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2018年7月20日 星期五

News Alert: Questions mount over Trump-Putin discussions

 
 
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Questions mount over Trump-Putin discussions
The White House is facing mounting pressure to disclose details of President Trump’s discussions with Russian President Vladimir Putin from this week’s summit in Helsinki.

The one-on-one meeting between the two leaders has been shrouded in controversy ever since Trump, standing beside Putin following the meeting, cast doubt on the U.S. intelligence community’s assessment of Russian interference in the election in favor of Putin’s own denials.
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Overnight Energy: Court rejects new effort to stop kids' climate lawsuit | Baltimore is latest city to sue over climate change | EPA staffers worried about toxic chemical in Pruitt's desk

 
 
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COURT REJECTS NEW ATTEMPT TO HALT KIDS' CLIMATE SUIT: A federal appeals court blocked the Trump administration's second attempt to halt a lawsuit filed by a group of children over climate change.

The California-based 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled unanimously on Friday that the lawsuit can go forward.

"We denied the government's first mandamus petition, concluding that it had not met the high bar for relief at that stage of the litigation. No new circumstances justify this second petition, and we again decline to grant mandamus relief," read a court order.

The suit argues that the Trump administration "violated the youngest generation's constitutional rights to life, liberty, and property, as well as failed to protect essential public trust resources" through their climate policies.

Today's ruling was not on the merits of the case, but rather clears the way for an Oct. 29th hearing.

The Trump administration has twice sought to either halt the case or have it thrown out entirely.

The same court ruled against the Trump administration earlier this year after attorneys for the Justice Department argued that the burden for the process of discovery would be overbearing.

Read more here.

 

And in other climate lawsuit news...

Baltimore on Friday became the latest city to file a lawsuit against oil and gas giants seeking to hold the companies financially responsible for contributing to global climate change.

The city filed a suit challenging BP, Exxon, Shell Oil and 23 other oil and gas giants that do business in the city, accusing the companies of knowingly emitting harmful carbon dioxide pollution.

The lawsuit, which seeks damages and legal penalties from the companies, cites eight alleged offenses including failure to warn the public and public nuisance.

"The city seeks to ensure that the parties who have profited from externalizing the responsibility for sea level rise, extreme precipitation events, heatwaves, other results of the changing hydrologic regime caused by increasing temperatures, and associated consequences of those physical and environmental changes, bear the costs of those impacts on the city," the lawsuit reads.

It's a trend: Friday's suit is the latest in a string of similar cases –– many of which have been promptly thrown out by courts –– that cities across the U.S. have filed challenging fossil fuel companies for knowingly contributing and profiting off of a product that directly contributes to climate change.

The suit follows on the heels of a case dismissed by a federal judge in New York on Thursday evening.

Read more here.

 

TGIF! Welcome to Overnight Energy, The Hill's roundup of the latest energy and environment news.

Please send tips and comments to Timothy Cama, tcama@thehill.com, and Miranda Green, mgreen@thehill.com. Follow us on Twitter: @Timothy_Cama, @mirandacgreen, @thehill.

 

PRUITT STAFFERS ONCE WORRIED ABOUT TOXIC CHEMICAL FROM HIS DESK: Former Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Scott Pruitt's nearly $10,000 office redecoration included the purchase of a desk his staffers feared was contaminated by a toxic chemical.

Email interactions between EPA staffers first reported by Politico on Friday, showed that aides worried about the potential health effects of formaldehyde found in the desk. The fears they raised came just months before the EPA blocked the release of a report highlighting the dangers of formaldehyde exposure in drinking water.

According to the emails released through a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request to American Oversight, staffers worried about a safety warning placed on the desk from California -- which classifies formaldehyde as a carcinogen.

Staffers were so concerned about the warning that acting deputy chief of staff Reginald Allen reached out to an EPA career official serving as acting head of EPA's toxic chemicals office for advice.

"Sorry to bother you with this but we need some help. The desk the Administrator wants for his office from Amazon has a California Proposition 65 warning. What I am asking is can someone in your area tell us whether it is OK to get this desk for the Administrator related to the warning?" Allen wrote on April 7 to Wendy Cleland-Hamnett and one other career official.

Read more here.

 

ON TAP NEXT WEEK:

The House Natural Resources committee Tuesday will hold an oversight hearing looking into alternative uses of coal.

The House Energy and Commerce committee the same day will explore a discussion draft of a bill that would aim to authorize the Department of Energy to carry out a program to lease underutilized petroleum research facilities for other purposes.

The House Science, Space and Technology committee will have a markup Tuesday of a bill that would direct all assessments on the toxicity of chemicals be carried out by the program offices of the Environmental Protection Agency.
The House Oversight committee's subcommittee on the Interior, Energy, and Environment will hold a hearing Tuesday examining the rights to let animals graze on federal land.

The House committee on Natural Resources Wednesday will hold an oversight hearing looking into the management crisis that overwhelmed Puerto Rico in the wake of Hurricane Maria.

Over on the Senate side on Wednesday, the Commerce, Science, and Transportation subcommittee on Space, Science, and Competitiveness will examine putting boots on Mars.

 

OUTSIDE THE BELTWAY:

Appeals court reverses course after EPA denied Ergon - West Virginia, Inc., a small refinery hardship waiver in 2016

North Dakota's Attorney General files $38 million claim to federal government over pipeline protests

Canada's looming tough climate policies face backlash

 

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT:

Check out stories from Friday...

-Court rejects new Trump attempt to halt kids' climate lawsuit

-Pruitt staffers worried about toxic chemical in his desk

-Baltimore joins cities filing climate change lawsuits against fossil fuel companies

-Interior fast tracks study of drilling's Arctic impact: report

-Zinke left some details off public calendar: report

-Judge dismisses New York City's climate change lawsuit against oil companies

 
 
 
 
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Overnight Health Care: Trump meets with Pfizer CEO amid pricing push | Kentucky reinstates dental, vision Medicaid benefits | Spending by health lobby groups down in second quarter

 
 
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Welcome to Friday's Overnight Health Care, where we can't believe President Trump's Helsinki press conference was only on Monday. There was also a ton of health care news this week, most notably on drug pricing, where we begin.

 

Trump meets with Pfizer CEO amid drug pricing campaign

After tweeting about Pfizer's drug price hikes in the past, President Trump met with the company's CEO.

Context: Last week, Trump threatened the company with retaliation last week for increasing the list prices of 40 drugs. Pfizer then announced it would pause the increases until Jan. 1, or until the administration's "blueprint" on drug prices takes effect, whichever comes first.

Trump's campaign against high drug prices is ramping up. The administration floated allowing importation of drugs to address price spikes this week, and posted a notice about an upcoming regulation on drug rebates.

"The President and his Administration look forward to continuing its work with Pfizer and other pharmaceutical companies to reform the policies that are driving up prescription drug prices for all Americans," said Hogan Gidley, deputy White House press secretary.

They discussed the Administration's "ongoing commitment to lowering prescription drug prices for American patients," Gidley added.

Remember: The administration called the decision a win for American consumers, but it's not actually a price drop. In late May, Trump was railing against high drug costs and predicted that drug companies would soon announce massive, voluntary price decreases. The company is returning prices to the levels they were when Trump made that pronouncement.

Read more here.

 

Officials detail progress on reuniting separated children with their parents

The Trump administration said in a court filing Thursday that it has reunited 364 immigrant children between the ages of 5 and 17 that have been separated from their parents at the border, one week before the deadline to complete the reunifications.

The administration said last week that it had identified 2,551 immigrant children who had been separated from their families at the border.

Officials said Thursday that they have identified 1,606 of the parents, and have interviewed and cleared 848 of them to be reunited with their children, according to the court filing.

A status hearing on the case is scheduled for later Friday afternoon in California.

 

Lobbying spending down in the second quarter of 2018.

Second quarter lobbying reports are due Friday at midnight. Here what some of the biggest names in health care spent on lobbying between April 1 and June 30.

  • AARP spent $2.2 million on lobbying, slightly down from the second quarter of 2017.
  • The American Medical Association spent $4.3 million, down by nearly $1 million from the same time last year.
  • PhRMA spent $5.5 million, down by nearly half a million from the second quarter of 2017.
  • Amgen spent $2.3 million, down from the $3.6 million it spent on lobbying in the second quarter of 2017.
  • Eli Lilly & Co. spent $1.5 million, half a million less than it spent in the second quarter of 2017.
  • America's Health Insurance Plans spent $1.4 million, compared to $1.7 million in the second quarter of last year.

 

Kentucky reinstates dental, vision benefits in Medicaid

After an uproar over the cancellation of dental and vision benefits for around 500,000 Medicaid enrollees, Kentucky Gov. Matt Bevin's (R) administration is reversing course.

Kentucky said it would reinstate the benefits.

Officials said they recognized that the work requirement program would "not begin as soon as we hoped," and they wanted to avoid "a prolonged coverage gap."

Democrats had denounced Bevin's earlier move.

"In his haste to strip these services away from families across Kentucky, Governor Bevin gave no warning to patients or guidance to providers, resulting in chaos and reports of men, women, and children being denied access to the treatments they need – forced to walk away from appointments and scheduled procedures," Rep. John Yarmuth, the only Democrat in the state's congressional delegation, wrote to Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar earlier this month.

Read more here.

 

Coming next week?

The White House Office of Management and Budget is reviewing a few potential major HHS regulations. They could be issued as soon as next week, though there is no timeline for OMB review.

  • A final rule on short-term insurance plans, which critics call "junk plans."
  • An interim final rule on the ObamaCare risk adjustment program.
  • A proposed rule changing the federal anti-kickback law with regards to prescription drug rebates.

 

What we're reading

The CEO of one of the largest health insurers in the U.S. explains the problem with healthcare in America (Business Insider)

The 2018 midterms are all about healthcare (The New Republic)

U.S. court rejects Allergan bid to shield patents through tribe deal (Reuters)

 

State by state

Connecticut's ObamaCare insurers vary widely on rate proposals (Washington Examiner)

Ohio Republican AG Mike DeWine changed position on Medicaid expansion (PolitiFact)

 
 
 
 
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