Tennessee Joins Arizona and 10 Other AGs in Lawsuit Aimed to Cleanse Federal Regulations Hampering Washing Machines, Dishwashers

by Joe Mueller

 

Twelve attorneys general filed an opening brief Friday in a lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) for changes made this year to energy and water efficiency standards for dishwashers and washing machines.

“These arbitrary washing machine regulations are unlawful, ineffective, and absolutely ridiculous,” Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich, co-leader of a suit in the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals against the DOE and Secretary Jennifer Granholm, said in a statement. “They should be hung out to dry as soon as possible.”

The DOE regulates energy efficiency and water conservation in products through the Energy Policy and Conservation Act (EPCA). In 2020, new rules were implemented after consumers complained dishwashers and washing machines ran poorly because of DOE regulations. Previous regulations required appliances to run slower to be more energy efficient. However, no energy was saved as consumers often ran their machines twice to attain adequate cleaning results.

In February, the DOE instituted the “Energy Conservation Program: Product Classes for Residential Dishwashers, Residential Clothes Washers, and Consumer Clothes Dryers.” It replaced the 2020 regulations and with new rules requiring shorter wash times for washing machines and mandated cycle times for dishwashers be 60 minutes or less.

“This is a prime example of the administrative state acting with too much power,” Missouri Republican Attorney General Eric Schmitt said in a statement. “The Department of Energy shouldn’t be able to dictate what laundry machines people buy, and they really shouldn’t enact such insane emissions standards that Missourians have to run their dishwashers twice.”

Among the In addition to Missouri and Arizona, the attorney generals in Alabama, Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Montana, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Utah joined the suit.

Yes, Every Kid

The 83-page legal brief argues the DOE rule violates the EPCA and is arbitrary and capricious. The plaintiffs contend the DOE failed to adequately explain the change in policy and supply enough rationale for the department’s refusal to create specific standards for performance classes.

The attorneys general stated the DOE doesn’t understand its own authority.

“… DOE can never create a new class with lower efficiency standards not withstanding Congress’s explicit grant of authority to adopt new classes with ‘higher or lower efficiency standards. That tyranny-of-mediocrity construction violates the underlying statute, and the 2022 rule should therefore be set aside.”

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Joe Mueller covers Missouri for The Center Square. After seven years of reporting for daily newspapers in Illinois and Missouri, he spent the next 30 years in public relations serving non-profit organizations and as a strategic communications consultant.
Photo “Loading the Dishwasher” by m01229. CC BY 2.0.

 

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6 Thoughts to “Tennessee Joins Arizona and 10 Other AGs in Lawsuit Aimed to Cleanse Federal Regulations Hampering Washing Machines, Dishwashers”

  1. Betty J Ziesel

    In the last 16 years I’ve had Whirlpool, Maytag, Kitchen Aid brand appliances, all of which are manufactured by the same company. The quality & efficiency of the products have deteriorated significantly.
    Washer cycles are shorter, smaller loads & oftentimes not enough water to clean clothes. Dishwashers leave dishes wet, even with heat dry setting. Some things gotta give!

  2. Tennessee citizens are locked away in a gulog in in DC as political prisoners and our representatives are focused on dishwashers…

    1. 83ragtop50

      Hopefully they can walk and chew gum at the same time. Well, probably not Slatery but maybe some other REAL AG’s. And frankly I am in serious doubt that the soon to be handpicked AG will serve Tennessee any better.

  3. Donna Locke

    I hope this works. The new washing machines forced on us use so little water that they do not get the laundry wet, much less clean, meaning running only small loads and running them 2 or 3 times, saving no water or energy whatsoever. And the laundry is still not clean. We recently bought a new Maytag to replace a 25-year-old heavy-duty Maytag that was GREAT. The new one meets the new government regulations forced on us and is just a piece of total and expensive uselessness. Brands and stores won’t take them back anymore either.

    1. Betty J Ziesel

      In the last 16 years I’ve had Whirlpool, Maytag, Kitchen Aid brand appliances, all of which are manufactured by the same company. The quality & efficiency of the products have deteriorated significantly.
      Washer cycles are shorter, smaller loads & oftentimes not enough water to clean clothes. Dishwashers leave dishes wet, even with heat dry setting. Some things gotta give!

    2. Renier C

      Yes!
      I wonder if anyone coming up with government standards ever washed clothes/dishes.

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