San Diego Union-Tribune

U.S. RESTORES STATE, TRIBAL WATER AUTHORITY

Grants power to review projects to protect waterways

- BY MATTHEW DALY

States and Native American tribes will have greater authority to block energy projects such as natural gas pipelines that could pollute rivers and streams under a final rule issued Thursday by the Biden administra­tion.

The rule, which takes effect in November, reverses a Trump-era action that limited the ability of states and tribes to review pipelines, dams and other federally regulated projects within their borders. The Environmen­tal Protection Agency says the new regulation will empower local authoritie­s to protect rivers and streams while supporting infrastruc­ture projects that create jobs.

“We actually think this is going to be great for the country,” said Radhika Fox, assistant administra­tor for water. “It’s going to allow us to balance the Biden administra­tion goals of protecting our water resources and also supporting all kinds of infrastruc­ture projects that this nation so desperatel­y needs.”

But Fox acknowledg­ed at a briefing that the water rule will be significan­tly slimmed down from an earlier proposal because of a Supreme Court ruling that weakened regulation­s protecting millions of acres of wetlands. That ruling, in a case known as Sackett v. EPA, sharply limited the federal government’s

jurisdicti­on over wetlands, requiring that wetlands be more clearly connected to other waters such as oceans and rivers. Environmen­tal advocates said the May decision would strip protection­s from tens of millions of acres of wetlands.

Fox declined to offer a specific number of waterways that would no longer be protected. But she said the Sackett case “does limit pretty significan­tly the number of the waters that we expect to be (under federal jurisdicti­on) when those determinat­ions are made” by the Army Corps of Engineers.

The administra­tion will work closely with states, tribes and territorie­s on implementi­ng the rule, “but again, what is jurisdicti­onal and not jurisdicti­onal is determined by these very casespecif­ic reviews” by the Corps, she said.

In a separate action last month, the Biden administra­tion weakened regulation­s protecting millions of

acres of wetlands, saying it had no choice after the high court ruling. The rule defining “Waters of the United States” marks a policy shift that departs from a half-century of federal rules governing the nation’s waterways.

The federal Clean Water Act allows states and tribes to review what effect pipelines, dams and some other federally regulated projects might have on water quality within their borders. The Trump administra­tion sought to streamline fossil fuel developmen­t and made it harder for local officials to block projects.

The rule announced Thursday will shift power back to states, tribes and territorie­s.

EPA Administra­tor Michael Regan said in a statement that the new rule affirms the authority of states, territorie­s and tribes “to protect precious water resources while advancing federally permitted projects in a transparen­t, timely and predictabl­e way.”

The rule allows states and tribes to work with federal agencies to determine the time frame for review — up to a maximum of one year — but provides a six-month default deadline if local authoritie­s and the federal agency do not agree on a timeline.

The EPA has said states should have authority to look beyond pollution directly discharged into waterways and “holistical­ly evaluate” the impact of a project on local water quality. The new rule gives local regulators more power to ensure they have the informatio­n they need before facing deadline pressure to issue or deny a permit, the EPA said.

Environmen­tal groups said the new rule will make it easier for states and tribes to review projects that could harm water quality.

Former President Donald Trump had argued that states were improperly wielding the Clean Water Act to block needed fossil fuel projects.

In 2020, EPA officials said the Clean Water Act shouldn’t be used to hold infrastruc­ture projects hostage and finalized its rule that curtailed state and tribal power.

The Trump rule was tossed by a federal judge in 2021, but a divided Supreme Court later reinstated it. The court’s three liberal justices and Chief Justice John Roberts dissented, saying supporters of the rule had not shown that they would be sufficient­ly harmed by the lower court’s ruling.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN AP FILE ?? Bethsaida Sigaran (left), Jaime Sigaran and Thea Louis rally in support of the Clean Water Act in 2022.
JACQUELYN MARTIN AP FILE Bethsaida Sigaran (left), Jaime Sigaran and Thea Louis rally in support of the Clean Water Act in 2022.

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