Thursday, June 18, 2015

Capitol Hill This Week - What to Watch For (UPDATED)

Photo: Getty
Below are the U.S. House and Senate activities currently scheduled for the week ahead that relate to Mississippi River Basin water resources.

There are six Congressional work weeks to go before its scheduled five-week summer recess, and all eyes on Capitol Hill are warily watching the slow pace at which spending bills are moving along (or not moving along, which is closer to reality).  The House Appropriations Committee is considering one such spending bill of River relevance this Tuesday, and the Senate two. However, prospects continue to be poor that the regular processing of appropriation legislation will happen at a rate needed to meet a looming September 30 fiscal year deadline.

The U.S. EPA's new coal combustion waste disposal rule is one non-spending issue of River-region interest to be discussed this week (by members of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee).  As early as next week, the House should schedule a vote on a bill to modify that rule somewhat (H.R. 1734 - introduced by West Virginia Republican Rep. David McKinley).

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. This page will be updated as warranted.

Tuesday
  • House Appropriations Committee meeting to markup the Fiscal Year 2016 Interior and Environment Appropriations Bill (funding, in part, the Interior Department, USEPA, and U.S. Forest Service), 10:15 AM, room 2359 Rayburn House Office Building.
  • Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Department of Homeland Security meeting to markup the "Fiscal Year 2016 Homeland Security Appropriations Bill" (funding, in part, the Federal Emergency Management Agency); 10:30 AM, room 138 Dirksen Senate Office Building (no meeting Internet link available yet).
  • Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies meeting to markup "Fiscal Year 2016 Interior and Environment Appropriations Bill" (funding, in part, the Interior Department, USEPA, and U.S. Forest Service); 2:30 PM, room 124 Dirksen Senate Office Building (no meeting Internet link available yet).
Wednesday
  • House Agriculture Committee business meeting to consider legislation, including H.R. 2647, the Resilient Federal Forests Act of 2015, as amended by the House Committee on Natural Resources; 10:00 AM, room 1300 Longworth House Office Building.
  • Senate Environment and Public Works Committee oversight hearing to "examine the Environmental Protection Agency's final rule to regulate disposal of coal combustion residuals from electric utilities; 9:30 AM, room 406 Dirksen Senate Office Building.
Thursday
  • NEW - Senate Appropriations Committee meeting to markup the Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act for Fiscal Year 2016, and the Homeland Security Appropriations Act for Fiscal Year 2016; 10:00 AM, room 106, Dirksen Senate Office Building.
  • House Appropriations Subcommittee on Agriculture meeting to mark up fiscal year 2016 spending bill for the Agriculture Department and Food and Drug Administration; 10:30 AM, room 2362-A Rayburn House Office Building.
  • Senate Homeland Security Subcommittee on Regulatory Affairs and Federal Management hearing "Re-examining EPA’s Management of the Renewable Fuel Standard Program" (EPA's proposed mandates for blending ethanol and other alternative fuels into the national gasoline and diesel supply); 9:30 AM, room 342 Dirksen Senate Office Building.
  • Senate Energy and Natural Resources Subcommittee on Water and Power legislative hearing on several pieces of legislation, including: S. 593, the Bureau of Reclamation Transparency Act; and S. 982, the Water Rights Protection Act; 2:00 PM, room 366 Dirksen Senate Office Building.

Friday, June 12, 2015

Mississippi River Basin Water Resource Weekly News

~Most of the Water News - None of the Spin~
This Week and Next
The week now ending saw spills of an unusual variety (piglets in Ohio and cattle in Oklahoma) and releases of a more usual kind (swine manure in Oklahoma), drought relief throughout most of the River Basin and Red River flooding in Louisiana, Capitol Hill critiques of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (regarding the Waters of the United States) and the Army Corps of Engineers (on the one-year anniversary of WRRDA), and a farmland-nitrate-induced drinking water advisory in Columbus, Ohio. Also in the news: legislation authorizing Minnesota’s stream buffer requirement is poised today (Friday) to pass through the state Legislature for a second time, and the Upper St. Anthony Falls lock on the Mississippi River in Minneapolis was permanently closed in an effort to thwart the relentless upstream movement of Asian carp. Most of this and more can be found below (or, if you prefer, digested into one handy paragraph in “What We Learned This Week - 'How sweet it is'”).

This week in Congress included committee activity on spending bills that would fund the USEPA, Interior Department, U.S. Forest Service, NOAA and the National Academy of Sciences. Those bills were laden with riders that would block agency spending to implement several environmental policies, including climate research, endangered species protection and the Obama Administration's Clean Water Act jurisdiction rule. A Senate committee approved a standalone bill that would thwart implementation of that jurisdiction rule, as well. Don't expect any of those bills to become law in anything close to their present versions.

Next week’s Capitol Hill activity scheduled so far can be viewed in “Capitol Hill Next Week - What to Watch For.”  In addition to more spending bill activity, next week will see a Senate oversight hearing concerning the Environmental Protection Agency's final rule to regulate disposal of coal combustion residuals from electric utilities.

Noteworthy @UpperMiss Twitter Postings for the Week

Water Quality -
  • Nitrate levels increase in Columbus, Ohio drinking water, as advisory continues (water source:
    Photo: Dan Olson, MPR News
    Scioto River watershed) http://ow.ly/O7QJS
  • USDA-ERS: restoring and protecting wetland is a cost-effective "secret weapon" in the battle to control nutrient runoff http://ow.ly/O7x7N
  • Duncan, Oklahoma, prominently displays a statue of Erle P. Halliburton, but water pollution has sparked dozens of lawsuits http://ow.ly/NV7nL
  • Swine manure impoundment release results in fish kill in tributary to Ocheyedan River (Iowa) http://ow.ly/NVyt7
  • According to recent research, scientists have found artificial sweeteners in bodies of water around the world http://ow.ly/O1C5b
  • National Great Rivers Research and Education Center deploys water quality and weather monitoring buoy on Carlyle Lake (Kaskaskia River) http://ow.ly/O2dtA
  • Op-ed: Montana DEQ is ignoring “contaminants of concern” from septic systems, municipal sewage treatment plants http://ow.ly/O4mHe
  • St. Croix Watershed Research Station director: Lake bottoms' sediments can show how or if certain farming practices affect water quality http://ow.ly/OdPe3
Waters of the United States
  • Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) will not support legislation to kill Obama administration's controversial water rule http://ow.ly/OdF93
  • National Law Review: "The Practical Application of the Significant Nexus Test: The Final Waters of the US Rule" http://ow.ly/O5dqT
  • Draft House Interior Department and U.S. EPA FY 2016 spending bill contains several policy riders aimed at key environmental regulations, including definitions of navigable waters and fill material http://ow.ly/O5II1 (related articles under "Federal Budget," below)
  • Interior Secretary Jewell and environmental groups slam "dreadful" policy riders in House Interior and Environment spending bill http://ow.ly/O7tsS (related articles under "Federal Budget," below)
  • Senate Environment and Public Works Committee approves S. 1140, the Federal Water Quality Protection Act, to "require the Secretary of the Army and the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency to propose a regulation revising the definition of the term “waters of the United States” http://ow.ly/O8jXX (link to bill: http://ow.ly/O8k3K) (also see articles below)
  • Senate Republicans advanced legislation to kill Clean Water Act rule and set sweeping restrictions on waters regulated http://ow.ly/OaynH
  • Senate committee advances bill to overturn Obama clean water act rule after fierce partisan debate http://ow.ly/O8Nqt
  • U.S. EPA asks federal appeals court to reconsider a wetland jurisdictional ruling; story: http://ow.ly/OaAtZ EPA petition: http://ow.ly/OaArF
  • Minnesota's water war: Clean Water Act rule-based battle brews over needs of tourism, agriculture http://ow.ly/OaDxG
  • Agri-Pulse: Farm Bureau analysis says final WOTUS rule should be scrapped http://ow.ly/Odzf6
  • Op-ed: "A frenzy over birdbaths, puddles and the waters of the US" http://ow.ly/OdAYq
Water Resource Management (Floodplains, Dams, Navigation, Wetlands, Flooding, Supplies, etc.) -
  • One year after Water Resources Reform and Development Act passage, uncertainty surrounds key Army Corps projects http://ow.ly/OdFWV
  • Government Accountability Office report: federal agencies have made limited progress monitoring Missouri River basin snowpack, soil moisture following 2011 flooding http://ow.ly/O7zjb
  • MPR: On Tuesday night, the Upper St. Anthony Falls Lock (Minneapolis) ran its final cycle.
    William Lager | MPR News
    Here's an interactive guide to the closing: http://ow.ly/O47Ml
  • End of an era: Upper St. Anthony Falls lock (Mississippi River at Minneapolis) closes http://ow.ly/O7B2N
  • FEMA announces Flood and Pre-Disaster Mitigation Grants; proposals due August 28; Flood: http://ow.ly/O45IW and Pre-Disaster Mitigation: http://ow.ly/O45FC
  • FEMA issues 2015 National Preparedness Report summarizing progress in building, sustaining, and delivering on 2011 National Preparedness Goals http://ow.ly/O46mW
  • Homes, farmland flood in rural northwest Louisiana from overflowing Red River http://ow.ly/Oaya0
Agriculture -
  • Rep. Frank Lucas (R-Okla.): Congress should 'reassess' 2014 farm bill law that pared down conservation http://ow.ly/OdGv6
  • Agriculture and conservation groups ask Agriculture Department to simplify its conservation compliance implementation rule http://ow.ly/O8QkY
  • The trend is relentless-the average age of American farmers continues to creep upwards
     Source: Flickr: Soil Science
    http://ow.ly/NV8IE
  • Federal Reserve Bank: Cropland values in Minnesota and Northern Plains are lower than a year ago http://ow.ly/NV9cC
  • USDA-NRCS plans to revise methods for completing agricultural land wetland determinations in Louisiana to allow offsite determinations http://ow.ly/O4kVS
  • Reinvigorating the agricultural economy in southeastern Minnesota http://ow.ly/O56bS
  • Minnesota Pollution Control Agency seeks comments on proposed Nicollet County hog feedlot that would generate 1.7 million gallons of manure/year http://ow.ly/O8a4I
  • House Agriculture Subcommittee holds public hearing to review the implementation of Farm Bill conservation programs http://ow.ly/ObEWa
  • Minneapolis Star Tribune: Organic farmers see green both in sustainability and profits http://ow.ly/OdBbO
Climate and Weather -
  • We’re all climate change deniers at heart http://ow.ly/O2jX6
  • US drought update: Except for spots in South Dakota, Kansas and Colorado, U.S. midsection drought-free for first time since October 2014 http://ow.ly/wmTdv
  • Montana Farmers Union publishes reports on climate change effects on agriculture http://ow.ly/O15J6
  • National Farmers Union to the USEPA: Climate change impact on farmers is real http://ow.ly/O1pjy
  • Rep. John Shimkus (R-IL): focusing on adapting to, not preventing, climate change would be better use of government dollars http://ow.ly/NV6if
  • Journal Science publishes new NOAA analysis: Data show no recent slowdown in global warming http://ow.ly/O13Eo
  • May was wettest month in U.S. records http://ow.ly/O4gyB
Biodiversity, Wildlife and Invasives -
  • New coalition of dozens of conservation and gardening organizations aims to plant 1 million
    Photo credit: Jupiter Images
    pollinator gardens http://ow.ly/NVxbT
  • South Dakota officials move to remove eagles from threatened list as number of nests increases http://ow.ly/O2bf5
  • MPR News: Programs give farmers incentive to create bee habitat http://ow.ly/O4d73
  • Alabama CDNR report: Northern Alabama’s bat population at risk from white-nose syndrome http://ow.ly/O4p2M (CDNR release: http://ow.ly/O4oUj)
  • House Interior and Environment appropriations bill  directs Interior Secretary to take Minnesota's gray wolves off endangered species list http://ow.ly/O7wrB (related articles under "Federal Budget," below)
  • Fish and Wildlife Service proposes expanded hunting or fishing in 21 National Wildlife Refuge System units (11 in Mississippi River Basin) http://ow.ly/O7Az0
Click to enlarge
In the Cities -
  • Nashville, Tennessee Metro Council rejects contentious $100 million flood-protection proposal http://ow.ly/ObGUl
  • Small Towns, Big Ideas: Reimagining Southeast Minnesota, by Jay Walljasper, explores innovative examples of economic resilience that could serve as models for the entire Midwest http://ow.ly/O56WW
  • New Orleans faces a terrifying future as sea levels rise http://ow.ly/O1b7O
  • Flooding burdens Shreveport wastewater plant http://ow.ly/O7Utx (also: Everything you need to know about Red River flooding: http://ow.ly/O7UTI)
In the States-
  • Deals move Minnesota state budget toward finish line, making no one happy; action needed
    States in the news
    before July 1 http://ow.ly/OaBnU
  • Minnesota state House and Senate scheduled to convene today (Friday) for special session, voting on three budget bills http://ow.ly/OdLuy and http://ow.ly/OdAHp
  • Minneapolis Star Tribune editorial: Legislature 2015: Special interests win, environment loses with Minnesota ag bill http://ow.ly/ObGBO
  • Outmaneuvered: How many of Governor Dayton's Minnesota priorities were sunk in the budget negotiation process http://ow.ly/OdN8a (stream buffer provision one of few surviving)
  • Wisconsin's farm to school program is growing resulting in more access to locally produced foods http://ow.ly/OazjA
  • Iowa lawmakers adjourn 2015 regular session after approving a $7.3 billion state budget http://ow.ly/O14do
  • Missouri Department of Natural Resources to form work group to create state water quality trading framework http://ow.ly/OdHyp
  • Kentucky Department for Environmental Protection solicits nominations for 2015 Environmental Excellence Awards http://ow.ly/NVAa8
  • Kansas Legislature pushes through bill to avert Saturday midnight government shutdown, but state still has no budget http://ow.ly/O12RB
  • Kansas lawmakers drafted a new plan with increased taxes late Thursday night to avoid deep program cuts http://ow.ly/OdM5U
  • Louisiana lawmakers adjourn regular session after approving state’s $24 billion budget http://ow.ly/OdLcM (budget "winners and losers" - http://ow.ly/OdLeX)
  • NY Times: States - including Iowa, Wisconsin and Louisiana - confront wide budget gaps even after years of recovery http://ow.ly/O16eJ
  • State legislative calendars' update by National Conference of State Legislatures http://ow.ly/O1AiN
Gulf Coastal Region-
  • Sens. Vitter (R-La.), Whitehouse (D-R.I.) introduce bill to reauthorize National Estuary
    Graphic: Mark Schleifstein, The Times-Picayune
    Program but at reduced funding level; place-based program to protect and restore the water quality and ecological integrity of 28 estuaries of national significance, including the Barataria-Terrebonne National Estuary in southeastern Louisiana (bounded on the east by the Mississippi River) http://ow.ly/O4bnD (companion to House-passed HR 944 http://ow.ly/O4bgj)
  • Louisiana’s music, wetlands inspire new documentary http://ow.ly/OayGq
  • Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Louisiana to restore Caillou Lake Headlands ("Whiskey Island" Terrebonne Parish) http://ow.ly/OdC4X
Forestry -
Resource Development -
  • Peabody Energy - one of the five largest coal companies operating on the Powder River Basin in Wyoming and Montana -  does not have adequate funds or insurance to clean up its own mining operations http://ow.ly/O4tpj
  • A couple who owns land in North Dakota loses court challenge over Sandpiper oil pipeline, eminent domain http://ow.ly/NV5ue
  • Iowa Utilities Board will likely make a ruling on the proposed $3.8 billion, 1134-mile Dakota Access crude oil pipeline in December or January http://ow.ly/O85gP
  • Thousands of activists march through Minnesota capital in opposition to Enbridge’s planned $2.6 billion Sandpiper oil pipeline http://ow.ly/O1eVD (also see related article, below)
  • Minnesota PUC approves Enbridge's Sandpiper pipeline but still leave open possibility for an alternative route http://ow.ly/O1fR9
  • Fracking and its restriction are creating a new dividing line between U.S. red and blue states http://ow.ly/O1gBz
  • EPA releases Renewable Fuel Standard Program Standards for 2014, 2015, 2016, and Biomass-based Diesel Volume for 2017 http://ow.ly/O7Wyc
Federal Budget  (You can follow the status of all of the fiscal year 2016 appropriation bills on this Congress.gov web page) -
  • House Appropriations Committee releases its Fiscal Year 2016 Interior and Environment spending bill (funds DOI, USFS and EPA) http://ow.ly/O5GRz (see related articles below)
  • House Appropriations subcommittee approves fiscal year 2016 spending bill for Interior Department, Forest Service, USEPA http://ow.ly/O8Oc2
  • House appropriations subcommittee approves Interior-EPA spending bill cuting funding, with numerous policy riders http://ow.ly/O8OG4
  • Senate Appropriations Subcommittee approves Commerce, Justice spending bill; with level NOAA and NSF funding http://ow.ly/OaAQ2
  • U.S. Senate likely to spend weeks on spending bills that have little chance of becoming law http://ow.ly/O7Dkt
Events - Information on all past and future events listed here each week can be viewed in the on-line calendar, located above and to the right (and here as a stand-alone calendar)
  • Building a Water Quality Trading Program: Options and Considerations; June 18, 8:30 AM-noon EDT, World Resources Institute, Washington, DC http://ow.ly/OdJTA (tie-in with webinar available)
  • EPA State Level Nutrient Reduction Strategies webinar: BMP Selection to Solve Identified Water Quality Problems; June 16, 2 PM CDT http://ow.ly/OdIfO
  • Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy second Rural Climate Dialogue/webinar, Grand Rapids, Minnesota; June 22, 2 pm CDT http://ow.ly/O8oqI
  • North American Wetlands Conservation Council meeting re: wetland grants; June 23, 8:30 AM (PDT), Courtenay, BC, Canada http://ow.ly/OaCbm
  • Minnesota Pollution Control Agency Citizen Board meeting, June 23, 9:00 AM CDT, St. Paul, Minnesota http://ow.ly/Oe29K
  • South Dakota Governor’s Agricultural Summit, July 9, The Lodge, Deadwood SD (with Speakers from World Wildlife Fund and Protect the Harvest) http://ow.ly/OdEmG
  • 4th biennial symposium of the International Society for River Science (ISRS), August 23- 28, La Crosse, WI http://ow.ly/O5Mcj
  • CLEAN GULF Conference, New Orleans, La., November 10-12 http://ow.ly/O83tb
e-Newsletters, Publications, Journals, Multimedia  -
  • New book - "Bringing Conservation to Cities" - "explores the new urban conservation frontier" http://ow.ly/O8ly0
  • June 4 Gulf Restoration Network's Gulf Waves e-newsletter http://ow.ly/O1Bvq
  • Montana Watershed Coordination Council June 6 Watershed News http://ow.ly/NVEJV
  • Minnesota Pollution Control Agency Basin Alliance for the Lower Mississippi in Minnesota (BALMM) June 8 "Currents" e-magazine http://ow.ly/O1xuu
  • Minnesota Pollution Control Agency June 2015 Industrial Stormwater News http://ow.ly/O2dLS
  • Mississippi River Delta News: June 8 http://ow.ly/O44X6
  • Green Lands Blue Waters E-News Update, June 11, re: Continuous Living Cover on Mississippi River Basin agricultural land http://ow.ly/ObELj
  • June 11 Tulane Institute on Water Resources Law and Policy TUWaterWays e-newsletter will be posted here (shortly, if not already) http://ow.ly/OdDDJ
  • New EPA Video (YouTube): Science Safeguards Drinking Water from Harmful Algal Blooms http://ow.ly/OazOi (see below)
Other news-
EJSCREEN: New Orleans (click to enlarge)

  • USEPA releases EJSCREEN, an environmental justice screening and mapping tool (includes impaired streams layer, among many) http://ow.ly/O8igt
  • Restore America's Estuaries report: "Impact Assessment: Federal Coastal Habitat Investments Support People, Fish, and Wildlife" http://ow.ly/O5ucL
  • Creighton University Mid-America Business Conditions Index for May reflects energy and agriculture pullbacks; predicts slowing economic growth http://ow.ly/NVz5z
  • Pennsylvania tops U.S. states in turning old rail lines into trails http://ow.ly/O17hv
  • Wisconsin DNR accepting applications for grants to local government, nonprofit conservation organizations to fund land acquisition, recreational development http://ow.ly/O1lFn
  • House Energy and Commerce Committee Republicans ask Government Accountability Office to scrutinize USEPA's environmental grants management http://ow.ly/O1wkK
Politics and People-
  • New York Times editorial: G.O.P. Assault on Environmental Laws; Bill Clinton threatened or used vetoes to block that assault. Mr. Obama should be prepared to do the same http://ow.ly/O4dXE
  • House Minority Whip launches "Whip Watch" mobile app,  gives floor updates information on latest House developments http://ow.ly/ObE6Z
Your Moment of Zen -
Photograph: PMBrem/GuardianWitness

What We Learned This Week - "How sweet it is"

Nitrates from upstream Scioto River farmland prompted a Columbus, Ohio drinking water advisory.  Wetland restoration and protection are cost-effective nutrient runoff "secret weapons." Scientists have found artificial sweeteners in bodies of water around the world. A Senate Committee advanced a bill to kill the Obama Administration's Clean Water Act rule. Sen.   Amy Klobuchar (D) of Minnesota will be one Senator not supporting that legislation.  The U.S. Senate is gearing up to spend weeks working on spending bills that have little chance of becoming law.  "Dreadful" policy riders were included in a House Interior and Environment spending bill. It's the one-year anniversary of the Water Resources Reform and Development Act, and uncertainty around key Army Corps projects remains.  The Upper St. Anthony Falls lock on the Mississippi River at Minneapolis was closed in an effort to block Asian carp.  The Nashville, Tennessee Metro Council rejected a contentious $100 million flood-protection proposal.  Residential properties and farmland flooded in rural northwest Louisiana.  The average age of U.S. farmers continues to creep upwards, while cropland values in Minnesota and the Northern Plains continue to creep downwards.   The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency is seeking public input on a proposed hog feedlot that would generate 1.7 million gallons of manure each year.  Discharges from an Iowa swine manure impoundment resulted in a fish kill in tributary to the Ocheyedan River.  One of the five largest coal companies operating on the Powder River Basin does not have the funds or insurance to clean up its own mining operations. Pennsylvania tops all U.S. states in turning old rail lines into hiking and biking trails.  And last, but not least, data may show that there really has been no recent slowdown in global warming, but we're still all climate change deniers at heart.

Monday, June 8, 2015

Capitol Hill This Week - What to Watch For

Below are the U.S. House and Senate activities currently scheduled for the week that relate to Mississippi River Basin water resources. Wednesday's markup of the House Interior and Environmental spending bill for the upcoming fiscal year should prove to be interesting. First, the subcommittee is working within a $30.17 billion spending cap for Interior Department, Forest Service and Environmental Protection Agency funding; an amount $246 million below current funding levels. Second, this bill historically has become a home for controversial Republican amendments or "riders," such as a one blocking EPA implementation of expanded Clean Water Act jurisdiction guidance or regulation. Past riders would have also blocked the Interior Department from spending money to add high-profile animals (such as the lesser prairie chicken or sage grouse) to its threatened or endangered species lists. Look for more of this same to be introduced on Wednesday.

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.  This page will be updated as warranted.

Tuesday
  • Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee hearing on several pieces of energy legislation, including S. 1218, the Nexus of Energy and Water for Sustainability (NEWS) Act of 2015;" 9:30 AM, room 366 Dirksen Senate Office Building.
Wednesday
  • Senate Environment and Public Works Committee business meeting to consider S. 1140, the Federal Water Quality Protection Act," to "require the Secretary of the Army and the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency to propose a regulation revising the definition of the term “waters of the United States;” 9:30 AM, room 406 Dirksen Senate Office Building.
  • House Transportation and Infrastructure Subcommittee on Water Resources and Environment hearing on the "One Year Anniversary after Enactment: Implementation of the Water Resources Reform and Development Act of 2014;" 10:00 AM, room 2167 Rayburn House Office Building.
  • Senate Judiciary Committee hearing to examine "the Federal Regulatory System to Improve Accountability, Transparency and Integrity” (regarding a bill introduced by Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) that would seek to limit "sue-and-settle" lawsuits by allowing for public comment prior to legal action, and to make it more difficult for third parties to sue to federal government; 10:00 AM, room 226 Dirksen Senate Office Building.
  • House Appropriations Subcommittee on Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies meeting to mark up the fiscal year 2016 Interior and Environment Appropriations Bill (funding the Department of Interior, U.S. Forest Service and Environmental Protection Agency); 10:15 AM, room B-308 Rayburn House Office Building.
  • Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies meeting to mark up the Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, for fiscal year 2016 (funding, among other agencies, NOAA and the National Science Foundation); 10:30 AM, room 192 Dirksen Senate Office Building.
  • Senate Energy and Natural Resources Subcommittee on National Parks hearing on several pieces of legislation, including S. 403, the "North Country National Scenic Trail Route Adjustment Act," to revise the authorized route of the North Country National Scenic Trail in northeastern Minnesota, and for other purposes; 2:30 PM, room 366 Dirksen Senate Office Building.
  • House Natural Resources Committee meeting to mark up legislation (bills to be considered not yet identified); 4:00 PM, room 1324 Longworth House Office Building (will carry over on Thursday at 10:00 AM).
Thursday
  • House Agriculture Subcommittee on Conservation and Forestry hearing on "Implementing the Agricultural Act of 2014: Conservation Programs;" 10:00 AM, room 1300 Longworth House Office Building.
  • House Natural Resources Committee meeting to mark up legislation (bills to be considered not yet identified); 4:00 PM, room 1324 Longworth House Office Building (carried over from Wednesday meeting).
  • Senate Appropriations Committee meeting to mark up the Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act for fiscal year 2016; 10:30 AM, room 106 Dirksen Senate Office Building.

Friday, June 5, 2015

Mississippi River Basin Water Resource Weekly News

~Most of the Water News - None of the Spin~
This Week - Waters Glut
The Obama Administration's release of its final Clean Water Act (WOTUS) rule sets up a new but strangely familiar phase of efforts to thwart the rule, using two tactics. First, legislative efforts to block the rule will continue, in the form of riders or stand-alone bills to de-fund the rule's implementation or to require its withdrawal. Ultimately, however, since this is a paramount regulation of the Administration, the President would very likely veto any such efforts, and there is little chance that Congress could override a veto. Second, given the high visibility of the rulemaking effort, and the number of parties and interest groups that commented on the rule, litigation is likely. In addition to possible suits from industry sectors, look forward to state efforts to block the rule. Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt is preparing to seek an injunction against the rule, and Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge has indicated her intent to challenge the rule. Challenges to the rule will likely argue that the federal government exceeded the authority allowed under the
Clean Water Act in regulating "navigable waters."

It should be noted that environmental groups are pouring through the lengthy rule, and not all have come out decidedly on its behalf yet.  In fact, at least one group has come out against the rule, saying that it didn't go far enough in protecting U.S. waters.

Non-navigable water in the form rainfall continued to dampen much of the U.S. Plains and Midwest this week, resulting in some River Basin flooding, and in dramatic drought relief, which is projected to continue through the remainder of June.

You can find all of the details on this week's items, below, and summarized in one handy, digested paragraph in "What We Learned This Week - "Blosom, we hardly knew ye'."

Up Next - Irregular Disorder
Early year hopes are fading fast for a normalized passage of fiscal year 2016 spending bills first by the House, then the Senate, followed by the President's signature (so-called "regular order"). The House has passed four of its 13 spending bills so far, including an Energy and Water bill (funding the Army Corps of Engineers), and a Commerce, Justice and Science measure (funding NOAA) but the White House has threatened to veto both for various reasons. The Senate has yet to pass any of its individual spending measures, although an Energy and Water bill has been sent by appropriators to the full chamber. The White House has threatened to veto that bill, as well. Senate Democrats, meanwhile, vow to use Senate rules to block the entire appropriations process in an attempt to raise strict spending caps adopted in 2011 under "sequestration" legislation, while expanding funding for Democratic priorities. In other words, don't look for passage of all 13 appropriation bills before the fiscal year expires on September 30.  

Several River Basin states find themselves equally stalled in budgetary gridlock, notably Kansas, Iowa, Minnesota and Illinois, who are embroiled to various degrees in fiscal legislative delays and stalemates.

The work of Congressional committees continues on a variety of fronts of possible interest to Mississippi River followers, and for a glimpse ahead to committee activities already scheduled for next week relating to River water resources, see "Capitol Hill Next Week - What to Watch For."

Noteworthy @UpperMiss Twitter Postings for the Week

Water Quality -
  • Urban and rural interests in Iowa and elsewhere continue to argue over how to clean up
    polluted surface waters http://ow.ly/NHU4c
  • Senate bill introduced stripping USEPA of authority to issue Clean Water Act permits for pesticide spraying over waterways http://ow.ly/NRPWO (link to companion House bill here: http://ow.ly/NRPNl)
  • Dept. of Interior's proposed rewrite of the stream buffer zone protection rule is now slated for a June release http://ow.ly/NiseY
  • Sen. Dan Coats (R-IN) introduces legislation taking aim at Interior Department OSMRE stream protection rule http://ow.ly/Nj9QL
  • US EPA developing app to help water-quality managers and public determine level of toxic algae in water sources http://ow.ly/NI369
  • US EPA extending the comment period on new regulations for oil and gas extraction wastewater under the Clean Water Act http://ow.ly/NLbqw
  • Company accused of dumping oil field waste into Mahoning River tributary expected to change its innocent plea http://ow.ly/NIIqJ
  • Cleanup of a 2013 North Dakota oil pipeline spill will take at least two more years http://ow.ly/NIKvP
  • Minnesota Pollution Control Agency monitoring crews begin 8th year of ten-year effort to assess river, stream and lake conditions http://ow.ly/NiGtc
  • Minnesota Pollution Control Agency: Agencies, cities get creative to protect lakes and streams http://ow.ly/NJmgp
  • Medications, cosmetic ingredients, and endocrine disruptors found in Minnesota lakes and streams http://ow.ly/NL7Jg (from MN Pollution Control Agency) and http://ow.ly/NOQHu  (news article)
  • Minnesota Department of Health 2014 drinking water annual report: 10 percent of state noncommunity drinking water systems have groundwater sources affected by surface nitrate discharges http://ow.ly/NLtt8 (Related story: Minnesota Drinking Water Report Exposes Problems in Some City Systems http://ow.ly/NLvfF)
  • May 2015 Mississippi River-Gulf of Mexico Hypoxia Task Force Meeting materials have been posted online http://ow.ly/NQ4On
  • Kentucky Court of Appeals tells state Division of Water to reanalyze a coal plant's 2010 wastewater discharge permit, curb mercury, other toxins http://ow.ly/NSIyg
Reaction to Waters of the United States Rule
  • Fight over Clean Water Act rule enters new phase http://ow.ly/NI9BZ
  • Rep. David Rouzer (R-NC) introduces legislation to cut EPA funding until the agency withdraws Waters of the U.S. rule http://ow.ly/NMpHT
  • Agriculture, oil and home-building industries line up to attack rule aimed at protecting wetlands and waterways http://ow.ly/NI0y7
  • Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt is preparing to seek an injunction against Waters of the U.S. rule http://ow.ly/NITKv
  • Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge indicates intent to challenge Waters of the U.S. rule http://ow.ly/NIVJ8
  • North Dakota Farmers Union: Environmental Protection Agency overstepped its authority in final Waters of the U.S. rule http://ow.ly/NOG0j
  • League of Conservation Voters launches $300,000 national ad campaign to boost support for Waters of the United States rule http://ow.ly/NLMHx
  • Environment America launches $1.8 million effort in Maine, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Minnesota and Colorado, in support of "Waters of the U.S." rule http://ow.ly/NRNG5
  • Moderate swing vote senators, including Amy Klobuchar (D-MN), remain uncommitted on the Obama administration's controversial water rule http://ow.ly/NOwcQ
  • Senate Small Business Committee approves (by a vote of 11-8) "resolution expressing the Sense of the Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship that the Waters of the United States rule will have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities" Committee meeting web archive: http://ow.ly/NP518 (see this related article: http://ow.ly/NPLk3)
Water Resource Management (Floodplains, Dams, Navigation, Wetlands, Flooding, Supplies, etc.) -
  • Op-ed: Agriculture’s water resource irrationalities arise from lax regulation and mistaken pricing http://ow.ly/NI1pe
  • Letter to the Peoria Journal Star editor: EPA should do better job of protecting wetlands; "block the destructive New Madrid Project" http://ow.ly/NL9sp (also see: Letter to the Editor (Quad-City Timeshttp://ow.ly/NSWyo
  • Rep. Mike Quigley (D-IL-05), Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL) introduce Urban Flooding Awareness Act to direct FEMA, NAS to study urban flooding http://ow.ly/NRCAZ (link to Senate bill: http://ow.ly/NRCO5)
  • As Oklahoma and Texas rain stops, downriver Arkansas and Louisiana brace for Arkansas and Mississippi Rivers' flooding http://ow.ly/NRRNW
  • Arkansas River boat traffic-already slowed by recent flooding-halted after natural gas pipeline rupture http://ow.ly/NSJpr
Photo: Michael Buckner/Getty Images
Agriculture -
  • Farmers and ranchers can get conservation planning help online from USDA on new Conservation Client Gateway http://ow.ly/NIRNP
  • Neil Young looking to release an entire album dedicated to slamming agrochemical corporation Monsanto - working title "The Monsanto Years" http://ow.ly/NIXor
  • House Agriculture General Farm Commodities and Risk Management Subcommittee reviews the financial health of farm country http://ow.ly/NMmaY (see related article, below)
  • Lawmakers: 'Precarious' farm financial situation proves case for farm bill http://ow.ly/NOAVU
  • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences: Organic agriculture is far more profitable than conventional farming http://ow.ly/NMs23
  • Sen. Charles Grassley calls on USDA to finalize its actively-engaged rule for the 2016 crop year http://ow.ly/NMNjZ
  • There's a nitrogen pollution link between a dairy farm on Colorado's Eastern Plains and biological weirding in Rocky Mountain National Park http://ow.ly/NOtii
Climate and Weather -
Click to enlarge
  • Drought relief continues in water-logged Midwest, and southern, northern and central Plains, including most of Kansas and Oklahoma http://ow.ly/wmTdv
  • NOAA Climate Prediction Center monthly drought outlook for June: Across the Nation's midsection, forecasts favor continued pattern of near to above average precipitation, leading to further drought reductions http://ow.ly/q3yAx
  • NOAA 2015 Atlantic Hurricane Season Outlook predicts below average number of storms http://ow.ly/NI4xN
  • Decades of quiet hurricane seasons for many Gulf and East Coast cities have some worried that residents are unprepared http://ow.ly/NJrzN
  • Amendment approved to House Commerce spending bill "Prohibits funds from being used to implement, administer, or carry out  the National Climate Assessment, the IPCC report, the UN's Agenda 21, and the Social Cost of Carbon, etc." http://ow.ly/NOqCQ
  • Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee "going to try to build a broader Western water package" http://ow.ly/NOvwC
  • Eight maps that reveal Americans' incoherent opinions on climate change http://ow.ly/NOOBe
  • Brookings Institution: U.S. population surging in drought-stricken areas http://ow.ly/NRzgu
Biodiversity, Wildlife and Invasives -
Source: United States Geological Survey
In the Cities -
  • Nashville, Tennessee debates how to prevent another devastating flood http://ow.ly/NIFeD
  • Nashville hopes to make "The Nations" neighborhood more resilient to weather-related events by creating green alleys http://ow.ly/NJgNe
  • Hannibal: the Mississippi River town where Mark Twain = $$$ http://ow.ly/NUAqd
  • Greening the Pittsburgh Wet Weather Plan Charrette Project addressed overflow of sewage into area rivers http://ow.ly/NJhL8
In the States-
  • Minnesota Gov. Dayton vetoes two major budget bills, including agriculture-and-environment
    States in the news this week
    bill containing stream buffer provision http://ow.ly/NIJRX
  • Minnesota state Joint House-Senate Committee meeting today (Friday) to consider vetoed/unfinished state spending bills http://ow.ly/NUCbf
  • Bike advocates are fuming at a possible Wisconsin budget measure to impose a $25 tax on new bikes http://ow.ly/NhZk0
  • Wisconsin Joint Finance Committee restores some of Governor’s proposed  Stewardship Fund cuts; limits shoreline zoning protections http://ow.ly/NJauS (link to spending bill: http://ow.ly/NJbun)
  • Wisconsin Finance Committee reduces level of cuts proposed by Governor for University of Wisconsin Cooperative Extension program http://ow.ly/NOH7y
  • Wisconsin proposes "quicker, less expensive" general permit covering maintenance dredging of navigable waterways http://ow.ly/NJlx5
  • Wisconsin creating Office of Open Government to help public obtain government records more quickly and consistently http://ow.ly/NOJBC
  • Iowa Legislature appears headed toward an extended session as House-Senate state budget deadlock continues http://ow.ly/NLzEU
  • Illinois legislative session ends with an unresolved, $3 billion state budget deficit http://ow.ly/NL8dW
  • Divided state legislatures produce gridlock, not compromise - except in Kentucky http://ow.ly/NLAkf
  • New Missouri agricultural law brings into question the degree of lobbying influence on state legislators http://ow.ly/NIj17
  • Missouri Coalition for the Environment's Missouri Legislative Wrap-up http://ow.ly/NPHx9
  • Kansas Governor proposes income tax cut and raises sales tax in a bid to overcome fierce legislative divisions and delays over state budget http://ow.ly/NLB3V
  • Monthly revenue from oil taxes has fallen by from 45-75 percent in top 10 oil-producing states since last July (including Oklahoma, North Dakota, Louisiana and Kansas) http://ow.ly/Nirvj
  • The Myth of State Policy Innovation: often, policies are replicated among states with little attention to their efficacy http://ow.ly/NIfpm
Gulf Coastal Region-
  • NASA’s series of stark satellite images, its “World of Change” project, reveals years of Louisiana coastal change http://ow.ly/NHZV7
  • National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration offers $9 million in competitive grants to help coastal communities deal with weather, climate hazards (proposal deadline July 24) http://ow.ly/NIadh
  • House approves bill to reauthorize but cut $8 million in funding for U.S. EPA National Estuary Program, a place-based program to protect and restore the water quality and ecological integrity of 28 estuaries of national significance, including the Barataria-Terrebonne National Estuary in southeastern Louisiana (bounded on the east by the Mississippi River)  http://ow.ly/NLfUf
  • Louisiana coastal authority awards three grants for research on river diversions and soil strength http://ow.ly/NPNFX
Forestry -
  • Forest Service proposes to improve habitat, species makeup in Chequamegon-Nicolet National Forest, Wisconsin, Townsend Project http://ow.ly/NJv4r
Map source: USGS
Resource Development -
  • Department of Interior releases Wyoming Powder River Basin Regional Management Plan including 28 new coal leases http://ow.ly/NHYSm
  • North Dakota will begin holding public hearings on a proposed 1,134-mile, $3.78 billion Dakota Access Pipeline http://ow.ly/NhYqb
  • EPA releases 2014, 2015 and 2016 fuel volumes under the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS); background article: http://ow.ly/NIaR1 (also see article below)
  • House Agriculture Committee Ranking Member Collin Peterson: RFS Announcement a Setback for Rural America http://ow.ly/NIc8I
  • After fighting off plan to sell, Minnesota farmers increase their investment in a cooperatively owned ethanol plant http://ow.ly/NIFGC
  • Report finds that Wisconsin supplied nearly half of U.S. demand for frac sand in 2014 http://ow.ly/NIH3o
  • Illinois lawmakers approve bill requiring study of frac sand mining impacts; citizen group says bill doesn't go far enough http://ow.ly/NLDGf
  • EPA releases Draft Assessment on the Potential Impacts to Drinking Water Resources from Hydraulic Fracturing Activities; but has not caused "widespread" impacts http://ow.ly/NSyf8 (Related news article below)
  • Environmental Protection Agency concludes that hydraulic fracturing has not caused major harm to drinking water supplies http://ow.ly/NUAVT
  • USDA announces restart of Biomass Crop Assistance Program (BCAP), which was reauthorized by 2014 Farm Bill http://ow.ly/NJmzk
  • Minnesota tribes press concerns over Sandpiper pipeline plan, wild rice http://ow.ly/NLCmA (related article below)
  • Minnesota Public Utilities Commission expected to vote this Friday (June 5) on a proposed crude oil pipeline; Friends of the Headwaters opposes the project http://ow.ly/NONyQ
  • State says coal operator is making progress in addressing a record number of environmental violations at Kentucky strip mines http://ow.ly/NOSqb
Federal Budget -  (You can follow the status of all of the fiscal year 2016 appropriation bills on this Congress.gov web page)
  • Senate Energy and Water fiscal year 2016 appropriations report (with Army Corps of
    Photo: Shutterstock
    Engineers spending details) as approved by Senate Appropriation Committee http://ow.ly/NiL1O
  • White House Office of Management and Budget outlines "serious concerns" with Senate energy and water development spending bill http://ow.ly/NOvlx
  • House passes FY 2016 spending bill for Departments of Commerce and Justice, Science, and Related Agencies http://ow.ly/NRBnT (link to bill: http://ow.ly/NRBaG)  Bill includes $5.2 billion for NOAA, which is $274 million below this fiscal year's enacted level, and $7.4 billion for the National Science Foundation; an increase of $50 million above fiscal year 2015 and $329.3 million below the President's request.
  • White House objects to, threatens to veto House Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act http://ow.ly/NS6wF
Events - Information on all past and future events listed here each week can be viewed in the on-line calendar, located above and to the right (and here as a stand-alone calendar)
  • National Great Rivers Research and Education Center ecologist will speak on River issues at Piasa Palisades Group of the Sierra Club event, June 8, 7:30 PM CT,  Alton, Illinois http://ow.ly/NQ6q5
  • Association of State Wetland Managers Improving Wetland Restoration Success webinar: Riverine/Riparian Wetland Restoration; June 9, 3 PM ET http://ow.ly/NOs5T
  • Ohio State U Climate Change Webinar: Assessing Green Infrastructure Costs and Benefits in Toledo, OH and Duluth, MN; June 16, noon ET http://ow.ly/NOIPb
  • Louisiana Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority Board meeting, June 17, 9:30 AM CDT, State Capitol, House Committee Room 1, 900 North Third Street, Baton Rouge, LA 70802 http://ow.ly/NRDu4
  • USDA Black Hills National Forest Advisory Board meeting,  June 17, 1 PM, CDT, U.S. Forest Service, 8221 S. Highway 16, Rapid City, SD http://ow.ly/NLpO7
  • USEPA will hold a hearing on the  2014, 2015, and 2016 Renewable Fuel Standards,  Kansas City, Kansas, June 25, 9 AM CDT http://ow.ly/NRLNw
  • USEPA webinar: Building Public Support for the Value of Water Infrastructure, June 25, 1 PM EDT http://ow.ly/NRGQF
  • Great Mississippi River Photo Shoot, July 4, all day along the Mississippi River from the source to the Gulf http://ow.ly/NOMpb
  • Water Environment Federation webinar: Advances in Water Quality Trading as a Flexible Compliance Tool. July 8, 1-3 pm EDT http://ow.ly/NSOXQ
  • Ecological Society of America Annual Meeting, Baltimore, MD; August 9-14 http://ow.ly/NUBni
  • USEPA Science Advisory Board Hydraulic Fracturing Research Advisory Panel public teleconferences: Sept. 30, Oct. 1 and 19; Washington, DC public meeting: Oct. 29-30 http://ow.ly/NUDzt
  • Emerging Contaminants Summit, March 1–2, 2016, Westminster, Colorado http://ow.ly/NRQVF
  •  National Water Quality Monitoring Council 10th National Monitoring Conference: Working Together for Clean Water, May 2-6, 2016, Tampa, Florida http://ow.ly/NMHwN
e-Newsletters, Publications, Journals, Multimedia  -
Other news-
  • House Majority Leader McCarthy announces his June House agenda http://ow.ly/NJ0fn (includes Improving Coal Combustion Residuals Regulation Act) 
  • White House lays out regulatory plan for coming year in its Unified Agenda; story: http://ow.ly/NjaMn (link to agenda: http://ow.ly/NjaHu)  
  • Interior Secretary Sally Jewell continues campaign to prompt Congress to reauthorize, fully fund Land and Water Conservation Fund http://ow.ly/NjacD
  • Washington Post: Which federal agencies actually will respond to your requests for information and which won’t http://ow.ly/NJnXL
  • House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman criticizes Administration for its handling of FOIA requests http://ow.ly/NRDVK
Politics and People-
Source: Missouri History Museum
  • Leo Drey-who donated 146,000 forested Missouri acres to foundation to protect the lands for the public-dies at 98 http://ow.ly/NJq5x
  • Remembering Leo Drey, Missouri Coalition for the Environment's first President http://ow.ly/NMInU
  • Trent Kelly (R) wins Mississippi first district special congressional election; will finish the term of the late Alan Nunnelee http://ow.ly/NOphU
  • Kentucky Agriculture Commissioner James Comer concedes state's Republican gubernatorial race to Matt Bevin http://ow.ly/NISRT
  • Environmental Defense Fund names Diane Regas as its new executive director, http://ow.ly/NJpzL
  • Pennsylvania senate confirms Governor’s nominee, John Quigley, to head  Department of Environmental Protection http://ow.ly/NSK85
  • Pew Research poll: Millennials rely on Facebook for their news far more than any other source and are less interested in politics than older generations http://ow.ly/NOC4B
Your Moment of Zen -
Photograph: Zuma/Rex Shutterstock

What We Learned This Week - "Blosom, we hardly knew ye'"

A cleanup of the aftereffects of a 2013 North Dakota oil pipeline spill will take at least two more years.  Medications, cosmetic ingredients, and endocrine disruptors have been found in Minnesota lakes and streams, while ten percent of the state's non-community drinking water systems have groundwater sources affected by surface nitrate discharges.  Minnesota Governor Dayton vetoed an agriculture-and-environment budget bill that contained parts of his stream buffer zone initiative.  The Clean Water Act rule fight has entered a new phase, which looks eerily similar to the earlier phases.  Dairy farms on Colorado's Eastern Plains are prompting nitrogen enrichment and "biological weirding" in the Rocky Mountain National Park.  The White House objected to a House Commerce, Justice and Science spending bill  and expressed "serious concerns" with a Senate energy and water development spending bill.  Five invasive bighead carp were found in the St. Croix River, seven miles upstream from where they had been previously detected.  "Blosom," the world's tallest cow, passed on to the big pasture in the sky after holding the title for less than a year. Wisconsin plans to create an Office of Open Government to help the public obtain government records more quickly and consistently, while the Obama Administration was severely criticized for not being too quick or consistent in answering records' requests.  State legislatures in Kansas, Iowa and Illinois are mired in budget gridlocks, but that's not the case in Kentucky.  Drought relief continued in the water-logged mid-section of the U.S. and the relief is predicted to continue through the month of June. Oklahoma and Texas rain eased, and Arkansas and Louisiana braced for downriver flooding. Organic agriculture is far more profitable than conventional farming.  And last but not least, Neil Young is looking to release an entire album dedicated to the agrochemical corporation, Monsanto.

Tuesday, June 2, 2015

UPDATED: Capitol Hill This Week - What to Watch For

Both the U.S. House and Senate return this week from their Memorial Day recesses, and below are their activities currently scheduled for the week that relate to Mississippi River Basin water resources.

In addition to the committee activities listed, the House on Monday passed H.R. 944, a bill to reauthorize the National Estuary Program - a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency place-based program to protect and restore the water quality and ecological integrity of 28 estuaries of national significance, including the Barataria-Terrebonne National Estuary in southeastern Louisiana (bounded on the east by the Mississippi River).  H.R. 944 would cut $8 million from the National Estuary Program's current level of funding.

Staring on Tuesday, the House is also planning to debate and vote this week on a fiscal year 2016 appropriations bill relating to Mississippi River water resources: H.R.2578 - the "Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act." That bill would provide funding for, among other agencies, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the National Science Foundation.  The White House has threatened to veto the bill if passed by Congress in its present form.  The White House objections to H.R. 2578 are based, in part, on the bill's funding level for NOAA's Procurement, Acquisition, and Construction program, "which precludes needed long-term infrastructure investments to collect critical environmental data," and on the "funding levels provided for the National Ocean Service and climate research programs, which are 15 percent and 32 percent below the FY 2016 Budget request, respectively."

Links are provided to the relevant committee web pages, and, where applicable, to pieces of legislation. Many Congressional proceedings are webcast live, and these should be, as well (follow the appropriate link).  All times are Eastern.  This page will be updated as warranted. 

Monday
  • House Rules Committee meeting to set the rules for House debate of H.R. 2578, the Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2016; 5:00 PM, room H-313 The Capitol.
Tuesday
  • House Agriculture Subcommittee on General Farm Commodities and Risk Management hearing on the "Financial Health of Farm Country;" 10:00 AM, room 1300 Longworth House Office Building.
  • Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee hearing "to receive testimony on the status of drought conditions throughout the western United States and actions states and others are taking to address them;" 10:00 AM, room 366 Dirksen Senate Office Building.
  • House Oversight and Government Reform Committee hearing on "Ensuring Transparency through the Freedom of Information Act;" 2:00 PM, room 2154 Rayburn House Office Building (continues on Wednesday).
Wednesday
  • House Oversight and Government Reform Committee hearing on "Ensuring Transparency through the Freedom of Information Act;" 9:00 AM, room 2154 Rayburn House Office Building.
  • Senate Small Business and Entrepreneurship Committee business meeting to consider (among other items) a "resolution expressing the Sense of the Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship that the Waters of the United States rule will have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities;" 10:00 AM, room 428A Russell Senate Office Building.
  • House Natural Resources Subcommittee on Federal Lands hearing on a Discussion Draft: "Returning Resilience to our Overgrown, Fire-prone National Forests Act of 2015;" 2:00 PM, room 1324 Longworth House Office Building.
Thursday
  • House Science, Space, and Technology Committee hearing on "EPA Regulatory Overreach: Impacts on American Competitiveness" (including consideration of the impacts of the Clean Water Act jurisdiction ("Waters of the United States") rule); 9:00 AM, room 2318 Rayburn House Office Building.
  • Senate Homeland Security Subcommittee on Regulatory Affairs and Federal Management hearing "Examining Practical Solutions to Improve the Federal Regulatory Process;" 1:15 PM, room 342, Dirksen Senate Office Building.