Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Trump administra­tion poised to scale down Clean Water Act

- Los Angeles Times (TNS)

WASHINGTON – The Trump administra­tion is poised to roll back Clean Water Act protection­s on millions of acres of streams and wetlands, 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 scaled-down Clean Water Rule is expected to be released as soon as Tuesday. Officials said almost a year ago that they had begun the process of reversing the rule President Barack 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 all of the nation’s wetlands and many 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 ponds, wetlands and streams that form major parts of drinkingwa­ter systems and fisheries throughout the nation, particular­ly in the arid West. As many as one in three Americans drink water derived in part from seasonal streams that would 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 80 percent of the state’s fresh water 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.

The fight over how broadly the Clean Water Act’s protection­s reach has been going on for decades. 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 non-navigable 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.

 ?? Tribune News Service ?? A DWP employee takes water readings on a tributary of the Owens River near Bishop, California March 25, 2017.
Tribune News Service A DWP employee takes water readings on a tributary of the Owens River near Bishop, California March 25, 2017.

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