The U.S. Chemical Safety Board (CSB) was authorized by the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990 and became operational in January 1998. According to the Senate legislative history, the board’s main role is to investigate chemical accidents, determine their causes, and help prevent similar incidents. Congress gave the CSB an independent mandate, specifying that no other agency or executive branch official may direct its activities. Also similarly to the NTSB, the CSB performs "investigations [that] identify the root causes of chemical incidents and share these findings broadly across industries to prevent future incidents." Following criticism from lawmakers and allegations of mismanagement, the former chairman of the CSB,
Rafael Moure-Eraso, resigned in March 2015. He was replaced by
Vanessa Allen Sutherland in August 2015. Sutherland resigned with two years left in her five-year term after the Trump administration proposed shutting down the CSB as part of the
2019 United States federal budget which ultimately would not occur. In 2025, President
Donald Trump announced plans to defund and close the CSB by 2026, citing overlapping capabilities of the
EPA and
OSHA, but was rebuffed by Congress passing additional agency funding following a government shutdown. == Leadership ==