Saturday, April 11, 2026

In Yet Another Industry Handout, Trump EPA ‘Just Took a Sledgehammer’ to Coal Ash Rules

“Ultimately, if this rule is finalized, human health will suffer, and taxpayers will be left with the cost of cleaning up their rivers and drinking water.”


A worker moves coal refuse to be prepared for transport at a land reclamation project site in Center Township, Pennsylvania, with the shuttered Homer City Generating Station in the background, on June 12, 2024.
(Photo by Scott Lewis for The Washington Post via Getty Images)


Jessica Corbett
Apr 09, 2026
COMMON DREAMS

Amid mounting calls for the removal of US Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin, the EPA chief on Thursday announced proposed changes to coal ash rules, which critics blasted as another gift to polluters at the expense of public health.

Officially called coal combustion residuals (CCR), “coal ash—the toxic byproduct of burning coal—contains hazardous pollutants, including arsenic, boron, cadmium, chromium, lead, radium, and selenium, which are linked to serious health harms such as cancer, heart disease, and brain damage, among other lasting impacts,” noted the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC).

Specifically, as The Associated Press reported, the EPA “proposed easing standards for monitoring and protecting groundwater near some coal ash sites, rolling back rules forcing the cleanup of entire coal properties instead of just places where ash was dumped. The revisions would also make it easier to reuse coal ash for other purposes.”

While Zeldin claimed the “commonsense changes to the CCR regulations reflect EPA’s commitment to restoring American energy dominance, strengthening cooperative federalism, and accommodating unique circumstances at certain CCR facilities,” Environmental Protection Network’s Marc Boom responded that “letting companies avoid cleaning up waste sites that may be leaching toxic metals into groundwater and nearby waterways, while weakening protections and accountability, is not common sense.”

“EPA’s top priority should be protecting people’s health, not sacrificing it for corporate expediency,” argued Boom, senior director of public affairs at the group, which is made up of former agency staff. “EPA may call these safeguards ‘impractical,’ but anyone living downstream of coal ash sites holding thousands of tons of waste knows that requiring cleanup and monitoring is a necessary and basic standard.”

NRDC senior attorney Becky Hammer called the pending rollback just “the latest in a long, long, line of Trump administration giveaways to fossil fuels industries,” which have also included repealing EPA rules that targeted chemical pollution from coal-fired power plants, declaring a national energy emergency, and scrapping the 2009 “endangerment finding” that underpins all federal climate regulations.

Other advocacy organizations were similarly critical of Thursday’s announcement. Daniel Estrin, Waterkeeper Alliance’s general counsel and legal director, pointed out that “coal ash is contaminating water at nearly every active and retired coal plant in the US.”

“By gutting these safeguards, EPA is abandoning its duty to protect impacted communities by allowing preventable contamination of our rivers, lakes, streams, and groundwater,” he said. “The longer the coal industry is allowed to delay closing and cleaning up its toxic waste sites, the more difficult and costly it becomes to fix the damage. By failing to enforce the law, EPA is letting polluters continue harming people and wildlife without accountability.”

Like Estrin and Hammer, Earthjustice senior counsel Lisa Evans framed that proposal as “yet another handout to the coal power industry at the expense of our health, water, and wallets,” and warned of the dangers of delaying closure and cleanup. She said that “ultimately, if this rule is finalized, human health will suffer, and taxpayers will be left with the cost of cleaning up their rivers and drinking water.”

Although “the Trump administration just took a sledgehammer to the health protections in place for toxic coal pollution,” Evans added, “Earthjustice has successfully defended these safeguards in court and will do so again.”

Nick Torrey, senior attorney at the Southern Environmental Law Center, which has secured commitments to clean up over 270 million tons of coal ash in US communities, similarly said that “doing the bidding of industrial polluters instead of protecting ordinary families and clean water is shameful, but we are ready to keep fighting against coal ash pollution.”

“Letting coal-burning utilities set the agenda has been a disaster for communities across the South, resulting in coal ash spills and hundreds of families forced to live on bottled water for years under the threat of coal ash pollution,” Torrey highlighted. “The Trump administration and coal ash polluters want to take us back to the bad old days of arsenic, lead, and mercury from coal ash contaminating our water.”

In addition to facing a flurry of lawsuits over policies prioritizing the climate-wrecking fossil fuel industry—whose campaign cash helped President Donald Trump return to the White House last year—the administration has recently been hit with demands to remove Zeldin from more than 160 advocacy groups and nearly 300 health experts.

“This EPA’s actions to put polluters first, at the expense of our health, are dangerous and will be deadly,” states the health experts’ open letter, organized and released Thursday by the Climate Action Campaign. “Administrator Zeldin has abandoned his sworn duty and must be held accountable for his agenda.”


As Zeldin Embraces Climate Crisis Deniers, 290+ Health Experts Demand His Removal

“We cannot tolerate an EPA administrator who treats our families as expendable.”



US Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin participates in a discussion at the EPA in Washington, DC on April 2, 2026.
(Photo by Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc. via Getty Images)


Brad Reed
Apr 09, 2026
COMMON DREAMS

Hundreds of health experts are demanding the removal of Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin over his gutting of key regulations that they say will endanger Americans’ livelihoods.

letter released Thursday by Climate Action Campaign outlines Zeldin’s threats to public health and explains why he should not be serving as the top US environmental regulator.
RECOMMENDED...


‘Game Over Zeldin’: 160+ Climate and Health Groups Say EPA Chief Must Go


“Administrator Zeldin is pursuing a deregulatory agenda that will result in a massive increase in health-damaging air pollution, toxic chemicals, and climate-heating greenhouse gases,” says the letter, which is signed by nearly 300 medical experts, including physicians, nurses, and public health researchers.

“And just last month, the administration laid bare its decision to no longer count the economic value of health benefits when setting Clean Air Act rules,” the letter adds, “refusing to acknowledge the value of lives saved, hospital visits avoided, and lost work and school days prevented.”

The letter also points to the EPA’s February decision to revoke the so-called “endangerment finding,” which gave the agency authority to regulate greenhouse gases as threats to public health.

Repealing this finding, the letter contends, “will increase the frequency and severity of climate disasters.”

According to a Wednesday report from The Associated Press, Zeldin celebrated the EPA’s revocation of the finding while delivering a keynote address at the Heartland Institute, a right-wing think tank that has long pushed climate denialism.

“Today is a moment to celebrate,” Zeldin said at the event. “It is a day to celebrate vindication.”

Margie Alt, director of the Climate Action Campaign, said her group decided to organize the letter among medical experts because “Lee Zeldin is too dangerous to ignore.”

“When health experts—the people who see the effects of pollution on their patients every single day—say enough is enough, the rest of us need to pay attention,” said Alt. “Zeldin is not just failing Americans. He is actively endangering us. We cannot tolerate an EPA administrator who treats our families as expendable.”

This is the second “Game Over Zeldin” letter, following another from over 160 advocacy groups, including Climate Action Campaign and Moms Clean Air Force, last month.

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