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Oberstar
and Feingold Bait-and-Switch:
Deceptively-Named "Clean Water Restoration Act" Would
Expand, Not Restore Federal Powers
For
Release:
October 9,
2007
Contact: David Almasi at (202) 543-4110 or dalmasi@nationalcenter.org
100+
Conservationists, Seniors Advocates, Farm Bureaus,
Civil Rights Leaders, Cattlemen, Taxpayer Action Groups Detail
Potential for Abuse in Letter to Hill Leaders
Washington, D.C. - A letter signed by over 100 people representing
diverse interests and millions of Americans is being delivered to
Congress this morning contending that the Clean Water Restoration Act (CWRA)
would achieve the opposite of what its sponsors claim.
The bill, sponsored by James Oberstar in the House and Russell Feingold
in the Senate, was introduced ostensibly to restore protections under
the Clean Water Act lost due to Supreme Court decisions in 2001 and 2006
and to clarify which waters would be subject to federal jurisdiction.
But according to the coalition, the legislation would "achieve the
opposite: It would expand the scope of the Clean Water Act far beyond
its original intent while increasing confusion over what is and isn't to
be protected... [and] runs counter to the principle of accountable
government as it seeks to transfer legislative power from elected
officials" to the courts."
The coalition effort, spearheaded by the Washington, DC-based
National
Center
for Public
Policy Research, is signed by conservationists, family advocacy groups,
civil rights leaders, sportsmen organizations, seniors advocates, think
tanks and taxpayer action groups, among others.
Among the signers: John Berthoud, the late president of the National
Taxpayers Union; G. Ray Arnett, former president and a long-time
director of the National Wildlife Federation; Jim Handley, Executive
Director of the Florida Cattlemen's Association; Former U.S. Senator
Malcolm Wallop (R-WY), Chairman of Frontiers of Freedom; Niger Innis,
National Spokesman for the Congress of Racial Equality, one of the
nation's oldest civil rights organizations; Adrian T. Moore, Vice
President of Research of the Reason Foundation; Chris Derry, President
of the Bluegrass Institute; and Linda Runbeck, President of the American
Property Coalition, an organization founded by former U.S. Senator Rod
Grams (R-MN) which has led a national education effort on the CWRA.
"The 'Clean Water Restoration Act' is classic
bait-and-switch," said David Ridenour, Vice President of The
National Center for Public Policy Research. "Congressman
Oberstar and Senator Feingold advertise that their initiative is
designed to reassert congressional intent and add clarity to the Clean
Water Act. But that's not the product they're actually selling.
Indeed, the Clean Water Restoration Act would be an unprecedented
expansion of federal power."
The CWRA would, according to the letter, give the federal government the
power to regulate all interstate and intrastate waters, including
non-navigable waters. In so doing, the bill would exceed the
original scope of the Clean Water Act and likely violate the
Constitution. Non-navigable waters are unlikely to fall under the
Constitution's commerce clause.
"This bill would extend federal authority to literally all waters
in
America
right down
to intermittently wet drainage ditches," said Ridenour. "But
its reach wouldn't end at water's edge. It also regulates
'activities affecting these waters' providing an enormous opening for
regulation of dry land, too."
A view the letter, go to www.nationalcenter.org/Clean_Water_Restoration_Act_Letter_100907.pdf
The
National
Center
for Public
Policy Research is a non-profit, non-partisan educational foundation
based in
Washington
, D.C now
in its 25th year.
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30 -
501 Capitol Court, N.E.
Washington
,
D.C.
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Fax (202) 543-5975
E-Mail: info@nationalcenter.org
Web: www.nationalcenter.org
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