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(Remarks as prepared for delivery)
Today the Committee considers one of America's bedrock and most
successful environmental statutes: The Clean Water Act.
We will hear testimony on the Clean Water Restoration Act, a bill
introduced by Senator Feingold that would restore the protections of the
Clean Water Act that have been jeopardized by some activist members of
the U.S. Supreme Court.
Enacted just over 35 years ago, the Clean Water Act has a critically
important purpose: "To restore and maintain the chemical, physical, and
biological integrity of the Nation's waters."
The protections of the Clean Water Act have helped restore thousands
of lakes, rivers, streams, and wetlands. It has helped protect the water
supply for our families and provide essential habitat for fish, birds,
and other wildlife. But we still have a long way to go.
While all waters were not evaluated, according to the EPA's most
recent National Water Quality Inventory, 45 percent of assessed rivers
and streams were impaired; 47 percent of the nation's assessed lakes,
ponds and reservoirs were impaired; and of the assessed bays and
estuaries, 32 percent were impaired.
With an ever-expanding population and the potentially devastating
impacts of global warming on our water supply, now is not the time to be
weakening the Clean Water Act.
But due to the intervention of some of the Justices of the United
States Supreme Court, much of that progress is in jeopardy.
In two decisions on the scope of federal jurisdiction under the Clean
Water Act Solid Waste Agency of Northern Cook County v. Corps of
Engineers (SWANCC) in 2001 and Rapanos v. U.S. (Rapanos) in 2006, the
Supreme Court cast a shadow over nearly 30 years-worth of expert agency
interpretations in protecting America's waters.
In Rapanos, the Supreme Court failed to provide clear guidance for
when the Clean Water Act applied, publishing five conflicting opinions
with no majority ruling. This case has created massive confusion among
judges, the regulated community, EPA and the Army Corps. But there is so
much more at stake than confused lawyers, judges, agencies and
stakeholders.
According to EPA data, 111.6 million Americans are served by water
systems that receive water from intermittent or ephemeral streams or
headwaters-the very waters now argued to be outside the jurisdiction of
the Clean Water Act.
Our nation's great recreation economy is at risk when our waters are
at risk. According to the 2006 National Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and
Wildlife-Associated Recreation, $122.3 billion was spent on fishing,
hunting, and wildlife activities that year. 30 million people fished;
12.5 million hunted; 71.1 million took part in wildlife-observing
activities.
Without clean, healthy waters and ecosystems, America risks losing
much of its natural heritage.
The bottom line is that America's waterways and wetlands are
threatened because of these Supreme Court decisions and the Bush
Administration's interpretations of them.
Fortunately, there is a solution to this problem and I applaud
Senator Feingold for his leadership on this issue. His bill simply
restores the long-established jurisdiction of the Clean Water Act to
protect the waters it was intended to protect and has always protected.
Colleagues, after more than 35 years of improving and protecting
water quality in America, we should be celebrating the Clean Water
Act-not standing by and allowing its landmark protections to slip away. |