Administrator Lee Zeldin has reportedly recommended that the White House reverse an Obama-era finding that underpins
The president said Lee Zeldin, the agency administrator, was planning mass layoffs. Hours later, officials said the president was referring to a budget cut only.
EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin has recommended the White House reverse recognizing greenhouse gases as harmful to the environment. Reversing the declaration could lead to seismic changes in the way
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) plans to reverse its 2009 declaration recognizing greenhouse gasses as harmful to the environment, according to The Washington Post. Sources told the publication EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin recommended the move to the White House.
Trump froze out Project 2025 in his campaign. Now its blueprint is his health care playbook In a report to the White House, EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin called for a rewrite of the agency’s finding that determined planet-warming greenhouse gases endanger public health and welfare,
Zeldin’s remarks came after President Donald Trump said Wednesday that Zeldin planned to cut EPA’s workforce by 65 percent. That announcement stunned EPA employees and the agency’s supporters, and the White House issued a statement later Wednesday to say that Trump was referring to a 65 percent overall cut in EPA spending.
The Trump administration is weighing whether to repeal the “endangerment finding,” which states that greenhouse gases pose a threat to public health and welfare.
President Trump said Wednesday that Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Lee Zeldin has floated cutting the agency’s workforce by up to 65 percent. Speaking at the inaugural Cabinet meeting of his second term,
In the wake of the hottest year on record and dozens of climate-related disasters, the Trump administration is considering repealing findings that link climate change to health. View on euronews
The White House on Thursday walked back President Donald Trump's claim the day before that the Environmental Protection Agency plans to cut 65% of its workforce, saying that the environmental regulator plans to cut its spending by 65%.
Administrator Lee Zeldin plans to cut 65 percent of the agency’s staff, the White House backtracked and said Trump was