Archive for the ‘Obama’ Category

Trump to roll back Obama’s climate, water rules through executive action – Washington Post

President Trump is preparing executive orders aimed at curtailingObama-era policies on climate and water pollution, according to individuals briefed on the measures.

While both directives will take time to implement, they will send an unmistakable signal that the new administration is determined to promote fossil-fuel production and economic activity even when those activities collide with some environmental safeguards. Individuals familiar with the proposals asked for anonymity to describe them in advance of their announcement, which could come as soon as this week.

One executive order which the Trump administration will couch asreducing U.S. dependence on other countries for energy will instruct the Environmental Protection Agency to begin rewriting the 2015 regulation that limits greenhouse-gas emissions from existing electric utilities. It also instructs the Interior Departments Bureau of Land Management (BLM) to lift a moratorium on federal coal leasing.

[Scott Pruitt, longtime adversary of EPA, confirmed to lead the agency]

A second order will instruct the EPA and Army Corps of Engineers to revamp a 2015 rule, known as the Waters of the United Statesrule, that applies to 60 percent of the water bodies in the country. That regulation was issued under the 1972 Clean Water Act, which gives the federal government authority over not only major water bodies but also the wetlands, rivers and streams that feed into them. It affects development as well as some farming operations on the grounds that these activities could pollute the smaller or intermittent bodies of water that flow into major ones.

Trump has joined many industry groups in criticizing these rules as examples of the federal government exceeding its authority and curbing economic growth. While any move to undo these policies will spark new legal battles and entail work within the agencies that could take as long as a year and a half to finalize, the orders could affect investment decisions within the utility, mining, agriculture and real estate sectors, as well as activities on the ground.

Trump, who signed legislation last week that nullified a recent regulation prohibiting surface-mining operations from dumping waste in nearby waterways, said he was eager to support coal miners who had backed his presidential bid. The miners are a big deal, he said Thursday. Ive had support from some of these folks right from the very beginning, and I wont forget it.

[Barack Obamas evolution on climate change]

Bloomberg reported several elements of the executive orders Friday.

The greenhouse-gas limits on existing power plants, dubbed the Clean Power Plan, represented a central components of President Barack Obamas climate agenda. The regulations, which were put on hold by the Supreme Court and are being weighed by the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, direct every state to form detailed plans to reduce carbon dioxide emissions from such sources as coal-fired power plants, enough to decrease carbon pollution by about one-third by 2030, compared with 2005 levels.

Trump repeatedly criticized these and other rules aimed at reducing fossil-fuel use as an attack on the U.S. coal industry. Myron Ebell, a senior fellow at the Competitive Enterprise Institute who served on Trumps EPA transition team, said the president is fulfilling his campaign promise by directing key agencies to shift course. Ebell warned, however, that undoing these rules will take time. It could take days, months and years.

President Obama has used his authority under the 1906 Antiquities Act to create national monuments 34 times, more than any other president. With an incoming Trump administration vocally opposed to Obama's executive actions on many issues, will those monuments continue to stand? The Post's Juliet Eilperin explains. (Daron Taylor/The Washington Post)

[A call to modernize a coal leasing program thats cost taxpayers billions]

One measure lifting the moratorium on federal coal leasing could take immediate effect. That freeze has been in effect since December 2015, and last month the Interior Department proposed major changes to a program that guides coal exploration and production across 570 million publicly owned acres.

Days before Obama left office, the Interior Department issued a report saying the federal government should explore options that include charging a higher royalty rate to companies, factoring in the climate impact of the coal being burned through an additional charge to firms and setting an overall carbon budget for the nations coal leasing permits. But the new administration has expressed little interest in pursuing these policies and appears to be opening up the option of coal leasing again without any preconditions.

The House has already passed legislation that wouldeliminate a BLM rulecurbing the release of methane, a potent greenhouse gas, from oil and gas operations on federal land. The resolution, which needs Senate and presidential approval to take effect, uses the 1996 Congressional Review Act to reverse one of the final rules the Obama administration issued. While Trump administration officials have discussed whether to address methane regulation in the upcoming executive order, it may not be included in light of Congresss recent action.

Separately, Trump and his deputies are reopening a question of water policy that has bedeviled government officials from both parties for two decades. Two Supreme Court decisions that came down during the George W. Bush administration, in 2001 and 2006, spurred uncertainty over exactly which bodies of water fall under the federal governments jurisdiction. The Bush administration worked on drafting regulations to address the issue, but once Obama took office the EPA began rewriting them. The current rule gives the federal government wide latitude to protect smaller tributaries as well as some, such as wetlands, that may be dry periodically, on the grounds that they still need to be preserved as critical water supplies.

But groups such as the American Farm Bureau Federation argue that the new restrictions could require farmers to pay significant fees to gain federal permission for filling in areas on their property and could halt some operations altogether.

Hunter and angler groups, however, have expressed concern about any rollback of the rule, which they say will preserve wetlands and other habitat that is crucial for outdoor recreation.

If they have a better way to do it, were all for it, said Whit Fosburgh, president of the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership. But we want to make sure the wetlands and streams covered in the Obama rule can be covered in whatever they develop as a replacement. Thats our bottom line.

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Trump to roll back Obama's climate, water rules through executive action - Washington Post

Obama ranked 12th best president by historians in new C-SPAN poll – USA TODAY

The C-SPAN survey ranks presidents on leadership qualities, including public persuasion and crisis leadership. Video provided by Newsy Newslook

Just weeks after leaving the White House, President Barack Obama ranks as the 12th best U.S. president overall in a new poll of historians conducted by C-SPAN ahead of Presidents Day.

It's the first time Obama was eligible for the Presidential Historians Survey, which asked 91 historians to rank all 43 former presidents across 10 categories. Those include"Pursued Equal Justice for All," in which Obama ranked 3rd, and "Relations with Congress," in which he ranked 39th.

Abraham Lincoln retained his top spot for the third time in the poll, which debuted in 2000 and last took place in 2009. Other consistently high-ranking presidents include George Washington, Franklin D. Roosevelt and Theodore Roosevelt, all of whom made the top five overall in each survey.

Also notable: George W. Bush bumped up three spots to 33rd since the poll's 2009 edition, while Bill Clinton stayed steady at 15th.

The biggest loser since the 2009 survey is Andrew Jackson, the populist president whose portrait adorns the wall of President Donald Trump's Oval Office. Jackson dropped five spots, from 13th to 18th.

More:

Men outnumber women more than 2-1 among top White House aides

No honeymoon: One month in, Trump's approval ratings are sagging

James Buchanan, Andrew Johnson and Franklin Pierce have taken the bottom three spots in each edition of the poll, C-SPAN noted, beneath even William Henry Harrison, who held office for only one month.

A team of advisers, including professors from Rice University and Howard University, guided all three of C-SPAN's surveys, approving criteria, assisting with participants and overseeing collection of the results.

See the entire poll and rankings for past editionsat C-SPAN.

Follow Josh Hafner on Twitter:@joshhafner

Read or Share this story: http://usat.ly/2lmZQ5W

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Obama ranked 12th best president by historians in new C-SPAN poll - USA TODAY

Trump’s Exorbitant Travel Costs Will Far Surpass Obama’s – The Root

President Donald Trump walks to greet supporters after arriving on Air Force One at the Palm Beach International Airport to spend part of the weekend at Mar-a-Lago resort on February 17, 2017, in West Palm Beach, Fla. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

President Trump had a lot to say about President Obamas vacations and his costs to American taxpayers. Yet, a new report confirms that Trumps travel costsmade more exorbitant because of his refusal to stay in the White House on weekendsis on track to far surpass that of Obama.

The Washington Post estimates that if the Trump familys elaborate lifestyle continues at the clip it racked up during the first month of his presidency, he will spend hundreds million more than his predecessor.

The Post reports that Trumps three trips to the Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida since the inauguration cost approximately $10 million in travel, security and more. President Obama spent roughly the same in travel ($12 million) for an entire year.

Because President Trump has such a large family, their security adds to the astronomical costs as well as well.

The costs of guarding the Trump Tower in New York City where the first lady, Melania Trump and Trumps youngest son Barron live, is estimated to cost $183 million a year. New York Senator Chuck Schumer says he wants the federal government to recoup these costs to New York City and State. The Post also reports that Eric Trumps trip to Uruguay ran $100,000 in hotel fees for Secret Service personnel.

This in addition to the $1.5 million a year to rent appropriate space for authorities in the Trump Tower, if the Pentagon decides to prepare for the commander-in-chiefs possible to return to his Manhattan residence.

Conversely, Obamas travel expenses were calculated at about $97 million for his two years in office.

Read more at the Washington Post.

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Trump's Exorbitant Travel Costs Will Far Surpass Obama's - The Root

Obama’s Library Architects Say Project May Need $1.5 Billion: Report – NBC Chicago

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Former President Barack Obama may need some additional cash flow to get the Obama Presidential Center built in Chicago, according to a report.

Former President Barack Obama may need some additional cash flow to get the Obama Presidential Center built in Chicago, according to a report.

The architects said the center needs an endowment of $1.5 billion, three times more than the amount raisedfor George W. Bush's presidential center that opened in Dallas in 2013, Page Six's Richard Johnson reports.

They attributed the high cost to the construction of both a library and museum. The architects said the expected $200 millioncost of the buildings themselves likely will be closer to $300 million.

They noted Obama declined to do much fundraising for the center while still in office,Johnsonreports. Sources told NBC 5Obama is about to begin a major fundraising effort for the project.

Obama returned to Chicago last week for the first time since he left office to hold meetings with community leaders and others involved in the Obama Foundation.

A military C-5 aircraft arrived in Chicago Thursday morning, bringing with it a shipment of Obamas belongings for the library.

Valerie Jarrett told the Chicago Sun-Times the president is eager to hear suggestions from community members to bring opportunities to the area.

Representatives of the former president and first lady said this monthan agency was hired to assist the couple with speaking gigs, as well as lawyers to handle their book deals.

Published at 11:18 AM CST on Feb 20, 2017

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Obama's Library Architects Say Project May Need $1.5 Billion: Report - NBC Chicago

The Obama ‘Fiduciary Rule’ Is Helping American Savers – Wall Street Journal (subscription)

The Obama 'Fiduciary Rule' Is Helping American Savers
Wall Street Journal (subscription)
When the Labor Department finalized the conflict-of-interest rule last April requiring retirement advisers to act as fiduciaries, some industry groups issued dire warnings. Upending the existing business model, they claimed, would cause American ...

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The Obama 'Fiduciary Rule' Is Helping American Savers - Wall Street Journal (subscription)