Wednesday, July 16, 2014

House Committee Advances Bills Restricting U.S. EPA Clean Water Activities

On Wednesday, July 16, the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee advanced three pieces of legislation during a Committee mark-up session.  The bills would limit the Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA's) ability to apply Clean Water Act protections to surface waters under various situations. On a voice vote, the Committee passed H.R. 5078, the "Waters of the United States Regulatory Overreach Protection Act of 2014."  That bill would prohibit the EPA and Army Corps of Engineers from "developing, finalizing, adopting, implementing, applying, administering, or enforcing" a proposed rule that attempts to clarify those streams and wetlands that are subject to federal regulation under the Clean Water Act (known as the "Waters of the U.S." rule).

The Committee also approved H.R. 5077, the "Coal Jobs Protection Act of 2014" (by a vote of 28-24) - a bill that would prevent the EPA from enforcing an existing 2011 guidance on mountaintop-removal mining and streamline permitting, and defining the term "fill material" to include mining debris (that otherwise could be used to fill federally-regulated streams).  And the Committee passed H.R. 4854, the "Regulatory Certainty Act of 2014" (on a 33-22 vote), which would restrict the EPA's ability to veto Clean Water Act Section 404 Army Corps of Engineers dredge-and-fill permits to that time period within the actual Army Corps' permitting process, not before or after permitting.

While the bills may see House floor activity and passage in the near future, there is little chance that any would gain traction in the Democratically-controlled Senate.

Tuesday, July 15, 2014

Ecosystem Restoration Conference to Include Mississippi River Basin and Gulf Coast Focus

The biennial Conference on Ecological and Ecosystem Restoration (CEER) will be held this year in New Orleans, Louisiana from July 28 through August 1, and will include a particular focus on ecosystem restoration in the Mississippi River Basin and the Louisiana coast. CEER is a joint effort of the National Conference on Ecosystem Restoration and the Society for Ecological Restoration (SER), which are collaborating to produce the conference covering restoration topics relevant to private sector, government, and non-profit restoration constituents throughout the country. While the conference program focuses on the U.S., attendees and presenters will represent restoration projects and research occurring worldwide. 

Mississippi River Basin- and Louisiana coastal-related conference topics will include "The Mississippi River - A Strategic Resource," "Rivers, Streams, and Lakes Ecosystem Restoration," and "Gulf Coast Ecosystem Restoration." 

Blog contributor Mark Gorman, a member of the CEER 2014 Program Committee, and a pro-tem officer for the newly-formed Large Scale Ecosystem Restoration Section of SER, and Colin Wellenkamp, Director of the Mississippi River Cities and Towns Initiative, will be in attendance at the CEER 2014 event, as will many other River Basin stakeholders.

To register to attend CEER 2014 visit this page.

Capitol Hill This Week - What to Watch For

Library of Congress
Below are the U.S. House and Senate activities currently scheduled for this week that relate to Mississippi River Basin water resources. Links are provided to the relevant committee web pages, and, as appropriate, to pieces of legislation. Many Congressional proceedings are webcast live and these should be, as well (follow the appropriate committee hearing link). All times are Eastern. This page will be updated as warranted.

Tuesday
Wednesday
  • House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee markup of several bills, including H.R. 5078 – "Waters of the United States Regulatory Overreach Protection Act of 2014" and H.R. 4854 -  "Regulatory Certainty Act of 2014: to amend the Federal Water Pollution Control Act to clarify when the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency has the authority to prohibit the specification of a defined area or deny or restrict the use of a defined area for specification as a disposal site under section 404" of the act; 10:00 AM, room 2167 Rayburn House Office Building.
  • House Budget Committee hearing on the Long-Term Budget Outlook; 10:00 AM, room 210 Cannon House Office Building.
  • House Natural Resources Committee markup of several bills, including H.R. 916 (sponsored by Ron Kind (D-WI))  "to improve Federal land management, resource conservation, environmental protection, and use of Federal real property;" 10:00 AM, room 1324 Longworth House Office Building.
  • House Homeland Security Subcommittee on Border and Maritime Security hearing on Port of Entry Infrastructure: How Does the Federal Government Prioritize Investments?  10:00 AM, room 311 Cannon House Office Building.
  • House Science, Space, and Technology Subcommittee on Oversight and Subcommittee on Environment joint hearing on EPA's Integrated Risk Information System; 2:00 PM, room 2318 Rayburn House Office Building.
  • Senate Environment and Public Works Subcommittee on Water and Wildlife hearing to consider several bills, including S. 1153, Invasive Fish and Wildlife Prevention Act; S. 1175, Infrastructure Facilitation and Habitat Conservation Act; H.R. 1300, to amend the Fish and Wildlife Act of 1956 to reauthorize the volunteer programs and community partnerships for the benefit of national wildlife refuges; S. 2225, Smart Water Resource Management Conservation and Efficiency Act; S. 2530, to prohibit the importation or exportation of mussels of certain genus; and S. 2560, United States Fish and Wildlife Service Resource Protection Act; 2:00 PM, EPW Hearing Room - 406 Dirksen Senate Office Building.
Thursday

Thursday, July 3, 2014

Gone Fishing!

"Friends"
(also known as Amy and Kooper)
There will be no "Mississippi River Basin Water Resource Weekly News" edition the week of July 7, as your FNB* (and friends) travel to the remote hills and valleys of northwestern Pennsylvania for some time in and near the headwaters of the Mississippi River Basin.  The Weekly News, and other Northeast-Midwest Institute Mississippi River Basin Blog posts will return the week of July 14.

In the meantime, here is a link to the Congressional activities currently scheduled (as of the time of this posting) for the week of July 7 that relate to Mississippi River Basin water resources.
_______________________________________
* "Friendly Neighborhood Blogger"                         

Mississippi River Basin Water Resource Weekly News

~Virtual Newspaper for an Aquatic World~
This Week
If you don't care to wade through all of the news one-liners below, here is our concise, weekly, one-paragraph, summary of things that we've learned: "What We Learned This Week - Floods, Drought, Body Doubles and Jumping Frogs."

Next Week
"Friends"
There will be no "Mississippi River Basin Water Resource Weekly News" edition the week of July 7, as your FNB* (and friends) travel to the remote hills and valleys of northwestern Pennsylvania for some time in and near the headwaters of the Mississippi River Basin.  The Weekly News, and other Northeast-Midwest Institute Mississippi River Basin Blog posts will return the week of July 14.

In the meantime, the U.S. House and Senate both return next week from an eleven-day, July Fourth Holiday recess. Congress is then planning to be in session for four consecutive weeks, before recessing for the entire month of August, and the first week of September (House schedule here; Senate's here).  Here is a summary of the activities currently scheduled for next week that relate to Mississippi River Basin water resources.  They include several House hearings, and the possible Senate floor consideration of a comprehensive "Bipartisan Sportsmen's Act of 2014." (* "Friendly Neighborhood Blogger).

Noteworthy @UpperMiss Twitter Postings for the Week

Water Quality -
  • Nancy Stoner, Acting Assistant Administrator for Water, USEPA: "Setting the Record Straight on Waters of the US" http://ow.ly/yGUh5
  • EPA Administrator McCarthy to promote jurisdictional ("Waters of the US") rule in "heartland"  tour "into the Midwest" http://ow.ly/yGYfR
  • GOP lawmakers: Waters of the US rule would "enable litigious environmental groups to jeopardize fireworks displays throughout the country" http://ow.ly/yHbSq
  • U.S. Geological Survey study: emerging contaminants of concern making their way into Minnesota's shallow and deep aquifers; MPR story: http://ow.ly/ywd9W (study found here: http://ow.ly/ywdtY)
  • Court rulings keep federal and state lawsuit alive against ExxonMobil Corp. over  Arkansas pipeline spill http://ow.ly/yBfND
  • Ohio DNR: Monroe County fracking well fire likely sent contaminants into nearby stream, killing fish, other aquatic life, as far as 5 miles away http://ow.ly/yE5mW
  • Citizens from local and statewide groups support West Virginia's Kanawha River protection proposal http://ow.ly/yHcGZ
  • Bill Northey, Chair of Mississippi River/Gulf Of Mexico Hypoxia Task Force:  group making "significant progress" http://ow.ly/yGPmw
  • USGS (in JSTOR): Appalachian waterways affected by mountaintop removal coal mining have fewer fish, less aquatic diversity http://ow.ly/yGZeJ
  • Missouri Public Service Commission approves Ameren Missouri’s plan to build coal ash landfill in Missouri River floodplain http://ow.ly/yK1dg
Water Resource Management (Floodplains, Dams, Navigation, Wetlands, Flooding, Supplies, etc.) -
  • A rising Mississippi River is threatening towns north of St. Louis area http://ow.ly/yK2pS
  • By the weekend, the Mississippi River will be at major flood stage in much of Iowa, Illinois and Missouri http://ow.ly/yH6XK
  • Rising flood waters expected to make 11 mid- and upper-Mississippi Rive locks and dams impassable, forcing river closure http://ow.ly/yE4yF (The current Mississippi River lock closure status page (from the Army Corps of Engineers): http://ow.ly/yE6os)
  • FEMA to assess Minnesota flood damage this week http://ow.ly/yBgdh and http://ow.ly/yBg7Z
  • Environmental Finance Center: catalog of publications describing green infrastructure financing and established benefits http://ow.ly/ywq8k
  • Sudden drop in Missouri River concerns anglers, and Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks ow.ly/yB0Rj
  • Arkansas River Infrastructure Task Force proposes construction of four low water dams to spur development (Oklahoma) http://ow.ly/yE7gF (plan: http://ow.ly/yE7iw) - see related article, below
  • Tulsa, OK city councilors and mayor make push for multi-million dollar construction project to "improve" Arkansas River http://ow.ly/yE7M2 -see related article, above
Agriculture -
  • USDA interim rule published requiring farmers to adopt  conservation practices before qualifying for federal crop insurance http://ow.ly/yH0xN
  • Op-ed: Risky agri-business in the face of climate change: What if one bad year just leads to more and
    U.S. Route 66
    increasingly bad years? http://ow.ly/yAVsJ
  • Reminder: USDA-NRCS Regional Conservation Partnership Program pre-proposals are due by July 14 (Mississippi River Basin is a priority area) http://ow.ly/yAZjT
  • Waterlogged fields wash out Minnesota corn, soybean crops, leaving farmers with limited options http://ow.ly/yEuPD
  • USEPA wading through over 27,000 public comments on proposed registration of 'superweed' herbicide http://ow.ly/yGXI6
  • @ChrisClaytonDTN explores how farming along Route 66 has changed since Steinbeck's day. http://t.co/95GPHJf8kx and http://t.co/839FIrlOd9
Climate and Weather -
Click to enlarge
  • El Nino-like event likely to disrupt climate in 2014, UN World Meteorological Organization warns http://ow.ly/yBbku
  • BBC's science editor visits one of the most-impacted U.S drought areas: the Oklahoma Panhandle  http://ow.ly/yJAbK
  • State climatologist: preliminary data show Iowa has endured its third-wettest June on record http://ow.ly/yJEro
  • Weekly US drought update: Drought condition upgrade for Iowa, Illinois, Louisiana, Nebraska, Kansas, northern Oklahoma due to plentiful rainfall http://ow.ly/wmTdv
  • NOAA Climate Prediction Center July drought outlook http://ow.ly/q3yAx River Basin drought relief expected except in southern Oklahoma; northeastern Tennessee
  • PLOS ONE - "Climate Exposure of U.S. National Parks in a New Era of Change" http://ow.ly/yJULB
Biodiversity, Wildlife and Invasives -
  • Indiana seeks to slow spread of Asian carp in state ow.ly/yC391 
    Emerald ash borer larval damage to ash tree
  • Emerald ash borer effects will ripple through forest ecosystems, affecting other plants, animals and water supplies http://ow.ly/yEtUU
  • USGS-led study: Intersex fish found in three Pennsylvania river basin, including Ohio River Watershed http://ow.ly/yHbb1 exhibiting effects of endocrine-disrupting chemical exposure
  • University of Missouri study: bisphenol A, or BPA, can alter a turtle’s reproductive system after exposure in the egg http://ow.ly/yBfgY
  • U.S. honeybees have become a victim of the very food system that has come to depend on bees for a third of its output http://ow.ly/yAWoz
  • PLOS Pathogens: Researchers pinpoint virus strain that causes bee deformities http://ow.ly/yBaeo
  • Wisconsin's statewide 'Landing Blitz’ to educate boaters on invasive species http://ow.ly/yJBlo
  • Obama administration releases final policy re: determining whether wildlife species deserve Endangered Species Act protection http://ow.ly/ywW68
  • June 30 Memorandum of Understanding renews Federal Native Plant Conservation Committee to identify priority areas for native plant preservation http://ow.ly/yE0Ov
In the Cities -
  • Clarksville, Missouri will no longer pay for temporary sandbag walls to protect its "quaint business district" from periodic Mississippi River flooding http://ow.ly/yK1TM
  • Nuisance properties a headache for Des Moines' historic River Bend neighborhood  http://ow.ly/ywrXu
  • Permeable pavement coming to Davenport, Iowa http://ow.ly/yE1QT
  • Reconfiguration of I-71 through Cincinnati provided city with long-planned access to Ohio Riverfront, accelerated environmental and health-related public infrastructure improvements http://ow.ly/yE2O7
In the States -
  • Minnesota Pollution Control Agency publishes first-of-its-kind report on condition of Minnesota’s rivers and streams http://ow.ly/yHvti
Forestry -
  • Louisville, Kentucky receives $400K USDA grant to increase nature-based recreational opportunities in Jefferson Memorial Forest http://ow.ly/yAUHr
Resource Development -
  • List of organizations opposed to St. Tammany Parish fracking (Louisiana) grows; seek denial of required wetlands permit http://ow.ly/yEvsT
  • Iowa ethanol plant begins producing the Midwest's first commercial-scale quantities of cellulosic ethanol http://ow.ly/yJCnp
Events -  Information on all past and future events listed here can be viewed in the on-line calendar (here as a stand-alone calendar)
  • The National Tom Sawyer Days are this week in Hannibal, Missouri (July 3-5) http://ow.ly/yE8yv - frog jumping contest on Saturday!
  • National Academies meeting on Analysis of Costs and Benefits of National Flood Insurance Program Reforms, July 11 (public session), Washington, DC http://ow.ly/yECvL - preregistration requested
  • Cities Alive 12th Annual Green Roof and Wall Conference Conference: Green Roofs for Healthy Cities; Nashville, Tennessee, November 12-15 http://ow.ly/yE3i0
e-Newsletters, Publications, Journals, Multimedia  -
  • Association of State Floodplain Managers' June News & Views http://ow.ly/yAYRf
  • Montana Watershed Coordination Council's June 26 Watershed News ow.ly/yB0bj
  • The Nature Conservancy's June 2014 - Great Rivers E-news http://ow.ly/yCeDI
  • Tulane Institute on Water Resources Law and Policy's July 1 TUWaterWays e-newsletter http://ow.ly/yGW2d
Other news-
  • New Orleans Advocate editorial: Our Views: Together for the River http://ow.ly/yEJs2
  • St. Croix Watershed Research Station announces the Summer 2014 Artists-in-Residence at Pine Needles http://ow.ly/yGOJL
  • New White House plan promotes streamlined infrastructure permitting by Federal agencies http://ow.ly/yGTr8
Politics and People-
  • Conservative Louisiana Rep. Vance McAllister (R-5-La.) recants his April pledge to retire http://ow.ly/yBSSE
  • Conservative group files lawsuit against Mississippi Secretary of State and Republican Party over recent US Senate runoff results http://ow.ly/yHi4s
  • Pew Research Center for the People and the Press: "Beyond Red vs. Blue: The Political Typology" - Polarized Wings; a Diverse Middle http://ow.ly/ywesG
  • Shrinking Congressional Battleground Map: Both parties have relatively few opportunities to pick up new seats in 2014 midterm election http://ow.ly/yBiIR
Last Word -
Beer fermenting
Global warming: Take it seriously or your beer will suck.” - St. Louis Post-Dispatch editorial, suggesting that, to get the climate change message across, we talk about beer.




Capitol Hill Next Week - What to Watch For

The U.S. House and Senate both return next week from an eleven-day, July Fourth Holiday recess. Congress is then scheduled to be in session for four consecutive weeks, before recessing for the entire month of August, and the first week of September.

One of the major pieces of legislation on the full Senate's calendar for the week is its consideration of the "Bipartisan Sportsmen's Act of 2014" (S. 2363); a bill designed to "to protect and enhance opportunities for recreational hunting, fishing, and shooting, and for other purposes." That legislation is a package of 12 bills that include reauthorizations of federal programs to conserve wetlands for waterfowl and that would allow federal agencies to use revenues from land sales to acquire lands of higher conservation value.

Below are the other U.S. House and Senate activities currently scheduled for next week that relate to Mississippi River Basin water resources.  Links are provided to the relevant committee web pages, and, where appropriate, to pieces of legislation. Many Congressional proceedings are webcast live, and these should be, as well (follow the appropriate link).  All times are Eastern.

Wednesday:
Thursday:
Friday:

What We Learned This Week - Floods, Drought, Body Doubles and Jumping Frogs

Near-record rains caused extensive flooding last week in parts of Minnesota, Iowa and the Dakotas, swamping farmland and forcing the Army Corps of Engineers to close several Mississippi River locks.  The June rains throughout much of the Midwest, and continued wet weather expected in July mean that the drought will continue to fade into memory throughout much of the River Basin, except in Oklahoma and northeastern Tennessee.  The U.N. World Meteorological Organization is "expecting about the same (global temperature) levels" during this year's upcoming El NiƱo episode as there were during the last (2009-2010) - the hottest year on record. The Missouri Public Service Commission unanimously approved Ameren Missouri’s plan to build coal ash landfill in the Missouri River floodplain.  The Clean Water Act jurisdiction rule proposed by the Obama Administration will "enable litigious environmental groups to jeopardize fireworks displays throughout the country," according to a group of GOP senators. That statement may be one reason why the U.S. Environmental Agency's Administrator Gina McCarthy will be "barnstorming" the Midwest in coming weeks, "setting the record straight" on the proposal.  Appalachian waterways affected by mountaintop removal coal mining have fewer fish and less aquatic diversity. In other "loss" news, the Prairie Pothole region has suffered an "alarming" rate of wetland acreage loss over recent years, while scientists fear they've lost a protracted battle against the emerald ash borer, an invasive beetle that is killing off ash trees across North America.  Congress quietly deleted a key Congressional ethics requirement requiring disclosure of free trips lawmakers take, and who pays for them.  A conservative group is suing in an attempt to overturn Sen. Thad Cochran's defeat of Chris McDaniel by a 6,700-vote margin in the June 24 Mississippi runoff for the GOP U.S. Senate nomination.  Elsewhere in the Mississippi River political scene, Conservative Louisiana Rep. Vance McAllister (R) recanted his April pledge to retire.  Nine-term incumbent Frank Lucas, congress-member from Oklahoma was murdered in Ukraine in 2011 and replaced with a robot body double, according to a recent primary election losing candidate for the congressman's seat.  But the weej's political news doesn't mean that one should classify Oklahoman, Louisiana or Mississippi as "red." According to the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press, U.S. political views are more complicated and subtle than that. If you want to see what the governors of Oklahoma, Mississippi or Louisiana (or any other state) think about climate change, check out this handy, interactive map. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch editors suggest that one message to those governors on climate change might be, “Global warming: Take it seriously or your beer will suck.” That's important, since the number of U.S. breweries more than doubled (to 869 from 398) between 2007 and 2012 according to the U.S. Census Bureau  - and they all use a lot of water. And last but not least, if "litigious environmental groups" have quashed your local fireworks displays, you can still celebrate the July Fourth holiday in water-friendly style by running over to the "National Tom Sawyer Days" in Hannibal, Missouri on Saturday to watch their annual frog jumping contest.