Earthjustice criticizes Okeechobee reversal
Contributed by Tom Palmer - Posted: June 4, 2009 4:55:50 PM
http://blogs.theledger.com/default.asp?item=2386011
Earthjustice, the legal arm of Sierra Club, is criticizing a court ruling today that will allow backpumping of polluted water into Lake Okeechobee without environmental permits and plan to ask for a rehearing.
The ruling reverses a ruling that occurred in 2007 that this kind of pollution was illegal. Lake Okeechobee is a major outdoor recreation area and the polluted water from the lake sometimes ends up in Atlantic and Gulf estuaries.
Earthjustice's statement follows:
TALLAHASSEE: Even though a federal judge
ruled in 2007 that "back pumping" polluted water from drainage canals
into South Florida's
"This
is the exact opposite interpretation than that reached by the Second Circuit
Court of Appeal only two years ago. Further consideration by the whole appeals
court panel seems appropriate," said Earthjustice attorney
Earthjustice plans to file for an en banc rehearing, which would be heard by a panel of judges.
"The
public's right to clean public waters is at stake here," Guest said. "
The SFWMD has contended for years that its controversial pumping practice should be exempt from the Clean Water Act.
Today's
ruling comes after a legal battle stretching back more than seven years. The
Florida Wildlife Federation and other groups filed a legal challenge against
pumping into
The
pumps at issue inject a plume of dark-colored polluted water into
The flow rate of the pumps is similar to that of a medium-size river and affects a zone of the lake encompassing 14 kilometers out from the pumps.
The court issued an injunction, requiring the SFWMD to immediately apply for federal Clean Water Act permits if it planned to pump any more dirty water into the lake.
Instead
of complying and cleaning up the lake, the district and Department of
Environmental Protection Secretary
They argued that they shouldn't have to have Clean Water Act permits to pump dirty agricultural runoff back into public waters.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, under then-President George W. Bush, also sided with polluters, adopting a last-minute administrative rule that says Clean Water Act permits for such polluting water pumping are unnecessary.
"This
ruling is a backward step," said Manley Fuller, president of the Florida
Wildlife Federation. "We plan to keep the pressure on polluters. One day
we hope to have a clean