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Washington, DC – The draft water resources
planning guidance released today by the Council on Environmental Quality
represents a vital first step in modernizing our nation’s water policies
to protect communities from global warming impacts and to plan for the
nation’s water needs in the 21st century.
“In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina,
Congress recognized it was time to fundamentally change the way flood
control, navigation and other water projects are planned and built,”
said David Conrad, senior resource specialist, National Wildlife
Federation. “Today, the Obama Administration has taken a vital step
toward recognizing the critical importance of our nation’s rivers,
coasts, and wetlands -- and setting the stage for the fundamental
changes needed to protect these vital resources.”
“For too long, our nation's water
resources have been steered by outdated guidelines that favored
development over all else,” said Andrew Fahlund, vice president of
Conservation for American Rivers, “With clear support from Congress, the
Obama Administration is beginning to ensure those rules prioritize 21st
century approaches to water management that work with nature rather than
against it. These Principles and Guidelines should provide a clear and
mandatory direction to federal agencies that healthy rivers, wetlands,
and floodplains are at the heart of safe and economically sustainable
communities. With the looming threat of greater and more intense storms
due to global warming, this cannot happen at a more important time. We
greatly appreciate the Administration’s efforts to this point.”
The draft guidance recognizes that
healthy waters are vital to human health and safety and for our natural
environment, and requires federal agencies to account for these values
in water resources planning. Healthy streams, wetlands and coasts
provide clean and abundant supplies of water, protect communities by
reducing flood and storm damages, and provide essential habitat for fish
and wildlife. The draft also begins to set out clear direction to
agencies that they must confront the profound impact of climate change
on water resource planning and management. Giving clear and unequivocal
direction to these agencies to confront this reality is critical for
sustainable economic development, public safety, and environmental
protection.
While American Rivers and National
Wildlife Federation are appreciative of the effort to date, we wish to
see the draft go further to implement the reforms mandated by Congress.
They urge the Administration to establish clear directives that will
ensure that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and other agencies protect
the natural resources needed to defend America from the floods,
droughts, storms, and increasing sea levels fueled by climate change.
For too long, the Corps in particular has allowed narrow development
interests to run roughshod over our natural resources and the broader
public interest, leading to devastating environmental losses,
unacceptable risks to public safety, and enormous waste of taxpayer
dollars. Just two weeks ago, a U.S. District Judge ruled that the Corps'
"gross negligence" in maintaining a navigation channel led to the
breeching of levees in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina.
A fundamentally new approach to planning
is needed to serve the nation’s 21st Century water resources needs. The
Administration should seize this opportunity and establish a modern
national water policy that requires the Corps of Engineers and other
federal agencies to protect and restore our nation’s vital rivers,
coasts, and wetlands. The new guidance should do this by establishing
clear directives, such as requiring federal agencies to utilize
non-structural and restoration approaches whenever practicable.
Contact:
David Conrad, Sr. Resource Specialist, National Wildlife Federation,
202-365-0565 cell, conrad@nwf.org
Andrew Fahlund, Vice President of
Conservation, American Rivers, (202) 487-6659 cell,
afahlund@americanrivers.org
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