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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Bob who wrote (512409)12/18/2003 2:17:37 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 769667
 
Another defeat for the enviro destructor Bush

Washington DC-- The US EPA today announced that it will not move
forward with a proposed rulemaking to weaken the Clean Water Act’s
rules defining “waters of the United States.”

“In the face of overwhelming support from the public for clean
water—and overwhelming opposition in Congress to weakening the
law—the EPA and White House are making the right decision,” said Joan
Mulhern, senior Legislative Counsel for Earthjustice. “There is no question
that dropping the idea of weakening the Clean Water Act’s rules is the
right thing to do.”

“However, in order to fully enforce the Clean Water Act and protect all
waters, the Bush administration must not only stop the proposed
rulemaking, but must rescind the guidance policy, issued at the same time
as the proposed rule,” Mulhern added. “That guidance itself threatens
protections for over 20 million acres of wetlands, according to EPA
estimates. Tens of thousands of miles of streams are also at risk
because of that policy.”

“The goal of the Clean Water Act—to make all of the nation’s waters safe
for fishing, swimming, drinking and other uses—cannot be met if any
waters are cut out of the law’s scope,” said Mulhern. “The nation’s
waters will not be fully protected until the guidance is withdrawn.”

In November, a bipartisan group of 218 U.S. Representatives sent a letter
to President Bush asking him to stop the proposed rulemaking that would
limit the types of waters covered by the Clean Water Act. The letter to
President Bush was organized by Reps. John Dingell (D-MI), James
Leach (R-IA), James Oberstar (D-MN), and Jim Saxton (R-NJ). Senators
Russell Feingold (D-WI), Jim Jeffords (I-VT), Barbara Boxer (D-CA), and
23 other Senators sent a similar letter to President Bush in October.

In addition to asking President Bush to not change Clean Water Act rules,
both letters requested that the administration withdraw a policy guidance
issued in January that weakened enforcement of federal protections
over some types of streams, wetlands, and ponds.