Baltimore Sun

U.S. House votes to restrict enforcing pollution targets

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For the second time in a year, the U.S. House of Representa­tives has voted to restrict the federal government from penalizing states for missing pollution-reduction goals — such as those guiding cleanup of the Chesapeake Bay. The measure was again pushed by Rep. Bob Goodlatte, a Virginia Republican who says the Environmen­tal Protection Agency has been “hijacking states’ water quality strategies.” It was attached to a bill approved Thursday that includes budget appropriat­ions for EPA and Department of the Interior programs. Maryland’s congressio­nal delegation voted 7-0 against the amendment, with Rep. Steny H. Hoyer not voting. The amendment passed 213-202. Eastern Shore Rep. AndyHarris, the state’s lone Republican in Congress, then voted in favor of the spending bill, which passed 217-199. The rest of the state’s delegation joined all the chamber’s Democrats in opposing it. The EPA’s power to enforce pollution targets is considered a key element of a 2010 agreement between the federal government and Chesapeake Bay watershed states to restore the estuary’s health by 2025. Under the cleanup blueprint, each state has committed to reducing the load of pollution that washes into the bay and its tributarie­s. Chesapeake Bay Foundation President William C. Baker called the amendment “shortsight­ed” and said it threatens progress at improving the bay’s health. Scientists recently said they finally can say for sure that the bay’s environmen­t is improving, and an assessment released this week found that the Chesapeake is hitting goals for reduced sediment and phosphorus, but not its target for nitrogen.The legislatio­n would need Senate approval to become law. The Senate did not approve a similar amendment the House adopted last year. Gov. Larry Hogan joined environmen­talists in urging the upper chamber to reject the proposal in February.

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