Paul LePage, the freshly inaugurated Republican governor of Maine who once said that heโd like to tell President Obama to โgo to Hellโ and recently told the NAACP to โkiss my buttโ, has announced that he will be rolling back dozens of environmental protections in Maine to create a more โbusiness-friendlyโ atmosphere. The governorโs office will be changing a minimum of 36 environmental laws in the upcoming months, with the possibility of more protections being scaled back as time goes on.
According to the Portland Press Herald, some of the proposed regulations include:
– Zoning 10 million acres of northern Maine for development.
– Repealing laws that require manufacturers to take back recyclable goods for disposal.
– Reversing a ban on the use of a chemical linked to cancer in childrenโs products.
– Making Maineโs environmental laws conform to less stringent federal standards. – Requiring a cost-benefit analysis for all rulemakings.
– Relaxing air emissions removal standards, especially for smaller projects.
– Replacing the BEP with a system of administrative judges who would hear appeals of state Department of Environmental Protection staff decisions.
– Allowing vertical building additions on sand dunes whether or not the entire building is on posts.
For those who followed LePageโs campaign last year, these new proposals come as no surprise. A Tea Party favorite (who frequently attended Tea Party rallies in his state,) LePage claimed on the campaign trail that โenvironmentalists have too much powerโ in Maine, and that he wanted environmental regulators to work with businesses rather than against them.
At a gathering in Yarmouth, Maine during his campaign, LePage described his vision of how state agencies would work under hisย control:
Other environmental issues that LePage talked about during his campaign included opening up the Gulf of Maine to offshore oil drilling, and allowing expanded drilling for coal and natural gas within the state.
Until recent years, the state of Maine was plagued with environmental atrocities. According to environmental attorney Bill Townsend:
โOur rivers stank. Pollution was rampant. People built dams where they damn pleased; people cut down forests where they damn pleased; people bulldozed the streams where they damn pleasedโฆWeโve come a long way to get away to get away from that and Iโm not willing to make a step one inch in the direction of going back toย that.โ
Environmental groups are prepared to challenge LePageโs current rollbacks, claiming that most of them are illegal. But donโt expect the governor to let his agenda be sidelined. He earned the nickname โLeRageโ over the years due to his frequent violent outbursts against members of the press and others who oppose him, so we can expect any challenge to his proposals to be met with the same kind ofย fury.
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