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Great Lakes
Article:
Environmental
Groups Counter Industry Demand for Blank Check to Pollute
Waters
Clean Water Act cases in Supreme Court could have far-reaching
consequences
Press Release, commondreams.org
Released January 13, 2006
WASHINGTON - January 13 - A coalition of environmental
and public health groups today filed a friend-of-the-court
brief in what could be the most important Clean Water
Act cases ever to be heard by the Supreme Court. In the
brief, the groups argue for continued federal protection
of streams and wetlands from harmful pollution in the
face of industry petitions asking the Court to eliminate
decades of Clean Water Act safeguards for these waters.
“These cases pose the question whether the Clean Water
Act regulates any discharges into the great majority of
this country’s tributaries and adjacent wetlands—involving
not just discharges of dredged or fill material, but also
discharges of sewage, sediment and toxic chemicals such
as cyanide from factories,” the groups wrote in the brief.
Earthjustice, representing American Rivers, Environmental
Defense, National Audubon Society, Natural Resources Defense
Council, Physicians for Social Responsibility, Sierra
Club, Tip of the Mitt Watershed Council and Waterkeeper
Alliance, filed the amicus brief on the side of the U.S.
government in the two consolidated Clean Water Act cases,
Rapanos v. U.S. and U.S. v Carabell, that the Supreme
Court is scheduled to hear February 21. Both cases involve
proposed commercial developments in Michigan wetlands
adjoining streams that are tributaries of the Great Lakes.
These groups join an unprecedented array of local, state,
and federal government officials, hunting and fishing
advocacy groups, scientists, and others from across the
political and policy spectrums who are all filing friend-of-the-court
briefs today urging the Court to maintain the longstanding
protections offered by the Clean Water Act. This unparalleled
collection of interested parties includes four former
Administrators of the Environmental Protection Agency
and nine members of Congress directly involved in the
passage of the 1972 Act and its reaffirmation in 1977.
Later today the attorneys general of 34 states plus the
District of Columbia, led by the states of New York and
Michigan, will also file an amicus brief in support of
the Clean Water Act. All expressed strong support of the
Clean Water Act’s core safeguard: the requirement to obtain
a permit before discharging pollutants into waters of
the United States.
In October, the Supreme Court agreed to hear these two
cases challenging the definition of federally protected
waters. In both cases, the developers (and industrial
polluters and others supporting their position) are arguing
that they can pollute—even destroy—the waters at issue
without a Clean Water Act permit. Indeed, they argue that
their right to pollute is protected by the U.S. Constitution.
For three decades the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers have rejected such
arguments, and have correctly applied the Clean Water
Act’s safeguards equally not only to large waterbodies
where boats can travel, but also to tributaries of such
waters and to wetlands adjoining those tributaries. These
streams and their adjacent wetlands that would go unprotected
under the developers and industries’ view of the law are
used for fishing, recreation, wildlife habitat, and drinking
water supplies, as well as for filtering pollutants and
helping prevent floods.
Indeed, protection of tributaries was fundamental federal
law long before the 1972 Clean Water Act, dating back
at least to the 1899 Refuse Act, which barred discharge
“into any navigable water of the United States, or into
any tributary of any navigable water from which the same
shall float or be washed into such navigable water.” The
environmental and public health groups noted that the
developers’ arguments would “dramatically shrink federal
water pollution permitting back to a narrow geographic
scope not seen since the McKinley Administration.”
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