Nathanael Johnson writes in Grist:
“This is a huge deal,” James M. Tierney, the New York State assistant commissioner for water resources, said of the new constraints. “There are whole watersheds that feed into New York’s drinking water supply that are, as of now, unprotected”…“Cases now are lost because the company is discharging into a stream that flows into a river, rather than the river itself,” said David M. Uhlmann, a law professor at the University of Michigan who led the environmental crimes section of the Justice Department during the last administration.
If you haven’t been following this, you may wonder why it’s controversial. That’s a fair question. As Sen. Ben Cardin (D-Md.) pointed out in an op-ed, these regulations used to seem like common sense to both Republicans and Democrats:
The draft rule relies on more than 1,200 pieces of peer-reviewed scientific literature that evaluate the critical functions that various types of water bodies perform. It restores protections that the administrations of presidents Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush championed.
Was this post of value to you?
Click
here for free updates
Recent Blog Posts:
No fracking in NJ but pipelines are changing its
landscape
Matt Mowers – Gov. Christie’s man in New Hampshire
Memorial Day Photos 2015
Gov. nominates four to NJ Water Supply Advisory Council
‘A Beautiful Mind’ Princeton Prof dies in auto accident