Act Now to Prevent Ag. Takeover of Clean Water Act Authority
Reply-To: info@riversunlimited.org
Greetings!
Imagine this scenario: You live along a stream in rural Ohio, and the stream's aquatic life disappears. You suspect it's been poisoned by runoff from the tank-truck loads of manure, a product of a local factory farm, that you've seen sprayed onto nearby fields. You call the Ohio EPA, only to learn that they no longer have the authority to do anything about it: oversight of factory farms has been transferred to the Ohio Department of Agriculture, an agency charged with promoting agriculture in Ohio. The fox is now guarding the henhouse.
Thanks to new legislation backed by Ohio's powerful agri-business lobbies, the Ohio EPA is about to lose regulatory authority over factory farms.
House Bill 363, which is being fast-tracked through the Ohio General Assembly, takes regulatory authority for discharges by factory farms out of the hands of the Ohio EPA and gives it to the industry-friendly Department of Agriculture.
We must act now.
Please call, write and email your state legislator in opposition to HB 363. Click here to find your legislator and her/his contact info.
You may wish to make the following points:
Factory farms can produce more animal waste than a small city produces human waste, yet the waste is seldom treated and is simply spread on crop fields close to ditches, streams and lakes. The Ohio EPA provides the last remaining bit of credible oversight in these situations.
If the legislation passes, Ohio would be the first state to transfer Clean Water Act authority from an environmental agency to an agriculture agency, breaking apart the national permitting system put in place by the U.S. EPA.
The Ohio Environmental Protection Agency, with its years of working with Ohio's waterways - doing research on rivers and streams and administering the Clean Water Act - is the body with the experience, expertise and capability needed to enforce the Clean Water Act.
This bill is politics as usual - a powerful lobby is pushing a bill through the legislature that suits its own bottomline but hurts average Ohioans who rely on clean water and healthy streams.
The Ohio EPA has enforced the Clean Water Act in our state since the Act was adopted 40 years ago. Water quality has improved, and 800 miles of our rivers and streams have been judged to meet the criteria for inclusion in the state scenic rivers system. What are the chances that the Dept. of Agriculture will aspire to continue this improvement?
Ohioans need objective oversight, as algae blooms and dead zones have reappeared in Lake Erie, and aquatic life in some inland lakes and streams has all but disappeared due to agricultural run-off.
The Ohio Department of Agriculture's enforcement of its own regulatory rules - involving the very largest factory farms - has been lacking, with only a few fines leveled in the program's first four years (and two of them were slaps on the rest at $200 and $700). Why should we grant them this last slice of regulatory authority?
Increased pollution could lead to increased water treatment costs, and Ohio's citizens will have to foot the bill.
Thanks for taking action- it's up to us to make sure that Ohio's rivers and streams have a voice as this legislation is considered.
Sincerely,
The Rivers Unlimited Team
http://www.riversunlimited.org/