Bush Administration Attacks Clean Water Safeguards, Sets Dangerous Precedent With Proposed Oregon Rule, Groups Say
40 minutes ago
PORTLAND, Ore., Oct. 30 /U.S. Newswire/ -- The Environmental Protection Agency (news - web sites)'s (EPA) proposed "Oregon Rule," which would pave the way for federal dams to evade their Clean Water Act obligations, is a trial balloon for a broad national policy that would have devastating consequences for river ecosystems across the country, conservationists warned today.
The proposed Oregon Rule would allow federal agencies to petition the EPA to weaken water quality standards that are needed to maintain river conditions that support healthy and thriving fish populations.
Right now, many federal dams impair water quality to the point that fish populations are decreased and sliding toward extinction. If a federal dam operator petitions EPA, the Oregon Rule would require EPA to initiate a process to change standards to suit the dam -- even if lower standards would prevent restoration of healthy fish populations.
EPA staff have admitted that the Oregon Rule is a precursor to a national rule that would offer special treatment to federal dams that violate water quality standards -- dams that can have severe effects on both temperature and dissolved oxygen content in the water trapped in their reservoirs. (snip/...)
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