As the Clean Water Act (CWA) turns 40, it is useful to compare it to the cars on the road in 1972. Big cars, some still adorned with tail fins and grills, ruled the road, running on 36 cents per gallon gas. Forty years later, we look back on the early 70s and ask how could we consider these cars, and what we wore driving them, so cool. Today, we are driving smaller, better engineered and designed fuel efficient cars.
If only it were so for our water protection laws. Instead, we are still trying to maintain and improve the quality of our nation’s waters and the aquatic ecosystems that they support with a clunky piece of legislation written four decades ago. For a long time, most in the environmental community have recognized that the CWA needs to be traded in.
The environmental community has three options for the future of the Act. First, it could spend all its time keeping the clunker running as industry uses the Republican Party to eviscerate it or return to pre-1972 inconsistent and largely non-existent state protection. Second, there is a well-developed incremental reform agenda. It includes closing gaps such as non-point sources and confined agricultural run-off, reforming the dysfunctional Section 404 Corps-EPA relation, and strengthening the long-running TMDL program. The third option is to work toward trading in the Act for a new model, an Audi A8 Clean Water Act, if you will.
What might such an Act look like? The guiding principle should be to reintroduce hydrology into the Act. We have to run with perhaps the most useful environmental principle announced by the Supreme Court. In PUD No. 1 v. Washington Department of Ecology, Justice O’Connor called the distinction between water quality and quantity “artificial” because the two are closely related. Hydrology was an integral part of pre-1972 pollution control, but it was used to promote, not control, the use of rivers and lakes as waste sinks. Lakes and streams were considered natural waste repositories because of their natural waste assimilative capacity. Their “highest and best use” was as open sewers. The CWA, of course, changed this. Section 101 makes a nod to the chemical, physical, and biological integrity of stream, but then shifts the emphasis from the watercourse to the condition of discharges into it. The hydrology of the system was, however, an implicit part of the Act. Both NPDES technology-standards and the maintenance of pre-1972 water quality standards rest on unarticulated assumptions about matters such as seasonable flows.
Of course, we do not want to give up the benefits of the Act, but a number of factors require the reintroduction of hydrology into the Act. First, climate change is here and is impacting water use, and given the unwillingness of the international community, led by China, India and the United states to engage in serious mitigation, so the present option is to adapt best we can. We are already seeing adverse impacts. This past summer, Illinois had to issue variances for thermal discharges from nuclear plants because of high water temperatures and low flows. Second, the federal government and many states have committed billions of dollars to aquatic ecosystem restoration experiments. The kicker is none of these experiments have a clear target of what the restored system should look like in terms of climate adjusted water quantity and quality parameters. Third, there are too many gaps in program in the Act that need to be closed before we can come close to meeting the integrity goal of the Act.
Where do we start? We have to start with the watershed. There have been numerous efforts to control pollution at the watershed level, but almost none have had an adequate legislative framework. When the federal government stopped building large dams, it also exited from any serious effort to create effective watershed management institutions. This Progressive Era vision needs to be revived and adapted to the Environmental Protection Era. Next, we need to comb through all post- 1972 efforts to measure water quality and synthesize them with all the research on river function and the ecosystem services that water bodies provide. The end product should be a set of acceptable stream function parameters. For each watershed, these parameters would have to be adjusted for climate change and applied to develop an acceptable range of stream conditions. We could think of these as hydrology rather than use based water quality standards. From here, state pollution control agencies, overseen by the federal EPA, would have to identify, using all the new land mapping technology that has been developed since 1972, ALL major sources of harmful discharges, including dams, diversions, farms for starters, that need to be controlled to maintain the parameters. Using legislation that gives them authority all these sources, a mix of best practices, performance standards and technology-based standards would be applied to bring the watershed into compliance.
This is a big dream and an impossible one to many, if not most, students of environmental regulation, especially in today’s take-no-prisoners environment. Even if one could get over the pollution barriers that have stalled all environmental legislative innovation, let alone most modest reform, there are formidable barriers to developments and integrating the science necessary to make this approach credible and workable. However, at some point, it becomes inefficient, if not impossible, to keep a 40 year old car running. Even as individual parts are replaced, the car can no longer perform the functions and services that it did when it was built. The same can be said of the CWA. It is time to think of a trade-in for something suitable to the challenges we will face managing the natural resources that we need to survive and thrive.
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A. Dan Tarlock | October 12, 2012
As the Clean Water Act (CWA) turns 40, it is useful to compare it to the cars on the road in 1972. Big cars, some still adorned with tail fins and grills, ruled the road, running on 36 cents per gallon gas. Forty years later, we look back on the early 70s and ask how […]
James Goodwin | October 11, 2012
The Vice Presidential debate is tonight, and I suspect that, among other things, we’ll hear Paul Ryan give some general talk of “reducing red tape” or “reducing government burdens on job creators.” We probably won’t hear a pitch for blocking air pollution rules that would save thousands of lives—which, after all, doesn’t poll well. But […]
Nicholas Vidargas | October 10, 2012
Imagine the ecosystem in which salmon evolved and thrived in the Northwest. As the region’s celebrated rain falls through old-growth forest, it is filtered through duff as it makes its way to one of thousands of pristine streams. It is in those cold, clear waters that salmon begin their lives among rock and pebble, the […]
William Andreen | October 9, 2012
This post is first in a series marking the 40th anniversary of the Clean Water Act. On October 18th, the nation will celebrate the 40th anniversary of the Clean Water Act. This landmark piece of legislation has proven remarkably successful. Water pollution discharges from both industry and municipal sewer systems have declined sharply, the loss […]
Rena Steinzor | October 7, 2012
President Obama travels to Keene, California, on Monday to designate the home of César E. Chávez as a national monument—a worthy honor for a key figure in the ongoing push for safe working conditions and fair pay. One thing the President is unlikely to raise in his remarks is that just a few months ago, his […]
Sidney A. Shapiro | October 2, 2012
When the government succeeds in protecting the public from harms, is that good news – or something to be atoned for by eliminating other successful protections? If the Department of Labor issues a new rule on construction crane safety, saving dozens of lives each year, should the agency also be required to eliminate an existing […]
| September 28, 2012
Remember Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum, argued before the Supreme Court last term? It’s back – the Court will hear argument again Monday – and bigger than before. A brief recap: For decades, Shell has extracted oil from the Niger Delta, causing extensive environmental degradation. The government of Nigeria, with the alleged support of Shell, […]
Robert Verchick | September 27, 2012
I’ll forego reporting on India today to address a new development in the post-Hurricane Katrina litigation: Judge Jerry Smith’s breathless hairpin turn in the “Katrina Canal Breaches Litigation.” On Monday, Judge Smith, writing for a three-judge panel of the Fifth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, dismissed a lawsuit against the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers […]
Rena Steinzor | September 27, 2012
This post was written by CPR President Rena Steinzor and Policy Analyst Wayland Radin. Today CPR releases Cozying Up: How the Manufacturers of Toxic Chemicals Seek to Co-opt Their Regulators, exposing the work of the International Life Sciences Institute (ILSI) and Toxicology Excellence for Risk Assessment (TERA), two industry advocacy groups that have undue influence on […]