WASHINGTON-
12/10/18 by Carol Davenport
The Trump
administration is expected on Tuesday to unveil a plan that would weaken
federal clean water rules designed to protect millions of acres of wetlands and
thousands of miles of streams nationwide from pesticide runoff and other
pollutants.
Environmentalists
say the proposal represents a historic assault on wetlands regulation at a
moment when Mr. Trump has repeatedly voiced a commitment to “crystal-clean
water.” The proposed new rule would chip away at safeguards put in place a
quarter century ago, during the administration of President George H.W. Bush,
who implemented a policy designed to ensure that no wetlands lost federal
protection.
“They’re
definitely rolling things back to the pre-George H.W. Bush era,” said Blan
Holman, who works on water regulations with the Southern Environmental Law
Center. Wetlands play key roles in filtering surface water and protecting
against floods, while also providing wildlife habitat.
President
Trump, who made a pledge of weakening a 2015 Obama-era rule one of his central
campaign pledges, is expected to tout his plan as ending a federal land grab
that impinged on the rights of farmers, rural landowners and real estate
developers to use their property as they see fit.
Under the
Obama rule, farmers using land near streams and wetlands were restricted from
doing certain kinds of plowing and planting certain crops, and would have been
required to apply for permits from the Environmental Protection Agency in order
to use chemical pesticides and fertilizers that could have run off into those
water bodies. Under the new Trump plan, which lifts federal protections from
many of those streams and wetlands, those requirements will also be lifted.
A
spokesman for the Environmental Protection Agency, John Konkus, declined to
comment on the plan.
The clean
water rollback is the latest in a series of actions by the Trump administration
to weaken or undo major environmental rules, including proposals to weaken
regulations on planet-warming emissions from cars,
power
plants and
oil and gas drilling rigs, a series of moves designed to speed
new drilling in the vast Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, and
efforts to
weaken protections under the Endangered Species Act. This
week in Katowice, Poland, at an annual United Nations conference on mitigating
global warming, Trump administration officials held an event touting the
benefits of fossil fuels.
The
proposed water rule, scheduled to be announced Tuesday morning at the
Environmental Protection Agency, is designed to replace an Obama-era regulation
known as Waters of the United States. Tuesday’s unveiling of the proposal is
expected to coincide with its publication in the federal register. After that,
the administration will take comment on the plan for 60 days, and it could then
revise the plan before finalizing it next year.
The Obama
rule, developed jointly by the E.P.A. and the Army Corps of Engineers under the
authority of the 1972 Clean Water Act, was designed to limit pollution in about
60 percent of the nation’s bodies of water, protecting sources of drinking
water for about a third of the United States. It extended existing federal
authority to limit pollution in large bodies of water, like the Chesapeake Bay
and Puget Sound, to smaller bodies that drain into them, such as tributaries,
streams and wetlands.
But it
became a target for rural landowners, an important part of President Trump’s
political base, since it could have restricted how much pollution from chemical
fertilizers and pesticides could seep into water on their property.
The new
Trump water rule will retain federal protections for those larger bodies of
water, the rivers that drain into them, and wetlands that are directly adjacent
to those bodies of water, according to a detailed eight-page fact sheet
prepared by the administration ahead of the unveiling of the rule and reviewed
by The New York Times.
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