U.S. Rep. Gray opposes Trump-backed bill to roll back air pollution limits on power plants

U.S. Rep. Gray opposes Trump-backed bill to roll back air pollution limits on power plants
Rep. Adam Gray — legistorm.com
0Comments

Rep. Adam Gray D-CA-13 voted against S.J. Res. 31, a resolution backed by President Donald Trump to repeal an Environmental Protection Agency rule that limits pollution from power plants and refineries. The measure passed the U.S. House narrowly on May 22 with only Republican support.

On May 22, House Republicans passed S.J. Res. 31 under the Congressional Review Act, nullifying an Environmental Protection Agency rule that limited how industrial polluters—such as oil refineries and natural gas plants—could reclassify their emissions status. The original rule, issued under the Biden administration, prevented facilities labeled as “major sources” of hazardous air pollutants from reclassifying themselves to avoid stricter pollution controls. According to Congress.gov, the resolution disapproves of the EPA’s rule and renders it without force or effect.

According to the Washington Post President Trump and his administration have repeatedly argued that rolling back power plant pollution limits is necessary to “unleash American energy,” reduce costs for consumers, and remove what they call “job-killing regulations”—even as environmental groups warn that these rollbacks could increase hazardous emissions and harm public health. 

Rep. Gray D-CA-13 voted no on the measure, according to the House Clerk’s Official Vote Tally, siding with environmental and public health advocates who argue that deregulating major polluters would lead to increased emissions of hazardous air pollutants in working-class communities.

The House passed S.J. Res. 31 by a narrow margin of 216–212 on May 22, 2025—with all Democrats and only one Republican voting against the bill, highlighting sharp partisan divisions on environmental policy.

Adam Gray has represented California’s 13th congressional district since 2023. Prior to Congress, he served a decade in the California State Assembly, where he focused on water infrastructure and agriculture policy, according to his House website.



Related

Magistrate Judge Teresa Stokes, Mecklenburg County Courts

LinkedIn: Judge who released schizophrenic Charlotte train murderer has a side gig treating criminals

In January 2025, Mecklenburg County Magistrate Teresa Stokes signed the release of DeCarlos Brown Jr., a repeat arrestee later accused of fatally stabbing Iryna Zarutska on Charlotte’s light-rail.

Decarlos Brown Jr (left) and Chris Cardona, Managing Director of the MacArthur Foundation (right)

Analysis: Chicago foundation paid $3.3 million to Mecklenburg County to keep career criminals, like DeCarlos Brown, on the streets

Mecklenburg County received $3.3 million from a Chicago-based political foundation after leaders agreed to “reduce the use of incarceration” for repeat criminals like DeCarlos Brown, Jr.

Julius Gandy and Nicholas Harper

Who are the former Merced Metro high school standouts competing in the week of Monday, Sept. 8?

The week of Monday, Sept. 8 will see these former Merced Metro area high school standouts in action.

Trending

The Weekly Newsletter

Sign-up for the Weekly Newsletter from Merced Times.