Big government hijacks Clean Water Act
National Cattlemen's
Beef Association | Updated: November 18, 2011
What you can’t legislate,
regulate. Such has been the case time and again with the
overzealous regulators in the current administration.
Fortunately for farmers, ranchers and private property
holders nationwide, the U.S. Congress is on the verge of
blocking the administration from moving forward with an
overreaching, potentially devastating expansion of the Clean
Water Act (CWA). The U.S. Senate could vote, possibly this
week, on an amendment offered by Senators John Barrasso (R-Wyo.)
and Dean Heller (R-Nev.) to the Energy and Water Development
Appropriations bill for fiscal year (FY) 2012 that would
defund the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ (Corps) and the
Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) attempt to expand
its jurisdiction under the Clean Water Act (CWA) through
guidance documents and/or regulation.
The guidance attempts to
expand the Corps and EPA’s jurisdiction by redefining what a
“water of the United States” (WOTUS) is. It uses broad
terminology to determine whether a water is a “tributary,”
essentially allowing every ditch or conveyance to qualify
and fall under federal regulatory authority. It expands the
agencies’ jurisdiction to cover ephemeral streams (which are
streams with water in them only during rainfall events). It
is unlikely most farmers and ranchers even know where all of
the ephemeral features are located on their property. Next,
it defines “traditional navigable waters” as any water that
supports one-time recreational use. One trip in a canoe down
a stream would qualify a water as a “traditional navigable
water.” In the history of the CWA, the term “traditional
navigable water” has only been used to describe major rivers
that can float commercial vehicles like barges. Finally, for
all “other waters” field staff will have broad authority to
find any type of water (puddle, prairie pothole, mudflat,
etc.) is a WOTUS by finding it is “similarly situated” to
other jurisdictional waters, or, finding it has a
“significant nexus” to a “traditional navigable water”
(which also has been expanded).
Unfortunately, this is not a
new issue. The federal government’s authority under the CWA
has been the subject of two recent Supreme Court cases,
which have clearly articulated that the Corps and EPA’s
jurisdiction is not limitless, unfortunately, that is
exactly what the guidance does. It makes the federal
government’s authority over water limitless. Additionally,
legislation was introduced in previous Congresses to
redefine WOTUS in this manner, by deleting the word
“navigable” from the CWA. Those bills never went anywhere.
There was never enough support to move them through Congress
and there is not enough support today. In fact, 170 members
of Congress sent a letter to EPA and the Corps opposing the
guidance earlier this year. The administration ignored
Congress and plowed ahead with this overreaching guidance.
The National Cattlemen’s Beef Association (NCBA) and the
Public Lands Council (PLC) supports protecting and
preserving our nation’s waterways but subjecting every drop
of water in this country to EPA and the Corps jurisdiction
isn’t responsible, science-based regulation. NCBA worked to
stop those misguided pieces of legislation and has worked
relentlessly to stop this guidance.
While the guidance has not
been finalized yet, the agencies are quickly moving forward
to a rulemaking redefining the term “waters of the United
States” to codify the guidance. It has been reported that
EPA and the Corps may walk away from the guidance only to
send a proposed rule, which would likely contain much of the
exact language in the guidance to expand the types and
number of waters subject to the CWA, to the Office of
Management and Budget in the coming weeks. This is the final
step before a regulation is officially proposed or
finalized. In order to stop EPA and the Corps from trying to
regulate virtually every drop of water – be it through
regulation or guidance – Congress must act. The
Barrasso-Heller amendment would do two things. First, it
would prohibit the Corps from finalizing the guidance.
Second, it would prohibit the Corps from promulgating a
rulemaking redefining WOTUS. Senator Barrasso said the
amendment “blocks Washington’s power grab over all farms,
ranches, small businesses and rural communities.” He also
said the “guidance creates even more uncertainty that delays
economic investment and job creation. America’s ranchers
should be focused on running their operations — not dealing
with this Administration’s bureaucratic red tape.”
The guidance claims to
provide clarity and certainty to landowners. Unfortunately,
expanding the scope of the CWA in such a manner will do
nothing but give farmers and ranchers the certainty that
every stream, ditch and pond on their property will be
subject to federal regulation, not the kind of certainty
cattle producers are looking for from this administration.
NCBA urges all senators to
support the Barrasso-Heller amendment and we urge cattlemen
across the country to weigh in with their senators as well.
Supporting this amendment is a vote on the side of
responsible, commonsense regulation and it is a vote on the
side of America’s farmers and ranchers.
Source :Ashley Lyon,
NCBA deputy environmental counsel