File #: 2010-0600    Version: 1
Type: Motion Status: Passed
File created: 11/22/2010 In control: Environment and Transportation Committee
On agenda: Final action: 12/6/2010
Enactment date: Enactment #: 13381
Title: A MOTION supporting clarification of federal jurisdiction under the Clean Water Act for streams and wetlands.
Sponsors: Larry Phillips
Indexes: Water
Attachments: 1. 13381.pdf, 2. 2010-0600 Staff Report - Clean Water Act
Drafter
Clerk 11/18/2010
Title
A MOTION supporting clarification of federal jurisdiction under the Clean Water Act for streams and wetlands.
Body
      WHEREAS, for nearly thirty years, virtually all natural surface waters were "waters of the United States" and protected by the Clean Water Act, and
      WHEREAS, despite the goals of the Clean Water Act, counties across the nation are facing increased flooding, surface water pollution, toxic blue-green algae outbreaks and contamination of their wetlands and estuaries, and
      WHEREAS, it is a priority in Washington state and King County to protect high quality, diverse and interconnected habitats throughout our lands, river systems and marine water to aide in the restoration and recovery of the Puget Sound ecosystem, and
      WHEREAS, for more than forty years, King County citizens have invested in the clean water by creating a centralized wastewater treatment system that cleaned up Lake Washington and vastly improved effluent discharges to Puget Sound and currently treats an average of one hundred seventy million gallons of sewage per day, and
      WHEREAS, for over twenty years King County has invested in and continued to improve its programs to manage stormwater runoff  to protect people, natural resources and wetlands from damage caused by pollutants and uncontrolled runoff, and
      WHEREAS, King County's groundwater protection program seeks to protect the health and viability of drinking water for its residents and to preserve fish and wildlife habitat by ensuring groundwater replenishment of streams, lakes and wetlands, and
      WHEREAS, King County has embraced and provided leadership in the groundbreaking collaborative efforts to protect and restore salmon runs through coordinated watershed planning and investments to restore and improve habitat by working with local citizens, tribes, technical experts and policy makers to make investments and leverage state and federal funding, and
      WHEREAS, in a concurrent and complementary effort King County's small habitat restoration program has restored and improved streams and wetlands, and provided technical assistance to property owners, since 1995 resulting in hundreds of thousands of plants, trees and shrubs planted along of stream banks, in wetlands, and their buffer areas, and
      WHEREAS, wetlands are among the most productive ecosystems in the world, providing habitats for many kinds of plants and animals, including more than one-third of the United States' threatened and endangered species and more than two hundred species of wildlife and many plant species in western Washington, and
      WHEREAS, wetlands play an important role in providing a number of ecological services, including:  flood protection and control; erosion and sedimentation prevention and control; surface water filtration; groundwater recharge; and support for economic activity that depends on healthy populations of fish and wildlife, and
      WHEREAS, the Clean Water Act's jurisdiction over wetlands and all waters of the United States has been made uncertain by United States Supreme Court decisions in Solid Waste Agency of Northern Cook County (SWANCC) v. United States Army Corps of Engineers and related cases Rapanos v. United States and Carabell v. United States; thereby jeopardizing protection of an estimated twenty million acres of wetlands and fifty percent of all stream miles in the lower forty-eight states, and
WHEREAS, despite the issuance by the United States Corps of Engineers and the United States Environmental Protection Agency of supplementary guidance concerning Clean Water Act jurisdiction, confusion over federal jurisdiction under the Clean Water Act persists, adding substantial delays to valid permit actions and undermining the ability of the federal government and the states, whose wetland programs are legally intertwined with the Clean Water Act, to protect intermittent streams and isolated wetlands, placing many wetlands and streams at risk of pollution and destruction;
      NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT MOVED by the Council of King County:
      A.  King County supports a consistent definition of federal jurisdiction for wetlands and waters of the United States, with reinstatement of the definition in existence prior to the Supreme Court decision on the Solid Waste Agency of Northern Cook County v. United States Army Corps of Engineers; and
      B. Encourages  Congress to act immediately to reestablish Clean Water Act jurisdiction to the full scope of waters protected prior to the Supreme Court decisions,
and to work in cooperation with King County and the Conservation Leaders Network and other interested organizations to resolve Clean Water Act jurisdiction issues.