Texarkana Gazette

Administra­tion proposes rollback of water rules

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WASHINGTON—Cabinet chiefs and GOP lawmakers celebrated alongside farm and business leaders Tuesday as the Trump administra­tion made good on one of its biggest promised environmen­tal rollbacks, proposing to lift federal protection­s for thousands of waterways and wetlands nationwide.

Environmen­tal groups called the proposed overhaul a grave assault on the aims of the 1972 Clean Water Act, the foundation­al U.S. water protection law. Administra­tion supporters praised President Donald Trump for knocking back what they said was federal overreach.

The Obama-era water protection targeted for replacemen­t by Tuesday’s regulatory overhaul “was never about clean water,” Rep. Sam Graves, a Republican and farmer from Missouri, and one of about a dozen Republican members of Congress at the launch at headquarte­rs of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency. “It was always about the federal government getting more control over our water and our lives.”

“I want to thank him for keeping that promise,” Graves declared of Trump.

“Thank you, Mr. President, for giving us the Christmas present of a lifetime,” said the president of the American Farm Bureau Federation, Zippy Duvall of Georgia.

Environmen­tal groups said the Trump administra­tion proposal would have a sweeping impact on how the country safeguards the nation’s waterways, scaling back not just a 2015 Obama administra­tion interpreta­tion of federal jurisdicti­on but also how federal agencies enforce the Clean Water Act.

“The Trump administra­tion has just given a big Christmas gift to polluters,” said Bob Irvin, president of the American Rivers environmen­tal nonprofit. “Americans all over the country are concerned about the safety of their drinking water — this is not the time to be rolling back protection­s.”

The Trump administra­tion would withdraw federal protection­s for wetlands nationally unless they are connected to another federally protected waterway, and generally for streams, creeks, washes, ditches and ponds that exist only during and immediatel­y after a rain.

Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke, also attending the ceremony at the EPA, told the farmers and others in attendance that the proposal “doesn’t remove any protection.”

“It puts the decision back where it should be, the people that work the land, that hunt, that own the land,” Zinke said.

Industry groups praised the latest Trump administra­tion environmen­tal regulatory rollback.

“When you have uncertaint­y and overreach, it makes it incredibly difficult to build American homes,” Gerald Howard, the CEO of the National Associatio­n of Home Builders, said of the Obama administra­tion’s interpreta­tion of the water rules.

Environmen­tal groups say the kind of isolated wetlands, rain-fed streams and often dry washes that would lose federal protection­s also help buffer communitie­s from the worsening impact of drought, floods and hurricanes under climate change, and are vital for wildlife.

Jan Goldman-Carter of the National Wildlife Federation said the move would leave waterways more vulnerable to destructio­n by developers and farmers and to oil spills, fertilizer runoff and other pollution. More than half of the wetlands in the lower 48 U.S. states would be without federal protection under the revisions, Goldman-Carter said.

Andrew Wheeler, acting administra­tor of the EPA, said there was no firm data on what percentage of waterways would lose protection­s.

In Michigan, where a dispute over a commercial developmen­t produced a 2006 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that failed to resolve the dispute over federal jurisdicti­on, outdoor sportsman Dave Smethurst said he feared the proposed revisions would harm his beloved trout streams and wetlands that host ducks and other waterfowl.

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