Other short titles | Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972 |
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Long title | An Act to amend the Federal Water Pollution Control Act. |
Acronyms (colloquial) | CWA |
Enacted by | the 92nd United States Congress |
Effective | October 18, 1972 |
Citations | |
Public law | 92-500 |
Statutes at Large | 86 Stat. 816 |
Codification | |
Acts amended | Federal Water Pollution Control Act |
Titles amended | 33 U.S.C.: Navigable Waters |
U.S.C. sections created | 33 U.S.C. §§ 1251–1387 |
U.S.C. sections amended | 33 U.S.C. ch. 23 § 1151 |
Legislative history | |
| |
Major amendments | |
Clean Water Act of 1977; Water Quality Act of 1987 | |
United States Supreme Court cases | |
|
The Clean Water Act (CWA) is the primary federal law in the United States governing water pollution. Its objective is to restore and maintain the chemical, physical, and biological integrity of the nation's waters by preventing point and nonpoint pollution sources (though it does not enable the control of nonpoint sources); recognizing the responsibilities of the states in addressing pollution and providing assistance to states to do so, including funding for publicly owned treatment works for the improvement of wastewater treatment; and maintaining the integrity of wetlands. It is one of the United States' first and most influential modern environmental laws. As with many other major U.S. federal environmental statutes, it is administered by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), in coordination with state governments. Its implementing regulations are codified at 40 C.F.R. Subchapters D, N, and O (Parts 100-140, 401-471, and 501-503).
Technically, the name of the law is the Federal Water Pollution Control Act. The first FWPCA was enacted in 1948, but took on its modern form when completely rewritten in 1972 in an act entitled the Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972. Major changes have subsequently been introduced via amendatory legislation including the Clean Water Act of 1977 and the Water Quality Act of 1987.
The Clean Water Act does not directly address groundwater contamination. Groundwater protection provisions are included in the Safe Drinking Water Act, Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, and the Superfund act.
Background
Health implications of water pollution
Contamination of drinking water
supplies can not only occur in the source water but also in the
distribution system. Sources of water contamination include naturally
occurring chemicals and minerals (arsenic, radon, uranium), local land
use practices (fertilizers, pesticides, concentrated feeding
operations), manufacturing processes, and sewer overflows or wastewater
releases. Some examples of health implications of water contamination
are gastrointestinal illness, reproductive problems, and neurological
disorders. Infants, young children, pregnant women, the elderly, and
people whose immune systems are compromised because of AIDS,
chemotherapy, or transplant medications, may be especially susceptible
to illness from some contaminants.
Gastrointestinal illness
Gastrointestinal disorders
include such conditions as constipation, irritable bowel syndrome,
hemorrhoids, anal fissures, perianal abscesses, anal fistulas, perianal
infections, diverticular diseases, colitis, colon polyps and cancer.
In general, children and the elderly are at highest risk for
gastrointestinal disease. In a study investigating the association
between drinking water quality and gastrointestinal illness in the
elderly of Philadelphia, scientists found water quality 9 to 11 days
before the visit was negatively associated with hospital admissions for
gastrointestinal illness, with an interquartile range increase in turbidity
being associated with a 9% increase). The association was stronger in
those over 75 than in the population aged 65–74. This example is a small
reflection of residents of the United States remain at risk of
waterborne gastrointestinal illness under current water treatment
practices.
Reproductive problems
Reproductive problems refer to any illness of the reproductive system.
New research by Brunel University and the University of Exeter
strengthens the relationship between water pollution and rising male
fertility problems. Study identified a group of chemicals that act as
anti-androgens in polluted water, which inhibits the function of the
male hormone, testosterone, reducing male fertility.
Neurological disorders
Neurological disorders
are diseases of the brain, spine and the nerves that connect them. The
new study of more than 700 people in California’s Central Valley found
that those who likely consumed contaminated private well water had a
higher rate of Parkinson’s. The risk was 90 percent higher for those who
had private wells near fields sprayed with widely used insecticides.
Unlike water supplies in large cities, private wells are mostly
unregulated and are not monitored for contaminants. Many of them exist
at shallow depths of less than 20 yards, and some of the crop chemicals
used to kill pests and weeds can flow into ground water. Therefore,
private wells are likely to contain pesticides, which can attack
developing brains (womb or infancy), leading to neurological diseases
later in life. A study led by UCLA epidemiology professor Beate Ritz
suggests that "people with Parkinson’s were more likely to have consumed
private well water, and had consumed it on average 4.3 years longer
than those who did not have the disease."
Waters protected
All
waters with a "significant nexus" to "navigable waters" are covered
under the CWA; however, the phrase "significant nexus" remains open to
judicial interpretation and considerable controversy. The 1972 statute
frequently uses the term "navigable waters" but also defines the term as
"waters of the United States, including the territorial seas." Some regulations interpreting the 1972 law have included water features such as intermittent streams, playa lakes, prairie potholes, sloughs and wetlands as "waters of the United States." In 2006, in Rapanos v. United States, a plurality of the US Supreme Court
held that the term "waters of the United States" "includes only those
relatively permanent, standing or continuously flowing bodies of water
'forming geographic features' that are described in ordinary parlance as
'streams[,]... oceans, rivers, [and] lakes.'"
Pollution control strategy
Point sources
The CWA introduced the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES), which is a permit system for regulating point sources of pollution. Point sources include:
- industrial facilities (including manufacturing, mining, shipping activities, oil and gas extraction and service industries).
- municipal governments (particularly sewage treatment plants) and other government facilities (such as military bases), and
- some agricultural facilities, such as animal feedlots.
Point sources may not discharge pollutants to surface waters without a
permit from the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System
(NPDES). That system is managed by the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in partnership with state environmental agencies. EPA has authorized 47 states to issue permits directly to the discharging facilities. The CWA also allows tribes to issue permits, but no tribes have been authorized by EPA. In the remaining states and territories, the permits are issued by an EPA regional office.
In previous legislation, Congress
had authorized states to develop water quality standards, which would
limit discharges from facilities based on the characteristics of
individual water bodies. However, those standards were to be developed
only for interstate waters, and the science to support that process
(i.e. data, methodology) was in the early stages of development. That
system was not effective, and there was no permit system in place to
enforce the requirements. In the 1972 CWA, Congress added the permit
system and a requirement for technology-based effluent limitations.
Technology-based standards
The
1972 CWA created a new requirement for technology-based standards for
point source discharges. The EPA develops those standards for categories
of dischargers, based on the performance of pollution control technologies without regard to the conditions of a particular receiving water body.
The intent of Congress was to create a "level playing field" by
establishing a basic national discharge standard for all facilities
within a category, using a "Best Available Technology."
The standard becomes the minimum regulatory requirement in a permit. If
the national standard is not sufficiently protective at a particular
location, then water quality standards may be employed.
Water quality standards
The
1972 act authorized continued use of the water quality-based approach,
but in coordination with the technology-based standards. After
application of technology-based standards to a permit, if water quality
is still impaired for the particular water body, then the permit agency
(state or EPA) may add water quality-based limitations to that permit.
The additional limitations are to be more stringent than the
technology-based limitations and would require the permittee to install
additional controls. Water quality standards consist of four basic
elements: 1) Designated uses; 2) Water quality criteria; 3)
Antidegradation policy and 4) General policies.
Designated uses
According
to water quality standard regulations, federally recognized
tribes/nations and states are required to specify appropriate water
uses. Identification of appropriate water uses takes into consideration
the usage and value of public water supply, protection of fish,
wildlife, recreational waters, agricultural, industrial and navigational
water ways. Suitability of a water body is examined by states and
tribes/nations usages based on physical, chemical, and biological
characteristics. States and tribes/nations also examine geographical
settings, scenic qualities and economic considerations to determine
fitness of designated uses for water bodies. If those standards indicate
designated uses to be less than those currently attained, states or
tribes are required to revise standards to reflect the uses thaf are
actually being attained. For any body of water with designated uses that
do not include "fishable/swimmable" target use that is identified in
section 101(a)(2) of CWA, a "Use Attainability Analysis" must be
conducted. Every three years, such bodies of water must be re-examined
to verify if new information is available that demand a revision of the
standard. If new information is available that specify
“fishable/swimmable” uses can be attained, the use must be designated.
Water quality criteria
Federally
recognized Indigenous Nations and states protect designated areas by
adopting water quality criteria that the EPA publishes under §304(a) of
the CWA, modifying the §304(a) criteria to reflect site-specific
conditions or adopting criteria based on other scientifically defensible
methods. Water quality criteria can be numeric criteria that toxicity
causes are known for protection against pollutants. A narrative
criterion is water quality criteria which serves as a basis for limiting
the toxicity of waste discharges to aquatic species. A biological
criterion is based on the aquatic community which describes the number
and types of species in a water body. A nutrient criterion solely
protects against nutrient over enrichment, and a sediment criterion
describes conditions of contaminated and uncontaminated sediments in
order to avoid undesirable effects.
Anti-degradation policy
Water
quality standards consist of an anti-degradation policy that requires
states and tribes to establish a three-tiered anti-degradation program.
Anti-degradation procedures identify steps and questions that need to be
addressed when specific activities affect water quality. Tier 1 is
applicable to all surface waters. It maintains and protects current uses
and water quality conditions to support existing uses. Current uses are
identified by showing that fishing, swimming, and other water uses have
occurred and are suitable since November 28, 1975. Tier 2 maintains and
protects water bodies with existing conditions that are better to
support CWA 101(a)(2) "fishable/swimmable" uses. Tier 3 maintains and
protects water quality in outstanding national resource waters (ONRWs),
which are the highest quality waters in the US with ecological
significance.
General policies
States
and Indian tribes adopt general policies pertaining to water quality
standards that are subject to review and approval by the EPA. Those
provisions on water quality standards include mixing zones, variance,
and low flow policies. Mixing zone policy is defined area surrounding a
point source discharge where sewage is diluted by water. Methodology of
mixing zone procedure determines the location, size, shape and quality
of mixing zones. Variance policy temporarily relax water quality
standard and are alternatives to removing a designated use. States and
tribes may include variance as part of their water quality standard.
Variance is subject to public review every three years and warrant
development towards improvement of water quality. Low Flow policy
pertains to states and tribes water quality standards that identify
procedures applied to determining critical low flow conditions.
Nonpoint sources
Congress exempted some water pollution sources from the point source
definition in the 1972 CWA and was unclear on the status of some other
sources. Such sources were therefore considered to be nonpoint sources that were not subject to the permit program.
Agricultural stormwater discharges and irrigation return flows were specifically exempted from permit requirements. Congress, however, provided support for research, technical and financial assistance programs at the U.S. Department of Agriculture to improve runoff management practices on farms.
Stormwater runoff from industrial sources, municipal storm drains, and other sources were not specifically addressed in the 1972 law. The EPA declined to include urban runoff and industrial storm water discharges in the NPDES program and so was sued by an environmental group. In 1977, the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that storm water discharges must be covered by the permit program.
Research conducted starting in the late 1970s and 1980s indicated
that storm water runoff was a significant cause of water quality
impairment in many parts of the US. In the early 1980s, the EPA
conducted the Nationwide Urban Runoff Program
(NURP) to document the extent of the urban stormwater problem. The
agency began to develop regulations for storm water permit coverage but
encountered resistance from industry and municipalities, and there were
additional rounds of litigation. The litigation was pending when
Congress considered further amendments to the CWA in 1986.
In the Water Quality Act of 1987, Congress responded to the stormwater problem by defining industrial storm water dischargers and municipal separate storm sewer
systems (often called "MS4") as point sources, and requiring them to
obtain NPDES permits, by specific deadlines. The permit exemption for
agricultural discharges continued, but Congress created several programs
and grants, including a demonstration grant program at the EPA to
expand the research and development of non point controls and management
practices.
Financing of pollution controls
Congress created a major public works financing program for municipal sewage treatment in the 1972 CWA. A system of grants for construction of municipal sewage treatment plants was authorized and funded in Title II. In the initial program, the federal portion of each grant was up to 75 percent of a facility's capital cost,
with the remainder financed by the state. In subsequent amendments
Congress reduced the federal proportion of the grants and in the 1987
WQA transitioned to a revolving loan program in Title VI.
Industrial and other private facilities are required to finance their
own treatment improvements on the "polluter pays" principle.
Water Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act
Congress passed the Water Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act of 2014
(WIFIA) to provide an expanded credit program for water and wastewater
infrastructure projects, with broader eligibility criteria than the
previously-authorized revolving fund unter CWA Title VI.
Pursuant to WIFIA, EPA established its Water Infrastructure and
Resiliency Finance Center in 2015 to help local governments and
municipal utilities design innovative financing mechanisms, including public–private partnerships. Congress amended the WIFIA program in 2015 and 2016.
Major statutory provisions
This Act has six titles.
Title I - Research and Related Programs
Title I includes a Declaration of Goals and Policy
and various grant authorizations for research programs and pollution
control programs. Some of the programs authorized by the 1972 law are
ongoing (e.g. section 104 research programs, section 106 pollution
control programs, section 117 Chesapeake Bay Program) while other programs no longer receive funds from Congress and have been discontinued.
Title II - Grants for Construction of Treatment Works
To assist municipalities in creating or expanding sewage treatment plants, also known as publicly owned treatment works
(POTW), Title II established a system of construction grants. The 1972
CWA provided that federal funds would support 75% of project costs, with
state and local funds providing the remaining 25%. In 1981 Congress
reduced the federal funding proportion for most grants to 55%.
The construction grant program was replaced by the Clean Water State Revolving Fund in the 1987 WQA,
although some local utilities continued to receive "special purpose
project grants" directly from Congress, through a budgetary procedure
known as "earmarking."
Title III - Standards and enforcement
Discharge permits required
Section 301 of the Act prohibits discharges to waters of the U.S. except with a permit. Recreational vessels are exempt
from the permit requirements, but vessel operators must implement Best Management Practices to control their discharges.
Technology-Based Standards Program
Under the 1972 act EPA began to issue technology-based standards for municipal and industrial sources.
- Municipal sewage treatment plants (POTW) are required to meet secondary treatment standards.
- Effluent guidelines (for existing sources) and New Source Performance Standards (NSPS) are issued for categories of industrial facilities discharging directly to surface waters.
- Categorical Pretreatment Standards are issued to industrial users (also called "indirect dischargers") contributing wastes to POTW. These standards are developed in conjunction with the effluent guidelines program. As with effluent guidelines and NSPS, pretreatment standards consists of Pretreatment Standards for Existing Sources (PSES) and Pretreatment Standards for New Sources (PSNS). There are 28 categories with pretreatment standards as of 2018.
To date, the effluent guidelines and categorical pretreatment
standards regulations have been published for 59 categories and apply to
approximately 40,000 facilities that discharge directly to the nation's
waters, 129,000 facilities that discharge to POTWs, and construction
sites. These regulations are responsible for preventing the discharge of
almost 700 billion pounds of pollutants each year. EPA has updated some categories since their initial promulgation and has added new categories.
The secondary treatment standards for POTWs and the effluent guidelines are implemented through NPDES permits.
The categorical pre-treatment standards are typically implemented by
POTWs through permits that they issue to their industrial users.
Water Quality Standards Program
The
framework that came out of the Clean Water Act to be implemented by the
EPA and states includes states monitoring their water bodies and
establishing Water Quality Standards for them.
Water Quality Standards (WQS) are risk-based requirements which set
site-specific allowable pollutant levels for individual water bodies,
such as rivers, lakes, streams and wetlands. States set WQS by
designating uses for the water body (e.g., recreation, water supply,
aquatic life, agriculture) and applying water quality criteria (numeric
pollutant concentrations and narrative requirements) to protect the
designated uses. An anti-degradation policy is also issued by each state
to maintain and protect existing uses and high quality waters.
If a state fails to issue WQS, EPA is required to issue standards for that state.
Water bodies that do not meet applicable water quality standards
with technology-based controls alone are placed on the section 303(d)
list of water bodies not meeting standards. Water bodies on the 303(d)
list require development of a Total Maximum Daily Load
(TMDL). A TMDL is a calculation of the maximum amount of a pollutant
that a water body can receive and still meet WQS. The TMDL is
determined after study of the specific properties of the water body and
the pollutant sources that contribute to the non-compliant status.
Generally, the TMDL determines load based on a Waste Load Allocation
(WLA), Load Allocation (LA), and Margin of Safety (MOS) Once the TMDL
assessment is completed and the maximum pollutant loading capacity
defined, an implementation plan is developed that outlines the measures
needed to reduce pollutant loading to the non-compliant water body, and
bring it into compliance. Over 60,000 TMDLs are proposed or in
development for U.S. waters in the next decade and a half.
Following the issuance of a TMDL for a water body, implementation
of the requirements involves modification to NPDES permits for
facilities discharging to the water body to meet the WLA allocated to
the water body.
The development of WQS and TMDL is a complex process, both
scientifically and legally, and it is a resource-intensive process for
state agencies.
More than half of U.S. stream and river miles continue to violate
water quality standards. Surveys of lakes, ponds and reservoirs
indicated that about 70 percent were impaired (measured on a surface
area basis), and a little more than 70 percent of the nation’s
coastlines, and 90 percent of the surveyed ocean and near coastal areas
were also impaired.
National Water Quality Inventory
The
primary mode of informing the quality of water of rivers, lakes,
streams, ponds, estuaries, coastal waters and wetlands of the U.S. is
through the National Water Quality Inventory Report. Water
quality assessments are conducted pursuant to water quality standards
adopted by states and other jurisdictions (territories, interstate
commissions and tribes). The report is conveyed to Congress as a means
to inform Congress and the public of compliance with quality standards
established by states, territories and tribes.
The assessments identify water quality problems within the states and
jurisdictions, list the impaired and threatened water bodies, and
identify non-point sources that contribute to poor water quality. Every
two years states must submit reports that describe water quality
conditions to EPA with a complete inquiry of social and economic costs
and benefits of achieving goals of the Act. The report is organized into
two major sections; Section 1 shows national assessment of each type of
water body, with causes and sources identified. Section 2 summarizes
recommendations on improvement of water resource management.
Enforcement
Under section 309, EPA can issue administrative orders against violators, and seek civil or criminal penalties when necessary.
- For a first offense of criminal negligence, the minimum fine is $2,500, with a maximum of $25,000 fine per day of violation. A violator may also receive up to a year in jail. On a second offense, a maximum fine of $50,000 per day may be issued.
- For a knowing endangerment violation, i.e. placing another person in imminent danger of death or serious bodily injury, a fine may be issued up to $250,000 and/or imprisonment up to 15 years for an individual, or up to $1,000,000 for an organization.
States that are authorized by EPA to administer the NPDES program
must have authority to enforce permit requirements under their
respective state laws.
Federal facilities
Military bases, national parks and other federal facilities must comply with CWA provisions.
Thermal pollution
Section 316 requires standards for thermal pollution discharges, as well as standards for cooling water intake structures (e.g., fish screens). These standards are applicable to power plants and other industrial facilities.
Nonpoint Source Management Program
The 1987 amendments created the Nonpoint Source Management Program under CWA section 319. This program provides grants to states, territories and Indian tribes to support demonstration projects, technology transfer,
education, training, technical assistance and related activities
designed to reduce nonpoint source pollution. Grant funding for the
program averaged $210 million annually for Fiscal Years 2004 through
2008.
Title IV - Permits and licenses
State certification of compliance
States
are required to certify that discharges authorized by federal permits
will not violate the state's water quality standards.
NPDES permits for point sources
The NPDES permits program is authorized by CWA section 402.
The initial permits issued in the 1970s and early 1980s focused on
POTWs and industrial wastewater—typically "process" wastewater and cooling water where applicable, and in some cases, industrial storm water. The 1987 WQA expanded the program to cover storm water discharges explicitly, both from municipal separate storm sewer systems (MS4) and industrial sources. The MS4 NPDES permits require regulated municipalities to use Best Management Practices to reduce pollutants to the "Maximum Extent Practicable."
POTWs with combined sewers are required to comply with the national Combined Sewer Overflow Control Policy, published by EPA in 1994. The policy requires municipalities to make improvements to reduce or eliminate overflow-related pollution problems. About 860 communities in the US have combined sewer systems, serving about 40 million people.
Non-storm water permits typically include numeric effluent
limitations for specific pollutants. A numeric limitation quantifies the
maximum pollutant load or concentration allowed in the discharge, e.g.,
30 mg/L of biochemical oxygen demand.
Exceeding a numeric limitation constitutes a violation of the permit,
and the discharger is subject to fines as laid out in section 309.
Facilities must periodically monitor their effluent (i.e., collect and
analyze wastewater samples), and submit Discharge Monitoring Reports
to the appropriate agency, to demonstrate compliance. Storm water
permits typically require facilities to prepare a Storm Water Pollution
Prevention Plan and implement best management practices, but do not
specify numeric effluent limits and may not include regular monitoring
requirements. Some permits cover both storm water and non-storm water
discharges. NPDES permits must be reissued every five years. Permit
agencies (EPA, states, tribes) must provide notice to the public of
pending permits and provide an opportunity for public comment.
In 2012, EPA estimated that there are over 500,000 storm water
permittees. This number includes permanent facilities such as municipal
(POTW, MS4) and industrial plants, and construction sites, which are
temporary storm water dischargers.
Dredge and fill permits
Section 404 requires that a discharger of dredged or fill material obtain a permit, unless the activity is eligible for an exemption. Essentially, all discharges affecting the bottom elevation of a jurisdictional water body require a permit from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE). These permits are an essential part of protecting streams and wetlands, which are often filled by land developers. Wetlands are vital to the ecosystem in filtering streams and rivers and providing habitat for wildlife.
There are two main types of wetlands permits: general permits and
individual permits. General permits change periodically and cover broad
categories of activities, and require the permittee to comply with all
stated conditions. General permits (such as the "Nationwide Permits")
are issued for fill activities that will result in minimal adverse
effects to the environment. Individual permits are utilized for actions
that are not addressed by a general permit, or that do not meet the
conditions of a General Permit. In addition, individual permits
typically require more analysis than do the general permits, and usually
require much more time to prepare the application and to process the
permit.
When the USACE processes an application for an Individual Permit,
it must issue a public notice describing the proposed action described
in the permit application. Although the Corps District Engineer makes
the decision to grant a permit, the EPA Administrator may veto a permit
if it is not reasonable. Before making such a decision, however, EPA
must consult with the USACE. A USACE permit typically expires after five
years.
Mountaintop removal mining
requires a section 404 permit when soil and rock from the mining
operation is placed in streams and wetlands (commonly called a "valley
fill"). Pollutant discharges from valley fills to streams also requires
an NPDES permit.
Exemptions
After
passage of the CWA in 1972, a controversy arose as to the application
of section 404 to agriculture and certain other activities. The Act was
interpreted by some to place restrictions on virtually all placement of
dredged materials in wetlands and other waters of the United States,
raising concern that the federal government was about to place all
agricultural activities under the jurisdiction of USACE. For opponents
of the Act, section 404 had, as a result of this concern, become a
symbol of dramatic over-regulation.
When Congress considered the 1977 CWA Amendments, a significant issue
was to ensure that certain agricultural activities and other selected
activities, could continue without the government’s supervision—in other
words, completely outside the regulatory or permit jurisdiction of any
federal agency.
The 1977 amendments included a set of six section 404 exemptions.
For example, totally new activities such as construction of farm roads,
Sec. 1344(f)(1)(E), construction of farm or stock ponds or irrigation
ditches, and minor agricultural drainage, Sec. 1344(f)(1)(A), all are
exempted by Statute. Section 1344(f)(1)(C), which exempts discharge of
dredged material “for the purpose of... the maintenance of drainage
ditches.” All of these exemptions were envisioned to be self-executing,
that is not technically requiring an administrative no-jurisdiction
determination. One such example was the maintenance of agricultural
drainage ditches.
Throughout the hearing process, Congressmen of every environmental
persuasion repeatedly stated that the over $5 Billion invested in
drainage facilities could be maintained without government regulation of
any kind. Senator Edmund Muskie, for example, explained that exempt activities such as agricultural drainage would be entirely unregulated. Other exemptions were granted as well, including exemptions for normal farming activities.
Importance of no-jurisdiction determinations
Although
Congress envisioned a set of self-executing exemptions, it has become
common for landowners to seek no-jurisdiction determinations from the
USACE. A landowner who intends to make substantial investments in
acquisition or improvement of land might lawfully proceed with exempt
activity, a permit not being required. The problem is that if the
landowner's assumptions were incorrect and the activity later determined
not to be exempt, the USACE will issue a cease and desist order.
Obtaining an advanced ruling provides some level of comfort that the
activities will have been deemed conducted in good faith.
Recapture of exemptions
Because some of the six exemptions involved new activities, such as minor drainage and silviculture
(the clearing of forests by the timber industry), Congress recognized
the need to impose some limitations on exemptions. Consequently,
Congress placed the so-called recapture clause limitation on these new
project exemptions. Under section 404(f)(2), such new projects would be
deprived of their exemption if all of the following three
characteristics could be shown:
- A discharge of dredge or fill material in the navigable waters of the United States;
- The discharge is incidental to an activity having as its purpose the bringing of an area of navigable waters into a use to which it was not previously subject, and
- Where the flow or circulation of navigable waters may be impaired or the reach of such waters may be reduced.
To remove the exemption, all of these requirements must be
fulfilled—the discharge, the project purpose of bringing an area into a
use to which it was not previously subject, and the impairment or
reduction of navigable waters.
POTW Biosolids Management Program
The 1987 WQA created a program for management of biosolids (sludge) generated by POTWs.
The Act instructed EPA to develop guidelines for usage and disposal of
sewage sludge or biosolids. The EPA regulations: (1) Identify uses for
sewage sludge, including disposal; (2) Specify factors to be taken into
account in determining the measures and practices applicable to each
such use or disposal (including publication of information on costs);
and (3) Identify concentrations of pollutants which interfere with each
such use or disposal. EPA created an Intra-Agency Sludge Task Force to
aid in developing comprehensive sludge regulations that are designed to
do the following: (1) Conduct a multimedia examination of sewage sludge
management, focusing on sewage sludge generated by POTWs; and (2)
develop a cohesive Agency policy on sewage sludge management, designed
to guide the Agency in implementing sewage sludge regulatory and
management programs.
The term biosolids is used to differentiate treated sewage
sludge that can be beneficially recycled. Environmental advantages of
sewage sludge consist of, application of sludge to land due to its soil
condition properties and nutrient content. Advantages also extend to
reduction in adverse health effects of incineration, decreased chemical
fertilizer dependency, diminishing greenhouse gas emissions deriving
from incineration and reduction in incineration fuel and energy costs.
Beneficial reuse of sewage sludge is supported in EPA policies: the 1984
Beneficial Reuse Policy and the 1991 Inter-agency Policy on Beneficial Use of Sewage Sludge,
with an objective to reduce volumes of waste generated. Sewage sludge
contains nutrients such as nitrogen and phosphorus but also contains
significant numbers of pathogens such as bacteria, viruses, protozoa and
eggs of parasitic worms. Sludge also contains more than trace amounts
of organic and inorganic chemicals. Benefits of reusing sewage sludge
from use of organic and nutrient content in biosolids is valuable source
in improving marginal lands and serving as supplements to fertilizers
and soil conditioners. Extension of benefits of sludge on agriculture
commodities include increase forest productivity, accelerated tree
growth, re-vegetation of forest land previously devastated by natural
disasters or construction activities. Also, sewage sludge use to aid
growth of final vegetative cap for municipal solid waste landfills is
enormously beneficial. Opposing benefits of sludge water result from
high levels of pathogenic organisms that can possibly contaminate soil,
water, crops, livestock, and fish. Pathogens, metals, organic chemical
content and odors are cause of major health, environmental and aesthetic
factors. Sludge treatment processes reduce the level of pathogens which
becomes important when applying sludge to land as well as distributing
and marketing it. Pollutants of sewage sludge come from domestic
wastewater, discharge of industrial wastewater, municipal sewers and
also from runoffs from parking lots, lawns and fields that were applied
fertilizers, pesticides and insecticides.
The quality of sewage sludge is controlled under section 405(d),
where limitations are set with methods of use or disposal for pollutants
in sludge. EPA, under section 405(d)(3), established a containment
approach to limit pollutants instead of numerical limitations. This
methodology is more reasonable than numerical limitations and includes
design standards, equipment standards, management practice, and
operational standards or combination of these. Limits on sewage sludge
quality allows treatment works that generate less contaminated
pollutants and those that do not meet the sludge quality standards for
use and disposal practice must clean up influent, improve sewage sludge
treatment and/or select another use of disposal method. EPA has set
standards for appropriate practices of use and disposal of biosolids in
order to protect public health and the environment, but choice of use or
disposal practices are reserved to local communities. Listed under
section 405(e) of CWA, local communities are encouraged to use their
sewage sludge for its beneficial properties instead of disposing it.
Standards are set for sewage sludge generated or treated by
publicly owned and privately owned treatment works that treat domestic
sewage and municipal wastewater. Materials flushed in household drains
through sinks, toilets and tubs are referred to as domestic wastewater
and include components of soaps, shampoos, human excrement, tissues,
food particles, pesticides, hazardous waste, oil and grease. This
domestic waste water is treated at the source in septic tanks,
cesspools, portable toilets, or in publicly/privately owned wastewater
treatment works. Alternately, municipal wastewater treatments consist of
more levels of treatment that provide greater wastewater cleanup with
larger amounts of sewage sludge. Primary municipal treatment remove
solids that settle at the bottom, generating more than 3,000 liters of
sludge per million liters of wastewater that is treated. Primary sludge
water content is easily reduced by thickening or removing water and
contains up to 7% solids. Secondary municipal treatment process produces
sewage sludge that is generated by biological treatment processes that
include activated sludge systems, trickling filters, and other attached
growth systems. Microbes are used to break down and convert organic
substances in wastewater to microbial residue in biological treatment
processes. This process removes up to 90% of organic matter and produces
sludge that contains up to 2% solids and has increased generated
volumes of sludge. Methods of use and disposal of sewage sludge include
the following: Application of sludge to agricultural and
non-agricultural lands; sale or give-away of sludge for use in home
gardens; disposal of sludge in municipal landfills, sludge-only
landfills, surface disposal sites and incineration of sludge. Managing
quality of sewage sludge not only involves wastewater reduction and
separation of contaminated waste from non-contaminants but also
pre-treatment of non-domestic wastewater. Pre-treatment does not
thoroughly reduce pollutants level and therefore communities have to
dispose rather than use sludge.
Title V - General Provisions
Citizen suits
Any U.S. citizen may file a citizen suit
against any person who has allegedly violated an effluent limitation
regulation or against the EPA Administrator if the EPA Administrator
failed to perform any non-discretionary act or duty required by the CWA.
Employee protection
The CWA includes an employee ("whistleblower")
protection provision. Employees in the U.S. who believe they were
fired or suffered adverse action related to enforcement of the CWA may
file a written complaint with the Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
Title VI - State Water Pollution Control Revolving Funds
The Clean Water State Revolving Fund (CWSRF) program was authorized by the 1987 WQA.
This replaced the municipal construction grants program, which was
authorized in the 1972 law under Title II. In the CWSRF, federal funds
are provided to the states and Puerto Rico to capitalize their
respective revolving funds, which are used to provide financial
assistance (loans or grants) to local governments for wastewater
treatment, non-point source pollution control and estuary protection.
The fund provides loans to municipalities at lower-than-market
rates. The average interest rate was 1.4 percent nationwide in 2017,
compared to an average market rate of 3.5 percent. In 2017, CWSRF
assistance totaling $7.4 billion was provided to 1,484 local projects
across the country.
Earlier legislation
During
the 1880s and 1890s, Congress directed USACE to prevent dumping and
filling in the nation's harbors, and the program was vigorously
enforced. Congress first addressed water pollution issues in the Rivers and Harbors Act of 1899,
giving the Corps the authority to regulate most kinds of obstructions
to navigation, including hazards resulting from effluents. Portions of
this law remain in effect, including Section 13, the so-called Refuse Act. In 1910, USACE used the act to object to a proposed sewer in New York City,
but a court ruled that pollution control was a matter left to the
states alone. Speaking to the 1911 National Rivers and Harbors Congress,
the chief of the Corps, Brigadier General William H. Bixby, suggested
that modern treatment facilities and prohibitions on dumping "should
either be made compulsory or at least encouraged everywhere in the
United States."
Some sections of the 1899 act have been superseded by various
amendments, including the 1972 CWA, while other notable legislative
predecessors include:
- Public Health Service Act of 1912 expanded the mission of the United States Public Health Service to study problems of sanitation, sewage and pollution.
- Oil Pollution Act of 1924 prohibited the intentional discharge of fuel oil into tidal waters and provided authorization for USACE to apprehend violators. This was repealed by the 1972 CWA, reducing the Corps' role in pollution control to the discharge of dredged or fill material.
- Federal Water Pollution Control Act of 1948 created a comprehensive set of water quality programs that also provided some financing for state and local governments. Enforcement was limited to interstate waters. The Public Health Service provided financial and technical assistance.
- Water Quality Act of 1965 required states to issue water quality standards for interstate waters, and authorized the newly created Federal Water Pollution Control Administration to set standards where states failed to do so.
When EPA first opened its doors in 1970, the agency had weak
authority to protect U.S. waters, lacking the legal power to write
effluent guidelines and possessing only general authority to require
secondary treatment from industrial dischargers.
Clean Water Act and environmental justice
Executive Order
12898 (1994) states “... each Federal agency shall make achieving
environmental justice part of its mission by identifying and addressing,
as appropriate, disproportionately high and adverse human health or
environmental effects of its programs, policies, and activities on
minority, low-income, and indigenous populations.”
The order is also intended to advocate nondiscrimination in federal
programs that influence the environment and public health, and aims to
provide low-income, minority, and indigenous communities access to
public information and participation.
Case law
- United States v. Riverside Bayview Homes, Inc. (1985). The Supreme Court upheld the Act's coverage in regulating wetlands that intermingle with navigable waters. This ruling was revised by the 2006 Rapanos decision.
- Edward Hanousek, Jr v. United States (9th Cir. Court of Appeals, 1996; certiorari denied, 2000). In 1994, during rock removal operations, a backhoe operator accidentally struck a petroleum pipeline near the railroad tracks. The operator’s mistake caused the pipeline to rupture and spill between 1,000 and 5,000 gallons of heating oil into the Skagway river. Despite not being present at the scene during operations White Pass and Yukon Route Roadmaster Edward Hanousek, Jr. and President Paul Taylor were both held responsible for the spill and convicted.
- Solid Waste Agency of North Cook County (SWANCC) v. United States Army Corps of Engineers (2001), possibly denying the CWA's hold in isolated intrastate waters and certainly denying the validity of the 1986 "Migratory Bird Rule."
- S. D. Warren Co. v. Maine Bd. of Env. Protection (2006). The Court ruled that section 401 state certification requirements apply to hydroelectric dams, which are federally licensed, where the dams cause a discharge into navigable waters.
- Rapanos v. United States (2006). The Supreme Court questioned federal jurisdiction as it attempted to define the Act's use of the terms "navigable waters" and "waters of the United States." The Court rejected the position of the USACE that its authority over water was essentially limitless. Though the case resulted in no binding case law, the Court suggested a narrowing of federal jurisdiction and implied the federal government needed a more substantial link between navigable federal waters and wetlands than it had been using, but held onto the "significant nexus" test.
- Northwest Environmental Advocates et al. v. EPA (9th Cir. Court of Appeals, 2008). Vessel discharges are subject to NPDES permit requirements.
- National Cotton Council v. EPA (6th Cir. Court of Appeals, 2009). Point source discharges of biological pesticides, and chemical pesticides that leave a residue, into waters of the U.S. are subject to NPDES permit requirements.
- Army Corps of Engineers v. Hawkes Co. 578 U.S. __ (2016), 8-0 ruling that a jurisdictional determination by the Army Corps of Engineers that land contains "waters of the United States" is a "final agency action", which is reviewable by the courts. This allows landowners to sue in court if the Army Corps of Engineers determines that the land contains waters of the United States (and therefore falls under the Clean Water Act).
Recent developments
Waters of the United States
In May 2015 EPA released a new rule on the definition of "waters of the United States" ("WOTUS") and the future enforcement of the act. Thirteen states sued, and on August 27 U.S. Chief District Judge for North Dakota Ralph R. Erickson issued a preliminary injunction blocking the regulation in those states. In a separate lawsuit, on October 9 a divided Sixth Circuit appeals court stayed the rule’s application nationwide. Congress then passed a joint resolution under the Congressional Review Act overturning the WOTUS rule, but President Barack Obama vetoed the measure.
On February 28, 2017, President Donald Trump signed documents directing EPA and the Army Corps of Engineers to review and rewrite the Obama administration's "Clean Water Rule,"
which would clarify the WOTUS definition. The agencies were ordered to
reassess the rule consistent with promoting economic growth and
minimizing regulatory uncertainty.
The Sixth Circuit appeals court stay was overturned on January 22, 2018 when the Supreme Court ruled unanimously that challenges to the 2015 rule must be filed in United States district courts. EPA then formally suspended the 2015 regulation and announced plans to issue a new version later in 2018.
Amendment
Effects
To date, the water quality goals stated by Congress in the 1972 act have not been achieved by American society:
- "to make all U.S. waters fishable and swimmable by 1983;"
- "to have zero water pollution discharge by 1985;"
- "to prohibit discharge of toxic amounts of toxic pollutants".
More than half of U.S. stream and river miles, about 70 percent of
lakes, ponds and reservoirs, and 90 percent of the surveyed ocean and
near coastal areas continue to violate water quality standards.
The reasons for the impairment vary by location; major sources are
agriculture, industry and communities (typically through urban runoff).
Some of these pollution sources are difficult to control through
national regulatory programs.
However, since the passage of the 1972 act, the levels of
pollution in the United States have experienced a dramatic decrease. The
law has resulted in much cleaner waterways than before the bill was
passed. Agriculture, industry, communities and other sources continue to
discharge waste into surface waters nationwide, and many of these
waters are drinking water sources. In many watersheds nutrient pollution (excess nitrogen and phosphorus) has become a major problem.
It is argued in a 2008 paper that the Clean Water Act has made
extremely positive contributions to the environment, but is in desperate
need of reform to address the pollution problems that remain.
A 2017 economic study finds that "most types of water pollution
declined [over the period 1962-2001], though the rate of decrease slowed
over time... Our finding of decreases in most pollutants implies that
the prevalence of such violations was even greater before the Clean
Water Act." Several studies have estimated that the costs of the CWA
(including the expenditures for the Title II construction grants
program) are higher than the benefits. An EPA study had similar
findings, but acknowledged that several kinds of benefits were
unmeasured.