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Widespread Water Violations Decried
By Eric Pianin
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, August 7, 2002; Page A07
Nearly one-third of major industrial facilities
and government-operated sewage treatment plants have significantly violated
pollution discharge regulations during the past two years, but relatively
few are being prosecuted, according to a study by a watchdog group.
The report found that 10 states -- Texas, Ohio, New York, Indiana, Tennessee,
North Carolina, Alabama, Louisiana, Michigan and Pennsylvania -- had the largest
number of major facilities in "significant noncompliance" with discharge
requirements during the 15-month period examined. In Texas alone, more than
half the 546 major facilities and plants violated the law at least once during
that period, the study noted.
The U.S. Public Interest Research Group (PIRG) charged in the report that
a combination of lax enforcement of the Clean Water Act by the Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) and by state inspectors and lenient courts have fostered
persistently high levels of illegal dumping of waste and toxic chemicals.
Many of these plants are far exceeding their legal limits for polluting rivers
and streams with little concern for being prosecuted, the study said.
"At the most basic level, the government . . . has failed to properly
pursue and punish polluters," the report said. "Meanwhile, the courts
have eroded citizens' ability to file suits in order to enforce the Clean
Water Act."
The report is the latest in a series of sharp critiques of government enforcement
policies by environmental activists and government watchdogs. Prosecutions
of environmental crimes fell sharply during the Clinton administration, according
to the study, and continued to decline as Bush administration officials sought
to shift enforcement resources from EPA headquarters and regional offices
to the states.
According to the report, the number of pollution cases referred by the EPA
for criminal prosecution declined by 53 percent last year -- a figure the
agency disputes -- while one out of every four facilities surveyed was operating
on an expired pollution permit. The Washington Post reported last month that
the administration is considering a plan to reduce federal oversight of a
key Clean Water Act anti-pollution program and instead "trust states"
to clean up more than 20,000 dirty rivers, lakes and estuaries.
"With widespread violations of the law, this is no time for the Bush
administration to take cops off the beat," Richard Caplan, the U.S. PIRG
environmental advocate, said yesterday.
Joe Martyak, an EPA spokesman, said that recent agency clean water cases "reflect
a strong and vigorous enforcement effort for achieving compliance and deterring
noncompliance."
He cited as examples cases in which the city of Baltimore was fined $600,000
for combined sewer overflow and Wal-Mart Stores Inc. was penalized $1 million
and ordered to make $4.5 million worth of improvements.
The Clean Water Act was approved by Congress in 1972 with the expressed goal
of returning all waters to fishable and swimmable conditions by 1983 and eliminating
the discharge of all pollutants by 1985. Yet an estimated 40 percent of U.S.
waters are still unsafe for swimming and fishing. Since 1988, there have been
more than 60,836 beach closings and advisories. Last year, every state but
Wyoming issued fish consumption advisories because of high levels of dangerous
chemicals.
Using the Freedom of Information Act, U.S. PIRG analyzed the behavior of industrial
facilities, municipal treatment works and federal installations by reviewing
violations between January 2000 and March 2001, as recorded in the EPA's permit
compliance system database.
The review found that about 30 percent of the facilities were in serious violation
of the Clean Water Act for at least a quarter of that period.
The study noted that while the Clean Water Act was premised on gradually achieving
zero discharge of pollution, the EPA continues to allow industry to discharge
large amounts of pollution into waterways under a permit system.
© 2002 The Washington Post Company
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