Clean Water Discussion
--contributed by MeaghanO
In a recent article in the Associated Press, John Flesher details the lack of government funding for clean water initiatives. While the local governments pull more than their fair share of the load, the U.S. and Canadian national governments are reluctant to match these numbers, according to Flesher. In fact, President Bush’s proposed fiscal budget for 2009 would cut national spending for Great Lakes water maintenance by 16 percent from 2008.
In the fight for clean water, the national government is arguably the most important vehicle in steering the nation’s consciousness. Local governments can speak for their own constituencies, but until clean water becomes an issue on the national stage, little can be done to make drastic reform to water cleanliness. Water cleanup and maintenance is an issue that cannot be financed by local governments alone. The assistance of the national government is not only ideal, it is necessary.
In the past, the U.S. national government has acted to create legislature aimed at cleaning up the nation’s waterways, though more often than not, there has been little done to enforce these laws. The Clean Water Act, passed in 1972, resulted in immediate action to clean the waterways. It mandated that any group must obtain a government-issued permit before the release of pollution into a waterway. Besides these point-source pollution limitations, the act also limited pollution from non-point sources, specifically targeting runoff from agricultural farming. Another piece of legislation, passed in 1987 further limited pollution from non-point sources. Known as the Water Quality Act, it gave the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) a grant for research on non-point pollution controls. Similarly, the Clean Water Act put power in the hands of the EPA to ensure that this legislation was properly enforced. Yet today, for the first time since the enactment of these acts, the water quality in the United States has begun to decline.
While pollution from point-sources still remains lower than it was before the passage of the act, the pollution from non-point sources has begun to increase in recent years. Runoff from industrial farming systems has greatly increased, as farming has turned away from sustainable practices. The result is that waste from these farms often finds its way into the drinking water supplies of many U.S. communities. And the result is that the local communities are left with a problem that far overreaches the limitations of their water cleanup budget. People are left with water that makes them sick, and a national government that is unwilling to step in and stop this from happening.
In terms of water cleanup, the local governments bear the vast majority of the burden. Yet what is being overlooked is that it is not just a local problem. The legislation forbidding the pollution of these waterways exists on a national level. So to require that local government pay for the majority of the cleanup is missing the point. This problem is a national one and the solution should be the result of a collective effort of the whole, and not just individual or local efforts. The national government has enacted the Clean Water Act and the Water Quality Act, and it should certainly be responsible for enforcing its own legislation.
This would certainly include a large national budget for water cleanup. But the nation’s efforts should not be limited to water cleanup. The laws preventing the pollution from reaching these waterways are already in place. The government simply has to be responsible for enforcing these laws. Both the Clean Water Act of 1972 and the Water Quality Act of 1987 limited pollution from point and non point sources. Yet the quality of U.S. water is continuing to decline because of failure to adhere to these laws. The legislation exists to stop this from happening, and the government must do its part by enforcing these laws. A renewed commitment to halting pollution, as well as a proposed national budget to clean up the waterways should be a priority on the national agenda.
Flesher, John. "Local Governments Pay $15 Billion in Lakes Costs." The Associated Press. 4 Mar. 2008 <http://www.stevenspointjournal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2008802290729>.
Kerry, John, and Teresa Heinz Kerry. This Moment on Earth. New York: Public Affairs, 2007, p. 89.
|
|
|
govt has different agenda
|
1 |
Jul 17 2008, 4:57 PM EDT by
|
|
|
Thread started: May 6 2008, 12:06 PM EDT
Watch
I agree that the existing laws on water pollution need to be enforced. If the federal government is going to take the time to make the laws, then it should find the time to enforce the laws. However, I do not expect an increase in federal funding for water clean up any time soon. This article focuses on the need for federal funding, but it doesn't explain the difficulties involved with funding. In order for the federal government to increase its budget for water clean up, it would have to take funds from other programs by lessening those budgets or increase taxes. Unfortunately, our current administration places many priorities over that of water quality so taking funds from elsewhere seems out of the question right now. Also, in the midst of a economic slump, raising taxes would definitely not be the popular way to get more funding for water clean up. I do think this is a major issue and it needs to be fixed; however, the federal government is not at the right position to do so right now.
out of
found this valuable.
Do you find this valuable?
Show Last Reply
|
|
Last Reply:
RE: govt has different agenda
By: ,
Jul 17 2008, 4:57 PM EDT
As someone who is part of such an organization, groups like Friends of Milwaukee's Rivers, part of the River Keeper organization, and many other Milwaukee water advocacy groups do stick their necks out and try to keep our areas water clean with the goal of it being open for recreation. They do receive a lot of grants and money from the state for performing service or from suing them for violations. I agree that the state directly doesn't do enough to enforce the laws they are expected to force under the federal mandates of the clean water act, but citizens are really going to need to be the ones to do it. A good law suit can force the state to fund what is needed and pay for a law school student's summer internship.
out of
found this valuable.
Do you find this valuable?
|
|
Showing 1 of 1 threads for this page