Originally posted by Imran Siddiqui
Not really. It allows the Secretary to repeal those laws conflicting with the law Congress just passed. Instead of going back to Congress every little time the barrier conflicts a different law, the Secretary has the right to decide when that conflict happens, and in that case, Congress' blanket repeal applies.
It is very limited.
Not really. It allows the Secretary to repeal those laws conflicting with the law Congress just passed. Instead of going back to Congress every little time the barrier conflicts a different law, the Secretary has the right to decide when that conflict happens, and in that case, Congress' blanket repeal applies.
It is very limited.
It allows SECDHS to declare one-off, case by case exemptions to NEPA and related laws based on a finding that complying with the law would adversely impact homeland security. There is already a national security exemption most Federal laws, including NEPA, but military bases do NEPA and related processing for their planned projects most of the time. Despite having the authority to bypass it, it is rarely used. DHS, as a new agency, doesn't yet have that authority.
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