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To: Crocodile who wrote (39898)3/19/2004 9:46:41 AM
From: T L Comiskey  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 89467
 
BUSHGREENWATCH
Tracking the Bush Administration's Environmental Misdeeds
bushgreenwatch.org
***************************************

March 19, 2004

GOP POLLSTER WARNS BUSH TO EASE UP ON CLEAN WATER ACT

Under fire for its ongoing campaign to weaken environmental
protections, the Bush Administration has received an unequivocal
heads-up from the leading Republican pollster advising that
undermining clean water safeguards is politically dangerous, and
goes against the overwhelming sentiment of the American public.

"Young and old, Democrat AND Republican, the demand for clean
water is universal" declares a February 2004 memorandum prepared
by The Luntz Research Companies, headed by GOP opinion guru
Frank Luntz.

Based on its extensive polling about clean water issues, the
Luntz organization found that the American people consider
safeguarding clean water to be "a national problem requiring a
national solution" and "the public is willing to pay for it."
Indeed, 83% of those polled supported the idea of a trust fund
for clean water infrastructure.

Addressed to "interested parties," the memo concludes with the
warning: "I'll be blunt...this issue is NOT going to go away.
The environment is an area in which Americans expect progress to
be made, and when they do not see progress being made, they get
frustrated."[1]

"From more toxic pollution, to sewage discharges, to mountaintop
removal mining, this administration is the worst for clean water
since the Clean Water Act was passed 30 years ago," Joan
Mulhern, senior legislative counsel for Earth Justice, told
BushGreenwatch.

The Bush Administration's systematic assault on the Clean Water
Act, one of the nation's most important environmental laws, has
included weakening programs that maintain water quality, huge
cuts in funding for water protection, and reduced enforcement of
regulations.

One EPA draft proposal would weaken regulations and oversight of
the program responsible for cleaning up the 45% of the nation's
waters that are still too polluted for swimming, fishing,
drinking water, and other uses.[2]

"The most significant threat" noted Mulhern "is the directive
the administration issued in January, 2003, declaring that many
wetlands and streams should have no Clean Water Act limits on
pollution at all."

In a parallel effort, the Interior Department has been rolling
back protections to make it easier for coal companies to bury
streams and valleys with waste, in the process of mountaintop
removal strip mining. The Bush Administration's own studies show
that this type of mining has already destroyed more than 1,200
miles of streams and 380,000 acres of Appalachian mountains and
forests.[3]

###

TAKE ACTION
Sign a petition to let Bush know that clean water is important
to you. ga3.org