with (S787) The Clean Water Restoration Act and (S696) The Appalachia Restoration Act.http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/01/us/01water.htmlhttp://www.ilovemountains.org/press/495Supreme Court decisions and definition changes in the original Clean Water Act have reduced the ability of the EPA to ensure that America's waters are "Swimmable and Fishable". These Restoration acts should give the Original Clean Water Act the balls needed to live up to its intent of protecting America's waterways.Neither of these bills are receiving much attention, So I wanted to bring the subject up for discussion. While there is some obvious opposition, both of these bills seem like no-brainers to me: restore the Clean Water Act to its original intent. Politically, they could serve as easy victories going into the 2010 elections (for either Democrats or Republicans)
3/3/2010 1:09:10 PM
3/3/2010 1:37:45 PM
Why do all water ways need to be "Swimmable and Fishable" regardless of the cost? Why is a cost/benefit analysis not allowed for such things?
3/3/2010 3:06:30 PM
3/3/2010 4:35:09 PM
I, for one, am glad that the Supreme Court put an end to the gross abuse of power that the EPA exhibited when they interpreted "navigable waterways" to include trickling streams, isolated ponds on private property and dry riverbeds.
3/3/2010 4:53:09 PM
^^^it's an interesting question and not one that I am totally against, however-There would be a pretty big discrepancy on the dollar amount people would assign to the costs/benefits. Some in the community might think that being able to fish or swim in their local river is priceless (or very highly valued), while others might try to just assign tourism dollars brought in to the local community as the benefit of having a clean river. Industry might try to frame the cost of pollution in dollars spent by the local community on healthcare (assuming said pollution causes sickness), but the people of the community would probably hold their health as worth much more. The same goes for trying to assign a cost to the natural function and natural processes of a clean river (like providing nutrient rich silt to a farmer's field) etc etc.-Most of the time water is connected. Polluting one body of water means that eventually the pollution will make it to another water body. Any cost/benefits would also have to take into account users downstream of the pollution source.-Water is a public resource. To me this means any cost/benefit would have to take into account future users and what their potential uses of the water might be.-If the past is any indication, the areas that would be most beneficial to be used as pollution dumps would be poor areas. Poor people are cheaper to buy out or convince that pollution is a benefit to them; some might see this as ok (the poor people are deciding what they themselves are worth) but I see it as exploitation (some peoples lives are worth less than others)-I personally believe that a majority of Americans believe in having clean (relatively) waters. I dont have any stats or polls to back this up, its just a hunch (I could be way off).In some ways the Clean Water Act may already act like a Cost/Benefit. I used "swimmable and fishable" b/c that is the language the CWA uses. However, most of the Max pollutant levels allowed in a water body are related to human safety (atleast in the EPAs opinion). That is they believe the cost to the health of the community is greater than any benefits to industry.This doesn't mean I wouldn't like to see a Cost/Benefit performed. Would you be suprised if the analysis showed that we should be more stringent on pollution and have cleaner rivers?[Edited on March 3, 2010 at 4:58 PM. Reason : arrows]
3/3/2010 4:57:49 PM
3/3/2010 5:05:47 PM
3/3/2010 5:31:03 PM
Opposition to the Appalachia Restoration act is mostly Mining Companies that participate in Mountaintop removal, I think it would pretty much put an end to the practice. Ranchers are the only ones I have seen (thus far) that are opposed to the Clean Water Restoration Act. They are afraid farm ponds or spray fields or possibly ag runoff will be regulated. Im concerned about this (although in some cases they need regulation) but there are already pretty significant provisions for farm ponds in the Clean water act, and I doubt Ag runoff will somehow suddenly be regulated b/c of the restoration act; its going to take a new bill to do that.^^ I dont think the Clean Water Act includes any provisions for non-point source pollution which is what parking lot runoff and construction sedimentation would be included under. Again Im not totally sure about this. I think only North Carolina rules apply.[Edited on March 3, 2010 at 5:32 PM. Reason : .]
3/3/2010 5:32:15 PM
^You're pretty much right about the non-point source stuff. They ARE counted in total amounts of allowable pollution, but they aren't regulated under the EPA. And I really agree with that, it wouldn't be feasible for the CAA to regulate non-point sources or private homes for instance.[Edited on March 3, 2010 at 5:47 PM. Reason : ]
3/3/2010 5:45:58 PM
I think that some people in this thread don't understand what a "cost-benefit analysis" really is.
3/4/2010 3:07:19 AM
They are horrible. I had to do one for a local government program last semester as a part of my public policy analysis class (taught buy a guy w/ his doctorate in economics) in the Master of Public Administration graduate program. A lot of people seem to think of a cost-benefit analysis without willingness-to-pay. It isn't about making profit on the whole. Monetizing that shit, doing the discounting, and sensitivity analysis was a pain and it was one of the longest papers/projects I've ever done in my academic career (second only to a grant for philosophy research paper) and I had it easy since local government projects are no where near the scale of federal level stuff. My prof for that class said that the EPA only considers them worthwhile to do if they the impact is expected to be massive (maybe something like $100 million or more). Despite my derision, I think they are a good thing that should probably be used more often.One of the most amusing things from the class was how CBAs got politicized, specifically with one aspect: the value of a statistical life. Apparently they wanted to make the value of a statistical life more accurate by decreasing it for seniors. This would mean that in figuring out how much people would value EPA actions (which most help the young and do little or nothing for seniors given how much time it takes to go from Cost-Benefit Analysis to completed project impacts) they wouldn't be over valuing seniors willingness-to-pay for things that would help them. It was something that would ultimately help seniors. But as soon as the AARP heard a reduction the value of a seniors life (not understanding what a statistical life was), they lobbied against it the evaluation measurement, stopping it, to their own detriment.
3/4/2010 3:34:10 AM
The EPA didn't seem to care much some private citizen's life was being destroyed because they had a irrigation ditch on their property that filled with rainwater.The arrogance of EPA people has caused the agency to lose influence. They aren't seen any longer as protector of major water supplies, but as another multitude of officials sent by the imperial federal gov't to eat out the substance of the people.
3/4/2010 10:39:07 AM
wut?
3/4/2010 11:20:56 AM
It's not a tough concept. The EPA (among others) habitually oversteps it's regulatory authority, punishing landowners and businesses above and beyond the scope of the law. Their ridiculous application of the clean water act is only one example. It's a shame that the victims of this abuse of power have to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars taking this fight all the way to the supreme court.
3/4/2010 11:33:04 AM
I'm not defending the EPA, but we do need environment protections.Property owners do NOT have a right to create and destroy nature as they see fit.The Earth is a web of fragile ecosystems, not a piñata.
3/4/2010 11:49:32 AM
^^I understand the concept: You dont think pollution to water bodies should be regulated.I needed EarthDogg to expand his first sentence, it sounded like he had a specific example, but I didnt quite follow.As for overstepping their bounds, the original intent of the Clean Water Act was to regulate all american waters (atleast that is how it was interpreted from 1972 - 2001) and it will do so again if the Clean Water Restoration Act passes. I already posted this article discussing the constitutionality, if you dont agree with its interpretation, then we just have an obvious difference of opinion:http://www.acslaw.org/files/Clean%20Water%20Act%20Issue%20Brief.pdfalso , violators are rarely "punished",http://www.rivernetwork.org/blog/11/2009/09/14/new-york-times-chronicles-clean-water-act-enforcement-failures
3/4/2010 12:15:36 PM
3/4/2010 1:09:24 PM
Check out this quotehttp://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/01/us/01water.html?pagewanted=2
3/5/2010 10:00:13 AM
BTTT to see if anyone else wants to contributehere is a good article on water quality before the EPA got all "arrogant"http://www.cleveland.com/science/index.ssf/2009/06/cuyahoga_river_fire_40_years_a.html
3/9/2010 10:59:12 AM
who cares, everyone drinks bottled water anyway.
3/9/2010 11:07:35 AM
^too rich for my blood
3/9/2010 11:17:54 AM
I was kiddinghell, I drink the (unfiltered) tap water in my house.
3/9/2010 11:51:21 AM
And why couldn't the city or state deal with that problem? Oh, that's right, they were. I tried to find the graph of water aggregate quality before and after the clean water act was passed. Water quality was already improving before the bill passed and the slope did not change one bit, because state governments were already on the case, and it turns out that only state and local governments have the incentive and local knowledge necessary to actually fight pollution. As such, all the federal government did was create yet more bureaucracy that accomplishes nothing. Well, almost nothing: it allows federal politicians to take credit for the diligent work of state and local governments.
3/9/2010 11:57:59 AM
3/9/2010 12:24:49 PM
^^^lol I know ^^True, State and local governments are mostly responsible for administering the CWA. They mostly do a good job and I think some states have even gone above and beyond the CWA. The rules in the CWA are more of a baseline that the EPA thinks everyone should follow. If one state were more lax with its regulations and its waters flowed into another state, it could obviously create some pretty big disputes.But you dont have to look very far to find states that have buddied up with certain industries, and then allowed or even defended these businesses pollution West Virginia/Kentucky and Coal Mining http://blogs.wvgazette.com/coaltattoo/2009/09/14/ny-times-blockbuster-on-coal-and-dirty-water/
3/9/2010 12:47:51 PM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jeff-biggers/fundamental-misunderstand_b_504905.html
3/19/2010 10:12:16 AM
3/19/2010 1:13:07 PM
well, I suppose governments have the right to do it, they are just representing their "constituency" after all.I just find it unethical for a division of government that is charged with protecting the states environment and keeping the people safe to bend over for whomever can write the biggest check.
3/19/2010 1:41:58 PM
Pretty effective job security for lawyers and driving up costs for the rest of us. If you want to fight pollution, then in the current politicized system your only choice is to influence the legislature. Making tax payers pay such costs is unlikely to impact the decisions of legislators.
3/19/2010 2:31:32 PM
3/19/2010 2:44:23 PM
http://www.nytimes.com/gwire/2010/03/26/26greenwire-epa-proposes-veto-of-permit-for-major-mountain-90328.html
3/31/2010 4:38:02 PM
The Clean Estuaries act of 2010 also slowly making its way through congress, it would be an amendment to the CLean Water Act. http://www.opencongress.org/bill/111-h4715/show
4/19/2010 4:48:45 PM
^^ kind of ironic considering its much safer than underground mining.
4/19/2010 5:02:06 PM
True, unfortunately it is much more damaging to the environment and local communities.The veto of that permit was unrelated to the recent mine disaster (they were talking about it well before), except that it may have given the EPA/Obama administration the political capital to go after Massey Energy.
4/19/2010 5:11:15 PM
I mean you have 3 options. Underground mining + the dead miners that go with it. Surface mining + the ecological damage that goes with it. Or get rid of coal.We should aim for the last one, but its going to take a while. Meantime, is it cheaper to fix/prevent damaged land than it is to prevent/handle dead miners?
4/19/2010 5:14:33 PM
Its an interesting situation, and I'd like to say I don't advocate for the end of mountaintop removal because I want to see miners lose jobs or end up dead in underground mines.but consider this too:The recent mine disaster probably could have been prevented if safety rules had been followed.andMountaintop removal only produces something like 10% of the total coal exported out of appalachia. A switch to Mountaintop removal mining also requires fewer jobs than underground mines (so miners lose jobs anyways)andMountaintop removal's effects on the environment can mean health and safety problems for local communities (if their water supply is affected, etc). There have also been some reports of blasting near dams that keep mine tailings from flooding communities (could be a situation similar to that TVA ash pond accident a year ago or so)As for the actual monetary cost of dealing with dead miners vs. dealing with dead land, I have no idea. Its sad to admit, but my hunch is that it may be more expensive to remediate land.[Edited on April 19, 2010 at 5:29 PM. Reason : .][Edited on April 19, 2010 at 5:30 PM. Reason : ..]
4/19/2010 5:26:12 PM
the way i see it, even if underground mining safety standards are met, its still much more of a hazzard than surface mining. In addition, if the permitting process is good I dont see why you couldn't make surface mining meet certain requirements for water safety. It seems like it would be easier to do surface mining safely (both environmentally and personally) than it is for the fed to keep track of underground mining safety. The fed has obviously failed repeatedly to enforce underground mining safety standards. Im not too familiar with their surface mining enforcement. The irony being that in that other thread on the topic, people were all "durr durr free market failure!!" when clearly the free market wanted to move to MTR, which is safer.
4/19/2010 5:36:40 PM
4/19/2010 5:38:20 PM
I agree that surface mining will almost always be safer than underground mining. As for permitting, the EPA issued new water quality requirements for permits in response to some of the issues they were having with these mines. It basically means they will have to be more careful with the mine tailings instead of dumping them into streams. According to the mine owners, they wont be able to afford to operate. Time will tell if thats true, but it seems if you want MTR to stick around you'd have to lower the water standards.which personally I'm against.As for the free market, I would make the argument that it was actually moving away from MTR. The new requirements will just make the price of coal mined using MTR actually reflect the real cost it took to dig it out of the ground + the damage it caused the environment and local communities. Which is apparently not competitive with coal from underground mines. Coal is pretty heavily subsidized in general IMO.
4/19/2010 8:45:38 PM
http://blogs.wvgazette.com/coaltattoo/2010/04/21/new-wvu-va-tech-study-links-water-quality-and-cancer-deaths-in-west-virginia-coalfields/
4/23/2010 7:58:34 AM
American Rivers released its list of endangered rivers http://www.americanrivers.org/assets/pdfs/mer-2010/gauley_factsheet_2010.pdfComing in at #3 is the much loved Gauley River in West Virginia. Its Headwater streams are threatened by proposed mountaintop removal minesand it doesn't quite fit in the thread but the Little River here in NC also is on the list due to a proposed City of Raleigh Dam. http://www.americanrivers.org/assets/pdfs/mer-2010/littleriver_factsheet_2010.pdf
6/2/2010 10:08:08 AM
Going back to the posts about cost/benefit:I stumbled on this study today. I've only read the summary so far but the short version is the authors believe that "restoring" the Great Lakes could benefit the local economies by up to twice the initial investment.http://www.healthylakes.org/site_upload/upload/America_s_North_Coast_Report_07.pdf
7/1/2010 4:45:56 PM