National
New Clean Water Act Guidance Neither Clear Nor Clean
Tell the EPA: Stop the No Protection Policy for America's Waters
Right now, the Clean Water Act - the law that protects our water resources - is under attack. The Bush Administration is attempting to redefine what waters would be protected under the Clean Water Act by issuing a series of policies that offer "no protection" for our critical water resources.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is accepting public comments until January 21 on a policy that will determine which rivers, lakes, streams and wetlands are fully protected.
If you care about clean water and the future of your drinking water, please take a moment to write a letter to the EPA now on a bad "no protection" policy guidance that will lead to further pollution and degradation of our water resources.
On June 5, 2007, the U.S. EPA briefed environmental organizations on a new "Guidance" to its staff and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers on how to interpret Clean Water Act protections in light of two U.S. Supreme Court rulings. The "Guidance" is final despite a six month public comment period being established.
Regrettably, this "Guidance" will continue the Bush Administration's policy of weakening protections provided by the Clean Water Act, and will make it more difficult for both federal and state agencies to protect huge areas of the nation's waters. Passage of the Clean Water Restoration Act*, H.R. 2421, is more important than ever to restore the full protections originally intended by Congress.
Here's why the new "Guidance" is off-track:
- Although the Supreme Court has not struck down existing agency regulations that protect tributaries, creeks and rivers, the Guidance will effectively eliminate protections for some tributary streams, lakes, wetlands and other water resources.
- The "Guidance" will leave many valuable waters unprotected because it does not instruct field staff to fully protect the nation's surface water resources. Consequently, it will leave important questions unanswered about whether and when water resources can be protected, relying largely on case-by-case determinations, which will result in further litigation, administrative delays and confusion among regulated industries and the public.
- There is no analysis of what the impacts of the "Guidance" will be in waterways lost when it is implemented, and how this will affect the nation's water quality.
Agency bureaucrats should not be allowed to weaken the Clean Water Act. The only way to prevent that is by passing the Clean Water Restoration Act to assure protection of all of the nation's waters.
Take action now: Tell your Senators and Representative that clean water matters to you. Urge them to co-sponsor and support the Clean Water Restoration Act in this session of Congress.
*Although this legislation was formerly called the Clean Water Authority Restoration Act or CWARA, the 2007 bill is known as the Clean Water Restoration Act or CWRA.
