TRENTON – Attorney General Gurbir S. Grewal today led a coalition of 21 Attorneys  General in calling on the Trump Administration to focus on the COVID-19  pandemic and its impact and freeze most other federal rulemaking actions. 
                                    In  a letter today to the Acting Director of the federal Office of Management and  Budget (OMB), the Attorneys General note that state and local governments  across the nation remain focused on responding to the COVID-19 pandemic and  combating spread of the deadly novel coronavirus. 
                                    Against  that backdrop, the letter urges the federal government to halt most rulemaking  unrelated to COVID-19. It also asks the Administration to consider reopening closed  public-comment periods, so federal agencies can receive fresh input from state  and local governments, businesses and others affected by the COVID-19 pandemic  and its economic consequences. 
                                      “Nothing  is more important for New Jersey right now than stopping the spread of COVID-19  and ensuring that our residents get the health care and financial support they  need during the pandemic,” said Attorney General Grewal. “We need the federal  government to stay focused, too. So we are calling on the Administration to  prioritize its response to COVID-19, and its economic fallout, instead of  pushing through rules that don’t address the most urgent needs of people in New  Jersey and across the country.” 
                                      Beyond  calling on the federal government to dedicate itself to rules related to  COVID-19, the Attorneys General call for a general freeze on all new and  pending rules other than those that address emergency situations or other  urgent circumstances relating to health, safety, financial, or national  security matters, and those required by statutes or court decisions. 
                                      The  Trump Administration adopted the same kind of freeze on the President’s first  day in office, the letter notes.  
                                      Among  the rule proposals that could be postponed if the federal government were to  prioritize rulemaking related to COVID-19 are proposals that would eliminate or  roll back protections against predatory lending, housing discrimination, sexual  harassment and violence in education, and discrimination against LGBTQ+  individuals in federally funded programs.  
                                      Other  proposals that could be delayed—including cutbacks in the Supplemental  Nutrition Assistance Program or food stamps—would affect far more Americans  today than when they were originally proposed because of the recent economic  downturn.  
                                      The  letter notes that federal agencies already have taken some steps to prioritize  resources to focus on COVID-19, and that some federal agencies have already  extended rulemaking comment periods in response to the pandemic.  
                                      Joining Attorney General Grewal in  today’s call for a freeze on federal rulemaking were the Attorneys General  for:  Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware,  District of Columbia, Hawaii, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan,  Minnesota, Nevada, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania,  Rhode Island, Vermont and Virginia. 
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