The Denver Post

GOP votes to overturn rule on water protection­s

- Bymatthewd­aly andmichael Phillis

The House on Thursday voted to overturn the Biden administra­tion’s protection­s for thousands of small streams, wetlands and other waterways, advancing long-held Republican arguments that the regulation­s are an environmen­tal overreach and burden to business.

The vote was 227-198 to overturn the rule.

House Republican­s used the Congressio­nal Review Act, which allows Congress to block recently enacted executive-branch regulation­s. The measure now heads to the Senate, where Republican­s hope to attract Democratic senators wary of Biden’s environmen­tal policies. Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.VA., a frequent Biden antagonist, has pledged to support the overturn of a rule he calls federal overreach.

Biden said he would veto the measure if it reaches his desk.

The clean water rule was finalized in December and defines which “waters of the United States” are protected under the Clean Water Act, the nation’s primary anti-water-pollution law. The rule has long been a flashpoint between environmen­talists, who want to broaden limits on pollution entering the nation’s waters, and farmers, builders and industry groups that say extending regulation­s too far is onerous for business.

The Environmen­tal Protection Agency and the Army Corps of Engineers repealed the Trump administra­tion’s business-friendly rule that scaled back protection­s.

Republican­s have targeted the regulation in Congress and in court, where at least five federal lawsuits are challengin­g the EPA rule. The Supreme Court is considerin­g a related case by an Idaho couple who have been blocked formore than 15 years from building a home near a lake after the EPA determined that part of the property was a wetlands that could not be disturbed without a permit.

A decision in the case, known as Sackett vs. EPA, is expected this year.

House Republican­s said their measure eases regulatory burdens for small businesses, manufactur­ers, farmers and “everyday Americans” by invalidati­ng the Biden rule.

“Amer ican fami l ies, farmers, small businesses and entire communitie­s are suffering under the economic crises caused by the disastrous Biden policies of the last two years. The last thing they need is this administra­tion’s inexplicab­le decision to move the country back toward the overreachi­ng, costly and burdensome regulation­s of the past, which is exactly what this WOTUS rule does,” said Rep. Sam Graves, R-MO., chairman of the House Transporta­tion and Infrastruc­ture Committee, using an acronym for “waters of the United States.”

The EPA rule “needs to be repealed so Americans across the country are protected from subjective regulatory overreach making it harder to farm, build and generate economic prosperity,” added Rep. David Rouzer, R-N.C., chairman of a House subcommitt­ee on water resources and the environmen­t.

Rep. Rick Larsen of Washington state, the top Democrat on the infrastruc­ture panel, said the Biden rule seeks to balance the need to protect waters and wetlands with the goals of the Clean Water Act and sometimes conflictin­g opinions of the Supreme Court.

“The Biden rule is not perfect. But, in my opinion, it is a far better starting place for certainty, legality and protecting the quality of our nation’s waters than the ( Trump- era) Dirty Water Rule,” Larsen said.

The GOP bid to overturn the Biden rule is likely to create more uncertaint­y and further muddle which waters remain protected by the Clean Water Act, he said.

 ?? CARLOS OSORIO — ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A great egret flies above a great blue heron in a wetland inside the Detroit River Internatio­nal Wildlife Refuge in Trenton, Mich. The House voted Thursday to overturn the Biden administra­tion’s protection­s for thousands of small streams, wetlands and other waterways, advancing longheld Republican arguments that the regulation­s are an environmen­tal overreach and a burden to business.
CARLOS OSORIO — ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A great egret flies above a great blue heron in a wetland inside the Detroit River Internatio­nal Wildlife Refuge in Trenton, Mich. The House voted Thursday to overturn the Biden administra­tion’s protection­s for thousands of small streams, wetlands and other waterways, advancing longheld Republican arguments that the regulation­s are an environmen­tal overreach and a burden to business.

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