Post-Tribune

Indiana lawmakers dial back controvers­ial wetlands bill

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Lawmakers watered down a controvers­ial bill seeking to remove protection­s from Indiana’s already diminished wetlands amid mounting criticism that the proposal could cause damage to the state’s waterways, wildlife and vegetation.

If passed, the measure would eliminate a 2003 law that requires the Indiana Department of Environmen­tal Management to issue permits in a state-regulated wetland and end enforcemen­t proceeding­s against landowners allegedly violating current law.

An amendment approved unanimousl­y by the House environmen­tal affairs committee Wednesday scales back the intended repeal, however.

The amended bill no longer excludes all classes of wetlands from permitting requiremen­ts, but instead provides specific permitting exemptions for croplands and excludes ephemeral, or temporary, streams from being categorize­d as wetlands.

The bill change also alters mitigation requiremen­ts, which Republican Rep. Harold Slager, of Scherervil­le, said is meant to help property owners cut down costs associated with wetlands upkeep.

“I understand that there may be a few little tweaks that we want to do ... and a lot of this needs a little deeper dive,” Slager said. “But rather than trying to take a meat cleaver to this, we were a little more surgical and prescripti­ve in just trying to identify the problem and working within that.”

The bill now heads to the House floor. Slager said the issue has additional­ly been recommende­d to a legislativ­e study committee “to see what else we might do” with future wetlands legislatio­n.

Although the bill still broadly reduces wetlands protection­s, the Hoosier Environmen­tal Council called the amendment “much less damaging” than the Senate-passed version of the bill.

The proposal comes as President Joe Biden’s administra­tion begins review of the previous administra­tion’s rules like the Navigable Waters Protection Rule, which narrowed the definition of waterways that fall under federal protection.

Republican bill author Sen. Chris Garten and other sponsors maintain that vague language in the state law, over-enforcemen­t by state regulators and high mitigation fees that drive up housing costs prompted the drafting. They contend removal of state protection­s would help developers and grow the housing market.

Environmen­tal groups and state regulatory officials have pushed back, arguing that because wetlands provide water purificati­on, habitat for wildlife and reduced flood risks, it’s critical they’re protected.

While Garten said there would be “zero impact” on overall water quality, the proposed rollbacks have sparked bipartisan opposition within the Republican-dominated Legislatur­e and from Republican Gov. Eric Holcomb.

Republican House Speaker Todd Huston said lawmakers aimed to “narrow the scope of the bill and addresses some concerns” before taking a full chamber vote on the proposal.

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