[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 146 (Tuesday, September 27, 2016)]
[House]
[Page H5915]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
STOP THE CLEAN POWER PLAN
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from West
Virginia (Mr. Mooney) for 5 minutes.
Mr. MOONEY of West Virginia. Mr. Speaker, right now, down the street
at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, our
very own West Virginia attorney general, Patrick Morrisey, is arguing
against the unconstitutional coal and job-killing plan known as the
Clean Power Plan.
Time and again, President Obama has put radical leftwing
environmentalists ahead of hardworking Americans. Obama's so-called
Clean Power Plan is no different. This plan is a laundry list of
unnecessary environmental restrictions that will increase energy costs
and put even more Americans out of work.
In West Virginia, we rely on coal for over 90 percent of our power
generation. This regulation will shut down our power plants, kill our
coal jobs, and dramatically raise home energy prices for West
Virginians.
I have been working at a Federal level to help put a stop to these
job-killing policies. Last year, I sent a letter to Governor Tomblin,
along with Representatives McKinley and Jenkins of West Virginia,
urging him not to comply with the Clean Power Plan. Under the plan,
States are forced to come up with a State Implementation Plan to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions on a timeline that would be very harmful to
our State.
This January, my first bill to pass the U.S. House of Representatives
was aimed at putting a stop to the stream protection rule. When the
rewrite of the rule was first proposed by the Office of Surface Mining,
or OSM, they described it as a ``minor'' regulation that would only
impact one coal region. However, the proposed stream protection rule
contains sweeping changes that amount to modifying or amending 475
existing rules. The proposed rule would destroy up to 77,000 coal
mining jobs nationwide, including up to 52,000 in the Appalachian
region.
My bill, H.R. 1644, the Supporting Transparent Regulatory and
Environmental Actions in Mining Act, simply requires a study to be
completed to determine if the rules governing mining need to be updated
or changed. It calls for all scientific data used in rulemaking to be
made publicly available and prevents the Office of Surface Mining from
overstepping their regulatory role in implementing Clean Water Act
provisions.
When I campaigned to represent the people of the Second Congressional
District of West Virginia in Congress, I promised that I would fight
for the coal industry and the hard workers of our State. West Virginia
and our country need the Clean Power Plan to be stopped indefinitely
before more damage to the coal industry is done.
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