codrus (Forum Supporter) said:
alfadriver said:
Since SEMA is asking for Congress to specifically pass a law, I would not think that the EPA is overstepping their mandate. If that were the case, a simple lawsuit would solve that. Whereas an act of congress would modify the mandate.
Anti-tampering has been a law for a very long time, and the EPA was knowingly overlooking motorsports, including people who actually work at the EPA. We've gone over this many times, and people have abused that privilege to the point of forcing the EPA to act. And it's highly likely that someone is complaining to the EPA to do something- they don't really have the resources to go out on their own without tips.
Lawsuits aren't as simple as you think. You have to have "standing", and government agencies have an annoying habit of dropping fines or actions against individuals in order to prevent precedents from being set. That doesn't stop them from trying to put those same fines or actions against other people, who then have to pony up their own money for their own suit -- which then gets dropped, etc.
The question of what some people are doing does not justify the EPA stepping outside the grounds that Congress authorized in the 70s and taking down innocents as collateral. Wagging your finger and taking the toys away from all of the children just because some of them are misbehaving may work fine for a parent but it is not a legitimate use of government force and power.
First, there are anti-tampering laws on the books, there have been for decades. There have been instructions on how to make and market items that modify but don't change the emissions for about the same amount of time. And both the EPA and CARB have been overlooking harsh enforcement of that for motorsports for this entire time so some of the good behaving children can have their toys.
So you need to explain how this is overreach. We've been over this SO many times in the past few decades I've been part of this board, it's not even funny.
You want to keep the EPA overlooking these rules for motorsports as they have been for the entire time, fine. Tell me how you enforce that. The only way I can think of doing it is if the seller requires the car to not be registered, and has to get proof. Forgive me is that sounds pretty 1) very intrusive for a company and 2) hard to really track. From a legal standpoint, some of the rules in Street Prepared are no even legal, and have not been for at least 30 years.
Heck, we assume that the coal rollers are so much worse for the air than gas cars that change things- I honestly don't know that- because nobody has tested it. It's VERY possible that gas cars with modifications are worse than the coal rollers when you factor in how the vehicle is 100% used.
In the end, how do you selectively enforce a rule that covers every single vehicle on the road? Legally, I mean. If you allow gas cars to get away with it, the diesel folk will sue. If you allow Hondadata but not HP Tuners, someone else will sue. Either you enforce the law as written, or just get rid of the law. And I do not see a path where the law will be taken off the books- as an emissions developer for an OEM, the result of allowing tampering will just tighten further rules- which isn't reasonable. OEM's fully know and see this, BTW, and would lobby to not take the rules out, and put even more burden on further vehicles.