FEDERAL FERTILIZER
"NEW CLEAN WATER LEGISLATION REDEFINES THE TERM 'NAVIGABLE'"
"ISSUE:
Rep. James Oberstar (D-Minn.), Chairman of the House
Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, is circulating a 'Dear Colleague'
letter encouraging Members to cosponsor the Clean Water Authority Restoration
Act (CWARA), which would delete the word "navigable" from the Clean Water Act
(CWA)."
"IMPACT:
Under this proposal, the regulatory reach of the CWA would
undergo its greatest expansion since the law took effect in 1972. The CWARA
would grant the Environmental Protection Agency and the Army Corps of Engineers
federal regulatory authority over all "intrastate waters." This proposal would
move the CWA beyond protecting wetlands and waterways, and create legislation
that would regulate nearly every wet area in the nation. This could include
ditches, farm ponds and possibly groundwater."
This very current proposal has a history that most people
should understand before they jump to support it or yawn and wonder if it has
anything to do with them.
The term "Navigable Waters" first appears in the records of
the US Senate on 18 June, 1862 regarding the dredging of rivers to defend the
Great Lakes during the Civil War. The term then goes on over the years to
repeatedly, in Appropriations Bills and New Laws, appear to authorize Federal
dredging and "improvements" to "Navigable" waterways to aid and abet
"Interstate Commerce".
The Constitution (Article I Section 8) gave Congress the
"Power", "To regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several
States". From this original charge for Congress to "regulate" things like
harbors and rivers for purposes of "commerce" evolved the simple practice of
Federal regulation of interstate commerce by, among other things maintaining
safe and deep channels in "Navigable Waterways" for commerce. Also, one of the
stated purposes in the Preamble of the Constitution is for the Federal
government to "provide for the common defense". Additionally, in Article II
Section 2 of the Constitution it states that "The President shall be
Commander-in-Chief of the Army and Navy of the United States". From these
mandates came the established practice of the US Army Corps of Engineers
dredging "Navigable" rivers and bays and coastal channels for the purpose of
sheltering and moving a Navy and providing defensive capability for the nation.
For many decades States were happy to have the Federal
government maintaining water control structures like locks and dams, water
levels, navigation aides, and channels themselves up the Mississippi to
Minnesota and up the Missouri to North Dakota. Business and agriculture were
likewise supportive of this important and beneficial function of government.
From the Hudson to the Sacramento River, Federal projects and maintenance of
"Navigable Waters" were integral and welcome factors until somewhere around the
1960's.
Environmental claims arose in the 1960's that challenged
everything from logging and ranching to hunting and fishing. Federal authority
creation became a popular and effective tool to enforce the "new values".
Federal authority over "Endangered Species" and "Marine Mammals" and "Animal
Welfare" was created out of thin air and under questionable circumstances for
murky purposes. Also, lawsuits in certain more "radical" courts began to get
decisions that "Navigable Waters" (those under Federal jurisdiction and
regulations for most purposes) weren't "only" the waters that were "navigable"
or used for "commerce" or necessary for "defense": indeed, "Navigable waters"
included streams and creeks and marshes and ponds and intermittent wetspots and
everything in between. Radical environmentalists and Federal bureaucrats hailed
this new concept (as more new legislation like the "Clean Air Act" and the
"Clean Water Act" were being drawn up and a new federal agency, the
Environmental Protection Act, was being birthed.
For instance an Hungarian immigrant in Pennsylvania was
jailed for dumping tires in a wetspot behind his business while the entire
"Conservation Community" and State fish and wildlife agencies hailed the new
Federal authority over everything "wet" as the "only hope" for America's water
and wildlife.
Only thing is that, unlike Roe v. Wade, this Court finding
that "Navigable Waters" meant everything damp was itself all wet and under
constant challenges. Hence this latest move by the long-serving and esteemed
Congressman from Northern Minnesota to just drop the word "Navigable" from the
Clean Water Act thereby just making this Act "cover" all water as being under
Federal authority.
This convenient "switch in the night" is virtually
unopposed. Why? Could it be because the state fish and wildlife agencies and
State Natural Resource Departments that "regulate" state waters are in the
pockets of Federal bureaucracies? Is it because state politicians see this as
"good"
for getting "more" Federal grants" or having "federal
regulators" take the heat for planned water takeovers and shifts? Is it because
environmentalists see this as a way for Federal controls over shorelines, and
development, and water use, and "riparian areas", and water-associated wildlife
and fish, and human activities to be strengthened at the expense of state
authorities, local authorities, and private property owners? Could it be that
waterways are ideal units to piggyback future "corridors" and "Wildlands"
schemes on for Federal land acquisitions and easement programs?
Could it be that a state like Minnesota (remember the
ancient Congressman who wrote the letter above is from there) thinks that with
"all" their lakes they will get "lots" of whatever Federal largesse is made
available (too bad about all those lakefront owners and farmers though)?
Think of what this will do in the Northwest where
environmentalists and animal rights groups want to destroy dams and stop salmon
fishing and irrigation and gain more "control of headwaters". Think of what
this will do on the Platte Rivers in the face-offs between landowners and
agriculture versus the state and Federal politicians and bureaucrats in the
hire of the radicals. Think about the few privately owned marshes left in the
Dakotas or the wet woods in Michigan or Arkansas. Think of what this does for
goofy claims like Ivory-billed Woodpeckers in the woods or the "need" for black
bear or panther habitat in Florida. Think of what this means for riparian areas
in Arizona or coastal streams in New England or environmental desires for Maine
timberlands.
All of these areas of contention between the forces of
freedom and oppression will noticeably tilt in favor of a more powerful and
unresponsive central government controlled by radicals. Yes, all because of
"one little word". With the removal of that word it becomes feasible to claim
Federal jurisdiction to adopt "Native ecosystem" standards and "Invasive
Species"
requirements over much broader "Federal Waters". With the
removal of that one little word private property rights are further
jeopardized, local governments become more irrelevant, state governments become
more acquiescent (to Federal direction), and like Zimbabwean government claims
of owning everything our Federal government takes one more step toward
despotism. While Mugabe claims to do it for one race of citizen; we abandon the
tried and true concept of Federal defense of the nation and fostering
interstate commerce for the smoke and mirrors of the radical environmental
socialism of the New Millenium.
Thus does the Federal government grow. Just as laws that
ignore Constitutional guarantees and roles and private property grow Federal
power; so too can a simple erasure of a word in established law serve as a
venue for growing Federal power. Both methods are much like manure and liquid
nitrogen causing growth and then destroying everything as it is overdone.
Jim Beers
28 April 2007
- This article and other recent articles by Jim Beers can be
found at
http://jimbeers.blogster.com (Jim Beers Common Sense)
- Jim Beers is available for consulting or to speak.
Contact:
jimbeers7@verizon.net
http://jimbeers.blogster.com/little_word.html
- Jim Beers is a retired US Fish & Wildlife Service
Wildlife Biologist, Special Agent, Refuge Manager, Wetlands Biologist, and
Congressional Fellow.
He was stationed in North Dakota, Minnesota, Nebraska, New
York City, and Washington DC. He also served as a US Navy Line Officer in the
western Pacific and on Adak, Alaska in the Aleutian Islands. He has worked for
the Utah Fish & Game, Minneapolis Police Department, and as a Security
Supervisor in Washington, DC. He testified three times before Congress; twice
regarding the theft by the US Fish & Wildlife Service of $45 to 60 Million
from State fish and wildlife funds and once in opposition to expanding Federal
Invasive Species authority. He resides in Centreville, Virginia with his wife
of many decades.
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