The Trump Purges at the FBI Will Help His New FBI Director Rebuild...
Of Course, USAID's Fingerprints Are All Over the Russian Collusion Hoax
Former GOP Gov Reacts to Being Called a 'D**k' by CNN Host
Trump Is Considering Going This Route to Increase the Pace of Illegal Alien...
Trump to Deliver Bombshell Press Conference on Government Waste and Fraud Today
The New DOGE Site Is Up and Running
America’s Youth Are Losing Grit And Gratitude—Communist China May Be to Blame
Survey Shows How Much Support Harris Has in Hypothetical CA Gubernatorial Race
Another American Imprisoned Abroad Has Been Released
What Police Revealed About the Suspect Who Rammed a Car Into Munich Crowd
Chilling Audio of the Titan's Implosion Has Been Released
BREAKING: The Senate Has Voted on RFK Jr.’s Nomination for HHS Secretary
Here's This Democrat's Reasoning As to Why Most Women Don't Go Into Manufacturing
Caught on Camera: Islamist Nurses Fired for Threatening to Kill Patients in Australia
Bernie Sanders Flew Off the Handle Again About DOGE
Tipsheet

States Fight for Their Rights with the EPA

EPA regulations have been getting tougher, and now the states are fighting back to try and take back some of their power in this situation. The newest carbon emissions standards for existing power plants will be coming out in June and the states are looking to keep the EPA from destroying their abilities to make their own decisions.

Advertisement

The National Association of State Regulatory Utility Commissioners (NARUC) adopted a resolution today calling on the EPA to recognize the primacy of states to “lead the creation of emission performance systems that reflect the policies, energy needs, resource mix, economic conditions of each State and region.”

The NARUC also stated in their resolution that,

“[T]he guidelines should be flexible enough to allow States individually or regionally to take into account, when establishing standards of performance, the different makeup of existing power generation in each State and region.”

[T]he guidelines should provide sufficiently flexible compliance pathways or mechanisms that recognize State and regional variations to achieve the most cost-effective emissions reductions in each State,”

How many times does one need to explain that states always know what’s best for their citizens and their companies. The NARUC couldn’t have said it any better. The EPA needs to stop meddling in states’ rights and allow them to prosper, yet comply with new (absurd) regulations in their own ways.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement