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Washington, DC -- American Rivers, the nation’s leading river
conservation organization, is pleased to announce that Senator Udall
(D. NM) and Senator Whitehouse (D. RI) have introduced the ‘Green
Infrastructure for Clean Water Act of 2010’ (S. 3561) to the Senate.
Green infrastructure offers a 21st century approach to managing
our nation’s stormwater. By replicating, restoring, and protecting
the natural hydrology of the landscape, water is infiltrated where
it falls, filtering out contaminants and reducing the volume of
stormwater that overwhelms our water infrastructure systems. From
the neighborhood scale rain barrel to a watershed scale system of
green roofs, permeable pavements, and wetland restoration, green
infrastructure has the flexibility and economic viability to protect
and restore clean water supplies for communities.
Says Katherine Baer, Senior Director, Clean Water Program at
American Rivers, “This legislation emphasizes the importance of
green infrastructure as a cost-effective alternative to traditional
hard infrastructure fixes. By establishing a precedent of green
infrastructure solutions, this approach can become a new norm rather
than just a demonstration.”
“It’s time for Congress to move green infrastructure to center
stage in our national water strategy,” said Jacky Grimshaw, Vice
President for Policy at the Center for Neighborhood Technology in
Chicago. “Green infrastructure creates healthier, more vital
communities, protects clean water, saves energy, and helps to build
green jobs. The Green Infrastructure for Clean Water Act will extend
EPA’s partnership toward sustainable communities by expanding cost-
and ecologically effective green infrastructure.”
This bill will increase research and development of innovative
green infrastructure techniques, promote the use of green
infrastructure in permitting and regulations within EPA, and provide
incentive funding to communities to plan, develop, and install green
infrastructure technologies.
Contact:
Katherine Baer, American Rivers, 202-347-7550
Amy Kober, American Rivers, 206-898-3864
Steve Wise, Center for Neighborhood Technology, 773-269-4042 |