Shifting Sands: The Limits of Science in Setting Risk Standards
Cary Coglianese and
Gary Marchant
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Cary Coglianese: Harvard U
Gary Marchant: Arizona State U
Working Paper Series from Harvard University, John F. Kennedy School of Government
Abstract:
Regulators need to rely on science to understand problems and predict the consequences of regulatory actions, but over-reliance on science can actually contribute to, or at least deflect attention from, incoherent policymaking. In this article, we explore the problems with using science to justify policy decisions by analyzing the Environmental Protection Agency’s recently revised air quality standards for ground-level ozone and particulate matter, some of the most significant regulations ever issued. In revising these standards, EPA mistakenly invoked science as the exclusive basis for its decisions and deflected attention from a remarkable series of inconsistencies. For example, even though EPA claimed to base its standards on a singular concern for public health, it set its standards at levels that will still lead to hundreds, if not thousands, of deaths each year. In other ways, EPA’s positions were like shifting sands, changing at points that apparently were expedient for the agency. Such an outcome should not be unexpected when an agency misuses science as a policy rationale, but it also need not be inevitable. We conclude by offering a set of principles to give direction to standard setting by EPA and other agencies. In the case of EPA’s air quality program, Congress will likely need to amend the Clean Air Act to enable EPA to break free of the conceptual incoherence in which it now finds itself mired. Decision-makers in any setting, though, can avoid the problem of shifting sands by carefully understanding what science can and cannot do.
Date: 2003-08
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:ecl:harjfk:rwp03-036
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