EPA, Army Corps Announce Proposed Rule for Regulated Waters

Clip Season 51 Episode 5114
Federal authorities have struggled to reach an agreeable definition of "Waters of the U.S." as it pertains to the Clean Water Act. The EPA and Army Corps of Engineers are giving it another shot.

Federal authorities have struggled to reach an agreeable definition of "Waters of the U.S." as it pertains to the Clean Water Act. The EPA and Army Corps of Engineers are giving it another shot.

Transcript

Pointing to “five decades of confusing and everchanging definitions,” the EPA and the Army Corps of Engineers announced on Monday another attempt at clarifying the phrase “waters of the United States.”

Lee Zeldin, EPA Administrator: “And I know that across the country, news of today’s proposal is going to be met with lots of relief and happiness from farmers, ranchers, other land owners, governments that have been looking for a simple prescriptive definition.”

Adam R. Telle, Assistant Secretary of the Army for Civil Works: “Since 1972, Americans have struggled to understand what Congress meant when it included ‘Waters of the United States’ in the Clean Water Act. ... The definition of that term has been abused, sometimes stretched beyond recognition, over time, and it’s left Americans uncertain about whether they were complying with the Clean Water Act or not.

Federal officials say their proposal, which addresses the concept of “continuous surface connection,” is consistent with a 2023 U.S. Supreme Court decision.

The proposal addresses the scope of “adjacent wetlands” near regulated “traditional navigable” federal waters. The proposed rule says the water would need to have a continuous surface connection, with both surface water - at least during the wet season - and abutting a regulated body of water.

EPA officials say they recognize that, in some instances, drought or tide flow may need to be considered.

Before the new guidance is implemented, federal officials will seek written feedback and hold listening sessions.

Gov. Patrick Morrisey, Governor, West Virginia: “I’m hopeful that whatever happens with the body politic over the next ten years, that this could be a durable rule because it’s common sense.”

By Colleen Bradford Krantz. colleen.krantz@iowapbs.org

Read the Full Transcript

Watch More

    EpisodeSeason51Episode5130
    The war brings volatile prices to La Salle Street and Main Street. Past failures in America’s land promise. Commodity market analysis with Naomi Blohm.
    ClipSeason51Episode5130
    Iran War Raises Concerns About Inputs
    ClipSeason51Episode5130
    Market Analysis with Naomi Blohm
    ClipSeason51Episode5130
    Market Plus with Naomi Blohm
    PodcastSeason10Episode1040
    Don Schieber built a seed cleaning business that saved his farm. He has traveled the world selling American wheat, and spent 50 years officiating Friday night football in Oklahoma. Now he's retiring and he's got stories you won't hear anywhere else. This is what a life in agriculture looks like.
    EpisodeSeason51Episode5129
    The war in Iran threatens to make inputs more expensive. Building an agriculture program that’s feeding a changing local community. Commodity market analysis with Matt Bennett.