Environment America is the new home of U.S. PIRG’s environmental work.
Washington,
DC— More than 57 percent of industrial and municipal facilities
across America discharged more pollution into our waterways than
their Clean Water Act permits allowed in 2005, according to Troubled
Waters: An analysis of Clean Water Act compliance,
a new report released today by U.S. PIRG.
“As
the Clean Water Act turns 35, polluters continue to foul our rivers,
lakes and streams,” said U.S. PIRG Clean Water Advocate Christy
Leavitt. “With so many
facilities dumping so much pollution, no one should be surprised that
nearly half of America’s waterways are unsafe for swimming and
fishing. But we should be outraged.”
The
goals of the 1972 Clean Water Act are to eliminate the discharge of
pollutants into waterways and make all U.S. waters swimmable and
fishable. Over the last three and a half decades, this landmark
environmental law has made significant improvements in water quality,
but the original goals have yet to be met.
Using
the Freedom of Information Act, U.S. PIRG obtained data from the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency on facilities’ compliance with the
Clean Water Act in 2005. U.S. PIRG researchers found that:
-
Nationally,
628 major facilities exceeded their Clean Water Act permits for at
least half of the monthly reporting periods between January 1, 2005
and December 31, 2005. Eighty-five facilities exceeded their Clean
Water Act permits during every reporting period.
-
The
ten U.S. states with the highest percentages of major facilities
exceeding their Clean Water Act permit limits at least once are
Maine, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, Ohio,
Connecticut, New York, North Dakota, California, and West Virginia.
-
The
ten U.S. states with the most exceedances of Clean Water Act permit
limits during 2005 period are Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York, Texas,
California, Massachusetts, Louisiana, Tennessee, Alabama, and
Florida.
Leavitt
noted that the findings are likely “just the tip of the polluted
iceberg,” since the data that U.S. PIRG analyzed includes only
“major” facilities and does not include pollution discharged into
waters by the thousands of minor facilities across the country.
“Although
we have made enormous strides since the enactment of the Clean Water
Act, efforts to clean up America’s waters have stalled -- even
slipped -- under the stewardship of the Bush Administration. In
the past several years, the Federal government has let down
municipalities’ efforts to protect watersheds, provide safe
drinking water, and make recreational water sources fishable and
swimmable,” said Rep. James L. Oberstar (Minn.), Chairman of the
Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. “We are at a
turning point in history, and our responsibility to this generation
and our legacy to future generations is to advance the cause of
protecting the most precious of natural resources – clean water.”
Over
the last six years, the Bush administration has proposed or enacted
numerous policies that weaken the Clean Water Act. These include:
two separate policies that eliminate Clean Water Act protections for
streams and wetlands that feed
and clean treasured
lakes, rivers and bays;
and funding cuts to EPA’s budget, including significant cuts to the
Clean Water State Revolving Fund, the main federal funding source to
help communities upgrade their sewage treatment systems.
U.S.
PIRG called on the Bush administration to reverse policies that
weaken federal clean water safeguards and strengthen enforcement of
the Clean Water Act. In addition, the group called on Congress to
pass the Clean Water Restoration Act, bipartisan legislation to
ensure all U.S. waterways are protected by the Clean Water Act.
U.S.
PIRG applauded Representatives Oberstar, Vernon Ehlers (Mich.) and
John Dingell (Mich.) and Senator Russell Feingold (Wis.) for
sponsoring the Clean Water Restoration Act. U.S. PIRG urged other
Representatives and Senators to mark the anniversary of the Clean
Water Act by cosponsoring this important clean water bill.
“Rather
than holding polluters accountable, the Bush administration is
allowing more—not less-- pollution to enter our waterways. Now
more than ever, Congress should act to protect all of America’s
waters and pass the Clean Water Restoration Act,” concluded
Leavitt.
###
U.S.
PIRG is the federation of state Public Interest Research Groups.
State PIRGs are non-profit, non-partisan public interest advocacy
organizations.