Trump
Administration again Ignores Science
When lawmakers passed the Clean Water Act of 1972, they agreed
the federal government needed stronger regulations to protect the waterways
that we rely on for drinking, fishing, recreation and supporting a healthy
environment.
But our watersheds are more than just major rivers — there are
wetlands, ponds and small streams, some of which only contain water part of the
year. And it’s in these waterways that an ongoing, unseen conversation happens
between surface and groundwater.
Exactly which waters are protected under the Clean Water Act has
been a source of continued litigation. Scientists say keeping our drinking
water clean means protecting this vast network, but special-interest groups
like developers and farmers have fought for a narrower definition.
So the Obama administration went through a long scientific
review and rulemaking process to clarify the issue. The result, known as the
Waters of the U.S. Rule (or the Clean Water Rule), passed in 2015 and
immediately faced opposition from farmers, industry groups and some states. Two
years later it became a target of the Trump administration,
which has been working to repeal and replace the rule to
protect fewer waters.
We talked to Dr. Ellen Wohl, a professor of geosciences at
Colorado State University and an expert in river systems, about what the Trump
administration’s proposed rule change would mean for the health of our
waterways.
There is fundamental disagreement between scientists’ and special-interest groups’ understanding of river networks. Scientific understanding indicates that tiny headwater streams, channels that do not flow continuously (such as ephemeral channels that flow only after rainfall and intermittent channels that flow only where they intersect the water table) and wetlands that are not connected on the surface with rivers are vital parts of a river network and significantly influence water quality, the rate of flow and the biological communities in larger rivers.
Consequently, scientists and environmental advocates who base
their advocacy on scientific knowledge want these waters to be covered.
Special-interest groups as diverse as realtors, farmers and
public utilities do not want these waters to be covered because it’s perceived
as restricting development and land use by increasing the protected portions of
river networks.
Why are disconnected wetlands and streams that don’t always flow
so important ecologically?
For at least two reasons. First, even though surface
connectivity is not continuous in time and space, these portions of a drainage
basin can sometimes connect, such as during snowmelt or after rainfall.
During these periods organisms can migrate for breeding or to reach new habitat, and the habitat diversity provided by ephemeral channels and disconnected wetlands is important to many aquatic and terrestrial organisms.
During these periods organisms can migrate for breeding or to reach new habitat, and the habitat diversity provided by ephemeral channels and disconnected wetlands is important to many aquatic and terrestrial organisms.
Salamanders are one example: Some species of salamanders spend
much of their adult life in forests, but rely on ephemeral wetlands for breeding
and nursery habitat.
Second, ephemeral channels and wetlands without surface
connectivity can still be connected below the ground with other portions of the
drainage basin. This has a big impact on water quality — underground is where
microbes in the soil work to remove harmful nutrients like nitrates from water
that will eventually return to the surface in perennial rivers.
What does Trump’s proposed rule change get wrong about the
science of river ecology?
Pretty much everything. By ignoring the substantial body of
scientific literature on headwater streams, temporary rivers (ephemeral and
intermittent) and wetlands without surface connectivity, the proposed rule
change ignores modern scientific understanding of how rivers and river networks
function. And by doing so it will significantly reduce the effectiveness of the
Clean Water Act and undermine the intent of the original law, which is to
protect surface water quality in the United States.
There have been a lot of rollbacks of environmental regulation since Trump took office — how significant would this rule change be?
Rivers throughout the United States are already heavily
compromised in their hydrological and ecological functions. We’ve built levees
that block floodplains, channelized rivers and removed native land cover in
many upland areas. By doing so we have significantly increased the magnitude of
flood peaks and reduced the potential for recharge of ground water.
We have also increased the amount of nitrates entering our
waterways — primarily from fertilizers and fossil-fuel emissions — and at the
same time we’ve reduced the ability of rivers to remove nitrates. The effects
of these changes appear most dramatically in the enormous increases in nitrate
fluxes to nearshore areas and the resulting “dead zones,” such as in the Gulf
of Mexico.
The reduced ecological function of rivers also appears in rates
of extinction for freshwater species, which are much higher than extinction
rates for terrestrial species.
How can we best protect our waterways? Was the current rule
developed under the Obama administration sufficient?
The rule developed under the Obama administration reflects a
long collaborative process between diverse stakeholders. As such, there were
compromises made by both sides. As a river scientist, I don’t consider the
current rule perfect, but it’s far better than the proposed changes.
Tara Lohan is deputy editor of The
Revelator and has worked for more than a decade as a digital editor
and environmental journalist focused on the intersections of energy, water and
climate. Her work has been published by The Nation, American
Prospect, High Country News, Grist, Pacific
Standard and others. She is the editor of two books on the global
water crisis. http://twitter.com/TaraLohan