Richard Petty fighting tree-huggers from killing off motorsports

The King is holding court about auto emissions and racing to the defense of his industry in the face of environmental regulation.

The King, of course, is Richard Petty, the iconic driver of stock cars who lives in Randolph County. The issue is a concern by officials that the Environmental Protection Agency will crack down on items that are used to transform a street-type Mustang or Camaro into the super-charged race cars you watch on NASCAR tracks each weekend.

Richard Petty (R) fighting the tree huggers

Petty, who won seven championships and twice as many races as anyone else in his Dodges and Plymouths, is becoming a lobbyist of sorts to support a bill called the Recognizing the Protection of Motorsports Act – or, cleverly, the RPM act for short – that is being pushed by Rep. Patrick McHenry (R-Denver) and Republican Senator Richard Burr of Winston-Salem.

Petty’s involvement, first reported by Fox Auto News, is because the EPA’s Clean Air Act does not exempt NASCAR from the emission rules for street vehicles, although there has been an allowance for devices that could affect that.

The EPA recently has started to crack down on those who make such parts because they have found their way into street vehicles. One company in Colorado was fined for selling unsanctioned equipment, Fox Auto News reported.

The RPM bill would exempt NASCAR from street rules, and that’s where Petty comes in, working with the Specialty Equipment Market Association. “There wouldn’t have been any NASCAR or any cup racing if that kind of rule had been in effect in 1949,” Petty told Fox News Autos.

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