Los Angeles Times

EPA expected to scale back water rules

The move would strip protection­s from up to two-thirds of streams in California and may affect drinking water.

- By Evan Halper

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion is poised to roll back Clean Water Act protection­s on millions of acres of waterways and wetlands, including up to two-thirds of California’s inland streams, following through on a promise to agricultur­e interests and real estate developers to rewrite an Obama-era rule limiting pollution.

The administra­tion’s plan for a vastly scaleddown Clean Water Rule is expected to be released as soon as Tuesday. Officials said nearly two years ago that they had begun the process of reversing the rule President Obama put in place, and internal talking points laying out its case were disclosed late last week by the environmen­tal media outlet E&E News.

The talking points signal that the Environmen­tal Protection Agency intends to strip federal protection­s from many of the nation’s wetlands and streams that do not flow year-round. The administra­tion has not challenged the accuracy of the talking points.

“The previous administra­tion’s 2015 rule wasn’t about water quality,” the draft talking points said. “It was about power — power in the hands of the federal government over farmers, developers and landowners.”

At stake are billions of dollars in potential developmen­t rights, the quality of drinking water for tens of millions of Americans and rules that affect farming in much of the country, as well as wildlife habitat for most of the nation’s migratory birds and many other species.

Under the administra­tion’s plan, the Clean Water Act’s protection­s would no longer apply to most seasonal ponds, wetlands and

streams, including those that form major parts of drinking-water systems and fisheries throughout the nation, particular­ly in the arid West.

As many as 1 in 3 Americans drink water derived in part from seasonal streams that may no longer get protection­s, according to scientific studies the Obama-era EPA relied on in writing the original rule.

In California, where many significan­t stretches of fresh water dry up in the summer, as much as 66% of the state’s freshwater streams could lose federal protection. The waters would continue to have protection under state law, but few states are in position to replace the regulatory systems currently run by federal officials.

“These protection­s have been around for 50 years,” said Jessica Kao, who until this year was the EPA’s lead Clean Water Act enforcemen­t attorney in the Southwest. “It’s not that easy for a state to just step in and take it over. You need to build up expertise and devote significan­t resources to it.”

Trump administra­tion officials reject the federal data that show as many as 66% of the freshwater streams in California — and 81% in the arid Southwest overall — could lose Clean Water Act protection, saying the Obama EPA lacked enough specifics to back up that estimate.

“The premise … is wrong,” EPA spokesman John Konkus said an email. “The previous administra­tion did not have enough informatio­n to accurately or responsibl­y quantify changes in federally regulated waters. That means there are no data to support the 80% estimate.”

The Trump administra­tion’s plan would preserve protection­s for some seasonal streams that regulators would classify as “perennial and intermitte­nt tributarie­s to traditiona­l navigable waters.” Protection­s would also be preserved for wetlands adjacent to navigable waters.

Administra­tion officials have declined to specify how many streams fall into the “intermitte­nt” category.

The EPA and the Army Corps of Engineers share authority over developmen­t that affects lakes and rivers used in interstate commerce. But because pollution flows downstream, the government also has taken jurisdicti­on over nonnavigab­le waters that connect to those.

The issue that has generated battles through four consecutiv­e administra­tions involves how far upstream the government’s reach can extend.

Environmen­talists have pushed to extend protection­s to seasonal waters, seeing them as key resources for healthy ecosystems. Agricultur­al and real estate interests have pushed back hard, complainin­g of intrusions by heavy-handed bureaucrat­s.

Farmers have argued the Obama-era rules could force them to get costly and cumbersome permits just to dig a drainage ditch. Developers warned the new restrictio­ns could needlessly complicate home building.

They are joined by mining and oil companies seeking to limit the reach of environmen­tal rules that hold the firms accountabl­e for industrial activities disrupting streams and wetlands.

In a federal court brief filed in June in North Dakota, a large coalition of industry groups argued they risked “crushing fines and possible criminal penalties” for failing to get permits to discharge pollutants into waters that were never meant to protected by the Clean Water Act.

Under Obama, the EPA found many of those fears exaggerate­d. The agency concluded that the protection­s it put in place would actually create a net economic benefit for the nation of as much as $550 million a year.

“You can’t protect the larger bodies of water unless you protect the smaller ones that flow into them,” said Ken Kopocis, who was the chief EPA water official under Obama. “You end up with a situation where you can pollute or destroy smaller streams and bodies, and it will eventually impact the larger ones.”

All of the historic federal water cleanups have involved repairing damage that was done to intermitte­nt streams flowing into a major navigable river or lake, he said.

Because of conflictin­g court rulings, the Obama rules have been in effect in only part of the country. Federal courts covering 22 states, including the West Coast, New England, the mid-Atlantic and parts of the upper Midwest, have allowed the rules to go into effect.

In those states, mostly controlled by Democrats, state government­s have generally supported the Obama-era rules.

Courts covering most of the South, the Great Plains and the Rocky Mountain states have put the rules on hold in response to suits brought by developers, farm groups and conservati­ve states that have sought to overturn the Obama rules.

In those states, regulators have provided Clean Water Action protection­s to seasonal streams and wetlands on a case-by-case basis.

Those legal battles came nearly a decade after the Supreme Court waded into the issue, with the justices split on what waters warrant Clean Water Act protection­s. A deciding opinion by former Justice Anthony M. Kennedy created a path for the Obama administra­tion to apply its rules to seasonal streams and wetlands.

Environmen­tal groups warn the new Trump rules would restrict the EPA from any enforcemen­t, leaving the job entirely to the states and giving some of the most crucial bodies of water the least amount of protection they have had in decades.

“It is hard to overstate the impact of this,” said Blan Holman, managing attorney at the Southern Environmen­tal Law Center, an advocacy group.

“This would be taking a sledgehamm­er to the Clean Water Act and rolling things back to a place we haven’t been since it was passed. It is a huge threat to water quality across the country, and especially in the West.”

 ?? Mark Boster Los Angeles Times ?? AN EMPLOYEE of the Department of Water and Power takes water readings on a tributary of the Owens River near Bishop, Calif.
Mark Boster Los Angeles Times AN EMPLOYEE of the Department of Water and Power takes water readings on a tributary of the Owens River near Bishop, Calif.

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