The Guardian (USA)

New Mexico’s rivers are most threatened waterways in US, report finds

- Aliya Uteuova

New Mexico’s rivers,which include the Rio Grande, Gila, San Juan and Pecos, are America’s most threatened waterways, according to a new report. This is largely due to a 2023 US supreme courtdecis­ion thatleft more than 90% of the state’s surface waters without federal protection­s from industrial pollution, according to state officials.

“Virtually all the rivers in New Mexico are losing clean water protection­s,” said Matt Rice, the south-west regional director of American Rivers, the conservati­on group that publishes the annual list. “It has the most to lose, and the threat is particular­ly acute there.”

New Mexico, New Hampshire and Massachuse­tts are the only states without permitting power to regulate how much pollution is in their surface water,making them dependent on federal protection­s from mining activities, wastewater, agricultur­al runoff and industrial pollution.

The Sackett v Environmen­tal Protection Agency decision issued by the supreme court last May could affect more than half of the nation’s wetlands and up to 4.9m miles of streams, an agency official told CNN. In a landmark ruling, the court found that only “relatively permanent” streams, and wetlands with a “continuous surface connection”, are subject to Clean Water Act protection­s under the guidance of the EPA. In arid New Mexico, many of the state’s waterways only run during the rainy season or during snowmelt periods.

“This ruling, and lifting protection­s for half of the country’s wetlands, is a real, immediate threat to everything from the quality of our water, to the price of our water, to whether our communitie­s can thrive and ecosystems can exist,” said Heather TaylorMies­le, senior vice-president of advocacy and regional conservati­on for American Rivers. “A lot of places in the country that enjoy Clean Water Act protection­s have seen the rug pulled out for them, and as a result, we’re going to be dealing with a lot more pollution.”

New Mexico’s more than 100,000 miles of rivers and streams provide drinking water for the majority of the state’s population, including 23 sovereign pueblo and tribal government­s, according to the report.

“Water is part of who we are as New Mexicans,” said Rachel Conn, deputy director of conservati­on organizati­on Amigos Bravos. “Water is critical for our many tribal communitie­s here in New Mexico, for sacred ceremonies, and for the health of tribal communitie­s.”

In the wake of the Sackett ruling, New Mexico state lawmakers introduced legislatio­n that would safeguard the vulnerable rivers, streams and lakes in the absence of federal protection­s. In March, the state appropriat­ed $7.6m to improve monitoring of groundwate­r, and to establish a permitting program that would regulate pollution discharge into surface water.

“It is up to Congress to protect and to defend the Clean Water Act,” said Melanie Stansbury, a US congresswo­man from New Mexico, who last fall introduced a bill to restore the federal wetland protection­s the Sackett ruling stripped. She said: “The only way to restore them, now that the court has acted at the highest level, is for Congress to act.”

The report also listed the Big Sunflower and Yazoo rivers of Mississipp­i, which face the prospect of a federal plan to pump 16m gallons of floodwater a day out of the Mississipp­i Delta’s flood-prone area. Environmen­tal groups have long opposed the project, citing threats to critical wetlands, 80% of which have already been lost, as well as environmen­tal justice concerns – advocates say the pumps could flood majority-Black communitie­s downstream.

In Tennessee, population and industry growth are straining water supply from the Duck River, and in South Carolina, the proposed constructi­on of an interstate crossing threatens to rip through more than 300 acres of forested wetlands.

 ?? Smith/Courtesy American Rivers ?? Comanche Point and the Rio Costilla in the Valle Vidal, New Mexico. Photograph: Geraint
Smith/Courtesy American Rivers Comanche Point and the Rio Costilla in the Valle Vidal, New Mexico. Photograph: Geraint
 ?? O’Donnell/Courtesy American Rivers ?? Serpent Lake wetlands in New Mexico, in an undated photo. Photograph: Jim
O’Donnell/Courtesy American Rivers Serpent Lake wetlands in New Mexico, in an undated photo. Photograph: Jim

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