(Washington,
D.C. – September 26, 2011) Nearly half of New Jersey’s Congressional delegation
voted to block key clean air regulations last week, in spite of the increased
health risk for voters back home.
Reps.
Frank LoBiondo (R-NJ-2), Jon Runyan (R-NJ-3), Chris Smith (R-NJ-4), Scott
Garrett
(R-NJ-5),
Leonard Lance (R-NJ-7), and Rodney Frelinghuysen (R-NJ-11) voted in favor of
the TRAIN Act (H.R. 2401), a sweeping anti-clean air act that passed the U.S.
House of Representatives late Friday. The legislation would block many critical
public health safeguards, and would indefinitely delay two important and
long-awaited air pollution standards – the Mercury and Air Toxics Standard and
the Cross-State Air Pollution Rule.
The
TRAIN Act would delay those two standards until 2018 at the earliest, and the
delay could be indefinite.
The
TRAIN Act would result in more than 25,000 premature deaths in the first year
alone due to smog, soot, and toxic air pollution. There would be more than
175,000 more asthma attacks, many of them in children.
In
New Jersey, the delay of those two standards would cost more than 3200
lives per year.
“This
bill would give us more pollution and endanger our children’s health. The
congressmen who voted for more smog, soot and mercury – including some who have
supported common sense limits on these pollutants in the past – need to explain
themselves to New Jersey voters,” said Bill Petty of Environmental Defense
Fund. “Now it’s up to the Senate to stop this destructive bill.”
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