A recent Water Policy Report article reported that EPA is considering dramatic changes to its Clean Water Act enforcement and permitting program and oversight of state permitting programs. Many of the changes under consideration, including prioritizing the most significant pollution problems, strengthening oversight of states, and improving transparency and accountability, are long overdue. Passed in 1972, the CWA contains much of the authority needed to clean up water pollution from point sources and certain other sources, but strong enforcement is the key to ensuring the Act’s goals are achieved.
EPA has long applied deterrence-based enforcement, which is based on the idea that regulated entities weigh the cost and benefits of complying with regulations. If the costs of complying with the law are lower than the costs of violating it, a rational regulated entity will comply with the law, goes the theory. If, however, the size of the penalties for violation, discounted by the probability that the government will pursue them, makes it cheaper to violate than to comply, a rational profit-maximizer will choose noncompliance. Deterrence-based enforcement has four key components:
As EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson testified last year, “The time is long overdue for EPA to reexamine its approach to Clean Water Act NPDES enforcement to be better equipped to address the water pollution challenges of this century.”
In October 2009, EPA issued the Clean Water Act Enforcement Action Plan. The Plan cited many serious obstacles to achieving clean water, namely the proliferation of water pollution sources, the lack of baseline data and national information on the quality of waters; the lack of state enforcement actions; recent Supreme Court decisions that have left regulators confused; and the decline in federal financial assistance and state funding for enforcement programs. The Action Plan says that “state enforcement response to serious violations, whether at large or smaller facilities, is not what it should be.” For major facilities, EPA estimates that enforcement action was taken against only 26 percent of facilities in significant non-compliance in 2008. EPA has traditionally not required states to focus on smaller facilities, even though collectively they can have the same or greater impact on water quality as a major facility.
The Action Plan and the recent Water Policy Report article both indicate that EPA is headed in the right direction. EPA is considering a number of ideas, including:
Naturally the proverbial “devil is in the details” observation applies: it is much easier to spout the tough enforcement rhetoric than it is to implement it, considering the political and economic interests that inevitably become entangled. Those interests should remember, however, that strong enforcement benefits everyone by leveling the playing field so that regulated entities are neither penalized for compliance nor beneficiaries of non-compliance.
A final observation: EPA should focus equally on the quality of NPDES permits and whether they meet EPA standards, whether they are clear, and whether they are sufficiently protective of water quality. While enforcement actions are important on the back end, strong permits set the tone and level of expectations from the outset.
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Yee Huang | April 19, 2010
A recent Water Policy Report article reported that EPA is considering dramatic changes to its Clean Water Act enforcement and permitting program and oversight of state permitting programs. Many of the changes under consideration, including prioritizing the most significant pollution problems, strengthening oversight of states, and improving transparency and accountability, are long overdue. Passed in […]
Ben Somberg | April 16, 2010
As the Pump Handle noted earlier this week, OSHA submitted its draft final rule on construction cranes and derricks to OMB on Friday of last week. It’s good news that the process is now moving along. The cranes and derricks rule has been a long saga, and it was one of the case studies in […]
Matthew Freeman | April 16, 2010
The Competitive Enterprise Institute is upset with the way administrative law works. On Thursday they released their annual report on the costs of regulations. I hesitate to dignify it with pixels, but here goes. CEI has a problem with agency rulemaking altogether: Congress should answer for the compliance costs (and benefits) of federal regulations. Requiring […]
Alice Kaswan | April 15, 2010
In “Minding the Climate Gap: What’s at Stake if California’s Climate Law Isn’t Done Right and Right Away,” released Wednesday, researchers from several California universities have correlated the relationship between greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and associated co-pollutants in several California industries. The results demonstrate that California’s climate law, AB 32, enacted in 2006, could help […]
Ben Somberg | April 15, 2010
Senator Frank Lautenberg today released the “Safe Chemicals Act of 2010 ” — a bill to reform the Toxic Substances Control Act. Representatives Rush and Waxman released a discussion draft of related legislation in the House. Here are reactions from Environmental Defense Fund, Environmental Working Group, Natural Resources Defence Council, and Safer Chemicals, Healthy Familes […]
William Funk | April 13, 2010
Informal rulemaking under the Administrative Procedure Act was, as the late Kenneth Culp Davis opined, “one of the greatest inventions of modern government.” It not only decreased the procedural requirements (and therefore the overhead) of “formal” rulemaking, but it also broadened the universe of persons able to participate in the informal proceeding to the public […]
Celeste Monforton | April 12, 2010
Cross-posted from The Pump Handle. Last month, the US Dept of Labor (DOL) and MSHA were celebrating the 40th anniversary of the Coal Mine Health and Safety Act. Their proclamations said: “…this law represents a watershed moment in the improvement of occupational health and safety in the United States. It was the precursor to the […]
Ben Somberg | April 9, 2010
CPR President Rena Steinzor (former director of the University of Maryland’s Environmental Law Clinic) and Robert Kuehn, president of the Clinical Legal Education Association, have a post over at ACSBlog putting the recent attack on the independence of the Maryland clinic into the context of other such moves across the country. The Maryland legislature recently […]
Daniel Farber | April 9, 2010
Cross-posted from Legal Planet. When I sat down to write this blog posting, I started by going through my environmental law casebook and noting down the cases in which Justice Stevens had written the majority opinion or a major dissent. When I got done, I was startled by the central role Justice Stevens had played […]