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Washington, DC -- Today, Chairman James L.
Oberstar (D-MN) is holding a hearing in the House Transportation and
Infrastructure Committee to examine Clean Water Act enforcement
deficiencies at the state and federal level. The hearing will focus on
the failure to meet the goals of having all our nation's waters both
fishable and swimmable -- a strong tenet of the Clean Water Act. EPA
Administrator Lisa Jackson testified along with other witnesses.
The following statement is from Joan
Mulhern, senior legislative counsel for Earthjustice:
"The Clean Water Act is one of our
nation's most important environmental laws, but a lack of enforcement
has greatly limited its effectiveness, leaving almost half of our
nation's waters too dirty to meet all of their uses, and in some cases
threatening public health. We're pleased Administrator Jackson has
committed to ramping up enforcement efforts and Chairman Oberstar and
his committee are discussing the enforcement problems that are keeping
the Clean Water Act from achieving its broad goals.
"One of the most significant enforcement
problems today is that two muddied Supreme Court decisions have left
many of our streams, lakes, rivers and wetlands vulnerable and
unprotected. Internal EPA documents show that between July 2006 and
December 2007, confusion about Clean Water Act jurisdiction resulting
from these decisions adversely affected approximately 500 of EPA's Clean
Water Act enforcement cases -- almost 40 percent of the agency's annual
docket.
"Congress must pass legislation
restoring the Clean Water Act's broad scope, ensuring the protection of
all of our nation's waters against pollution, degradation and
destruction. By passing the Clean Water Restoration Act, it would return
the jurisdiction of the Clean Water Act to protect all streams, lakes,
rivers and wetlands that were protected before the Supreme Court
decisions."
Contact:
Raviya Ismail, Earthjustice, (202) 667-4500, ext. 221 |