By H. JOSEF HEBERT
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Bush administration made it harder Tuesday for
non-permanent streams and nearby wetlands to be protected under the federal
Clean Water Act.
The new guidance issued by the Environmental Protection Agency and the Army
Corps of Engineers requires that for such waters to be protected there must
be a “significant nexus” shown between the intermittent stream or wetland and
a traditional waterway.
And the guidance says a determination will be made on a case-by-case basis,
analyzing flow and other issues. Environmentalist argued that would negate
the broader regional importance of many such waterways in the aggregate on
water bodies downstream.
Assistant EPA Administrator Benjamin Grumbles said the new guidance to
regional offices and enforcement officials “sends a clear signal we’ll use
our regulatory tools” to meet President Bush’s promise of no net loss of
wetlands.
He said it “maintains ... the Bush administration’s strong commitment to
wetlands conservation.”
Environmentalists said the new rules will put in jeopardy many of the
intermittent streams and headwaters that now fall under the Clean Water Act,
and result in less protection of wetlands.
“This guidance adds unnecessary and unintended hurdles for agencies and
citizens trying to protect our wasters,” said Jan Goldman-Carter, an attorney
for the National Wildlife Federation, and she called it a “retreat from
protecting many important headwaters streams and wetlands.”
Under the new guidelines, it will be determined on a case-by-case basis
whether such tributaries or adjacent wetlands significantly affect
traditionally navigable waterways and, thereby, are subject to the Clean
Water Act.
John Paul Woodley Jr., the assistant Army secretary who oversees the Corps of
Engineers, said the policy “will foster ... predictability and consistency”
in determining whether a permit should be issued to conduct activities in an
intermittent tributary or adjacent wetland.
Grumbles said the new guidance conforms with a ruling by the Supreme Court a
year ago. A divided court said that while the government can block
development in a wetland, even miles from a traditional waterway, it can do
so only if there is a significant connection shown with the waterway.
While the ruling fell short of what some property rights advocates wanted in
limiting the law’s reach, it said — in the words of Justice Anthony Kennedy —
that there must be a “significant nexus” shown between the wetland and a
navigable waterway.
The EPA guidelines meet that test, said Grumbles, requiring an analysis on a
case by case basis of water flow and hydrological and ecological factors that
would determine the relationship of the tributary to navigable waters
downstream.
“This poses the question of whether the tributaries themselves will be
protected under the Clean Water Act,” said Joan Mulhern of Earth Justice, an
environmental advocacy group. The impact of the more stringent guidelines
could be broad because nearly 60 percent of the country’s stream miles are
intermittent, she said.
“This policy does nothing to clarify what waters should be protected. It
muddies the water,” said environmental advocate Christy Leavitt of U.S. PIRG.
In light of last year’s Supreme Court ruling, which was so splintered that
there were five separate opinions written by the justices, some members of
Congress have sought to clarify the Clean Water Act’s reach in protecting
wetlands and intermittent streams.
A bill offered by Reps. John Dingell, D-Mich., and James Oberstar, D-Minn.,
which has 160 sponsors, would make changes in the Clean Water Act to assure
that virtually all U.S. waters, including intermittent streams and wetlands,
are covered.
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On the Net:
Environmental Protection Agency:
www.epa.gov
Posted 6/6/2007