s efforts at exposing AHCOA and ACORN were covered in a story last week describing HUD’s award of $300,000 and a story today describing the $350,000 award.

In late 2009 Congress prohibited the government from funding ACORN or any ACORN affiliates, subsidiaries or allied organizations.  Not surprisingly, records recently uncovered from the Louisiana Secretary of State show that on January 8, 2010, ACORN simply changed its name to AHCOA.  HUD’s own press release removes any doubt that the Affordable Housing Centers of America (AHCOA) is not distinct from ACORN Housing by stating, “Since 1985, Affordable Housing Centers of America (AHCOA) has been providing housing counseling services to low and moderate and minority communities and fighting housing discrimination.”

The name-change trick apparently worked, because in a September 29, 2010 report, the U.S. Governmental Accountability Office found that AHCOA was not, “as presently configured. . . an affiliate, subsidiary, or allied organization of ACORN,” thus allowing ACORN/AHCOA to continue receiving federal funding.

If Congress does not ask the GAO to review its decision by September 29, 2011, the GAO’s funding determination will become unreviewable.

Freedom Through Justice Foundation Executive Director stated:

It is obvious that the President and his Housing and Urban Development Department are completely ignoring the will of Congress.  Despite clear evidence that ACORN merely changed their name to AHCOA, HUD continues to disingenuously maintain that AHCOA is not an affiliate of ACORN.  HUD’s September 2, 2011 grant is the latest instance of the American taxpayers’ money being improperly steered to an entity with a history of financial mismanagement and corrupt election activities.  In just the past year, AHCOA’s receipts from HUD have gone from $80,000 to $300,000 to $350,000; it’s a matter of time before AHCOA is receiving several million dollars per year of taxpayer dollars.

The Freedom Through Justice Foundation is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, nonpartisan public interest firm that uses public policy and legal reform strategies to ensure greater transparency in government, protect taxpayer interests and promote social and economic freedoms.  Follow the Foundation via Twitter: @FTJFoundation.

HUD Awards $300,000 Of Your Tax Dollars To ACORN Rebranded Affiliate

Award Made After Recent House Appropriations Resolution Specifically Banned Federal Funds To AHCOA

The Freedom Through Justice Foundation, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, nonpartisan public interest group, has found that the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (“HUD”) gave $300,000 on August 11, 2011 to the Affordable Housing Centers of America (AHCOA), which until last year, was ACORN-affiliate ACORN Housing Corporation. HUD believes that AHCOA is not an ACORN-affiliate and relied on a September 29, 2010 U.S. Government Accountability Office (“GAO”) determination that the Affordable Housing Centers of America is not an affiliate or related organization of ACORN. Congress has until September 29, 2011 to appeal this decision before it becomes unreviewable. Last week, the Freedom Through Justice Foundation wrote to NeighborWorks America concerning the importance of its publicly releasing an audit report that may present definitive evidence that AHCOA and ACORN are, in fact, affiliated. The fact that NeighborWorks, in its recent announcement of National Foreclosure Mitigation Counseling (“NFMC”) grant recipients, chose not to fund the previously funded AHCOA, combined with the fact that the June 14, 2011 GAO final report on ACORN’s federal funding cited a report written by the NeighborWorks Office of Special Audit concerning the financial relationship between AHCOA and ACORN, raises the inference that the Office of Special Audit report found AHCOA to be an affiliate or related organization of ACORN. (NeighborWorks, Office of Internal Audit, Special Audit on the Use of National Foreclosure Mitigation Counseling Program Grant Funds by ACORN Housing Corporation, Inc. (Washington, D.C., 2010)). The Office of Inspector General at HUD has already targeted AHCOA as an organization which mismanaged taxpayer dollars and a recent Homeland Security appropriations resolution passed by the U.S. House of Representatives specifically identifies the Affordable Housing Centers of America as an ACORN affiliate that should be barred from federal funding.

Fox News.com: ACORN Misused Federal Grant Funds, Report Says

Read the full story here. Fox News

“This report confirms that ACORN and its rebranded affiliates have used fiscal sponsorship in an illegal and abusive manner to launder taxpayer funds into its own coffers,” said Daniel Epstein, executive director of Cause of Action, a Washington, D.C.-based independent, nonprofit government watchdog that has monitored the actions of ACORN over the years.”

Politico’s Morning Energy Report: CoA Files Amicus Brief re: EPA

Read the full story here. Politico

“The Institute for Liberty, Americans for Prosperity, Center for Rule of Law, Cause of Action and National Black Chamber of Commerce are also worried about the effect of EPA’s final utility MACT rule for mercury and air toxics, which is due out Dec. 16. In an amicus brief filed Tuesday in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, the groups say EPA needs another year to study the rule’s impacts on electric-grid reliability because the agency has rushed into a rulemaking without a clear understanding of how many power plants will close and what the effect will be on power generation.”

 

CoA Stands Up Against Government Regulation of Private Choices

Cause of Action has just filed a brief before the FDA on behalf of Trent Arsenault, a Bay Area man who has been ordered by the federal government to “cease manufacture” of sperm. Over the last six years, Mr. Arsenault has helped thirteen couples conceive by donating his gametes to them at no cost. Many of these couples would otherwise have been forced to spend tens of thousands of dollars at a sperm bank without any guarantee of results. Trent does not take any compensation for his services and donates simply out of his desire to help those in his community having trouble conceiving.

Despite this, the FDA last year classified Trent as a “firm” which is a “manufacturer of human cells, tissues, and cellular and tissue-based products.” As such, the FDA ordered Trent to cease “manufacture” of his gametes unless he complies with regulations that normally apply to sperm banks. Compliance with these regulations would cost tens of thousands of dollars and be practically impossible for Mr. Arsenault as he does not own, nor operate out of, a laboratory. Trent has asked for an opportunity to tell his side of the story at a hearing, but the government opposed his request.

Cause of Action has decided to represent Mr. Arsenault because we are outraged at the intrusion of the FDA into the private lives of Trent and the people he helps. The FDA admits that if Mr. Arsenault was a “sexually intimate partner” with the couples that he helps that he would be beyond their regulation, but they offer no definition of what that term means. The FDA should not be in the business of deciding who is, and is not, sexually intimate, especially when doing so interferes with private individuals’ ability to start a family.

Read Cause of Action’s Brief.


The Washington Examiner: Cause of Action: NLRB former Chairman and General Counsel engage in ex parte communications

Cause of Action:  NLRB former Chairman and General Counsel engage in ex parte communications

“Cause of Action, a government accountability nonprofit, has obtained emails through a Freedom of Information Act request showing then-NLRB Chairwoman Wilma Liebman, NLRB Acting General Counsel Lafe Solomon and NLRB Public Affairs Director Nancy Cleeland coordinating the board’s response to its own decision to sue Boeing for opening a factory in the right to work state of South Carolina. . . Cause of Action has obtained at least four emails sent to both Solomon and Liebman explicitly about the Boeing litigation. There is also a fifth email about the Boeing litigation, sent from Liebman herself, to Cleeland and Solomon. All of these communications appear to violate NLRB’s own rules.

Cause of Action has asked NLRB’s inspector general to investigate the apparently illegal coordination by Liebman, Cleeland and Solomon on the Boeing suit. But Congress must do more.”