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Overall Assessment |
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None
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No evidence found
View Sources
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E
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Overall Assessment |
Analysis |
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Limited
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Federal Signal Corp offers only limited insight into its climate-related lobbying. It states that it works with bodies such as the American Traffic Safety Services Association, the Common Ground Alliance, the National Utility Contractors Association and the US Environmental Protection Agency in order to “promote legislation” that delivers cleaner air, water and safer infrastructure, indicating some engagement with environmental policy but without naming any specific bills, regulations or jurisdictions. The company likewise identifies the trade associations and the EPA as the channels or counterparts for its advocacy, but it does not explain how it engages—no details are given on letters, meetings, consultations or other methods—so the mechanisms remain vague. Finally, it describes its objective in broad terms of supporting policies that make roads, communities and the environment cleaner and safer, yet it offers no concrete policy positions, measurable targets or specific regulatory changes it is seeking. Because the disclosure stays at this high level of generality across all three areas, the transparency of Federal Signal’s climate-policy lobbying is limited.
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D
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