Water
Sentinels Score Big in Missouri
September 2003
By Tom Valtin
Sierra Club Activist Resource
Thanks largely
to the work of the Missouri Water Sentinels, more than 1,000 additional
miles of rivers and streams and tens of thousands of acres of lakes
in the Show Me State are now targeted for cleanup. The Sierra Club's
Water Sentinels program trains volunteers to monitor the health
of local waterways and advocate for their cleanup.
In May, the
EPA substantially expanded the list of Missouri waterbodies to be
cleaned up under Clean Water Act provisions. The Missouri Clean
Water Commission had compiled the list in 2002, but clean-water
activists described it as tainted and incomplete.
"It appears
the EPA has based its findings and recommendations on science, rather
than the Clean Water Commission's politics," says Ken Midkiff, a
Missourian who serves as national director of the Sierra Club's
Clean Water Campaign.
The Clean Water
Act requires states to list all waterbodies within their boundaries
that fail to meet federal water-quality standards. The so-called
303(d) list is to be compiled every two years, and is subject to
EPA review and approval. States must then develop a plan to reduce
pollution in these waterbodies.
"The state
of Missouri failed to compile a complete and accurate list in 1998,"
explains Midkiff, "which led to a suit brought by the Sierra Club
and the American Canoe Association. Our claim was that the state
had done a piss-poor job of identifying impaired waterbodies." A
settlement agreement with the EPA added a large number of streams
to the list, mandated additional monitoring on 26 waterbodies, required
the increased utilization of volunteer-collected data and initiated
sweeping reform of the state's inadequate water-quality protection
standards.
"It is our opinion
that the state and EPA wouldn't be doing diddly without the possibility
of 'contempt of court' hanging over their heads," says Midkiff.
"I really feel
that without the lawsuit the EPA would have tried to blow us off
no matter what we had in data," adds Missouri Water Sentinel Organizer
Angel Kruzen.
The Missouri
Clean Water Commission's 2002 list targeted 174 waterbodies a round
the state for cleanup. But this omitted 46 polluted streams that
the Sierra Club alleged had been illegally delisted. "Certain members
of the Clean Water Commission buckled under to complaints from the
Missouri Farm Bureau and industrial groups and politicians under
their sway, and removed documentable impaired streams, rivers, and
lakes from the cleanup list," Midkiff charges.
Clean-water
activists like Kruzen set about making their case with citizen-collected
data. Now, after having reviewed new data compiled largely by volunteer
water monitors, the EPA has mandated the cleanup of an additional
63 lakes, rivers, and stream segments.
"This is a
huge victory for the entire nationwide volunteer water-monitoring
movement," says national Water Sentinels director Scott Dye, also
a Missourian. "The EPA utilized quality-assured, scientifically
sound volunteer data in making its impairment determinations. It's
a testament to the power of a fully mature d volunteer monitoring
program."
"Six of the
seven urban streams in Kansas City and St. Louis that the Ozark
Chapter had targeted for inclusion are now on the 303(d) list,"
he elaborates, crediting Kruzen for spearheading the effort. "And
many additional streams will now be listed due to other volunteers'
comments, including the entire reaches
of both the Missouri and Mississippi Rivers within the state's borders
for PCBs, chlordane, or mercury."
The EPA found
that the Missouri Clean Water Commission had delisted 46 waterbodies
"without good cause," and placed them back on the 303(d) list. The
EPA also rejected the state's replacement of "sediment impairments"
on 34 streams with "habitat loss." This was key because "habitat
loss" isn't a pollutant, and thus wouldn't have been subject to
Clean Water Act restrictions - even though habitat loss is the result
of sedimentation. In addition, the agency expanded the list of pollutants
to be cleaned up in 32 listed waterbodies, from insecticides in
the Missouri and Mississippi Rivers to low water-oxygen levels,
fecal contamination, and high mercury levels in other rivers and
lakes.
"The EPA recognized
that water quality standards were not being met in the state's cities
and in areas impacted by corporate agribusiness," says Midkiff .
"The Sierra Club's goal is to get these waterbodies cleaned up,
not to pretend that no problem exists."
To find out
more about the Water Sentinels Program, go to www.sierraclub.org/watersentinels.
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