U.S.
EPA Releases San Francisco Bay Delta Action Plan to Address Toxins and Stressors that Harm
Fish
Curbing
pollution and restoring freshwater flows key to improving water
quality
SAN FRANCISCO – The U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency released an Action Plan today that proposes seven measures for
improving water quality, restoring aquatic habitat, and improving the management
of the San Francisco Bay Delta Estuary. The release of the Action Plan follows
the agency’s analysis concluding that existing federal and state water quality
programs are not adequately safeguarding the ecosystem.
“California’s economic security depends on a
healthy Bay Delta,” said Jared Blumenfeld, EPA’s Regional Administrator for the
Pacific Southwest. “By upholding the goals of the Clean Water Act, we can ensure
that our water is fit for drinking, farming, recreation, and for fish and
wildlife.”
The Action Plan responds to findings and
recommendations made following EPA’s Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking in
2011 that sought public input on the effectiveness of existing federal and state
water quality protection programs. The Action Plan prioritizes the following
seven actions to be pursued in partnership with the State Water Resources
Control Board, the Regional Water Boards for the Central Valley and San
Francisco Bay, the California Department of Pesticide Regulation, and numerous
other state and federal agencies:
- By 2013, propose a standard to curb selenium discharges from cities, farms, and oil refineries;
- By 2013, achieve organophosphate pesticide water quality goals in Sacramento County urban streams;
- By 2014, set new estuarine habitat standards, including salinity, to improve conditions for aquatic life;
- By 2017 establish a monitoring and assessment program for water quality in the Delta;
- Ensure that EPA’s pesticide regulation program more fully considers the effects that pesticides have on aquatic life;
- Restore and rebuild wetlands and floodplains to sequester drinking water contaminants, methylmercury, and greenhouse gases and make the Delta more resilient to floods, earthquakes, and climate change;
- Support the development and implementation of the Bay Delta Conservation Plan.
Forty years ago, against the backdrop of fires on the Cuyahoga River, the Santa Barbara oil spill and Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring, the federal Clean Water Act was made law. At the time, Congress charged a fledgling EPA with the goal of making the nation’s waters “fishable and swimmable.” While the agency has made great progress toward that goal, complex problems, such as those facing the restoration of the Bay Delta, still need attention.
A copy of the Action Plan is available at: http://www.epa.gov/sfbay-delta/actionplan.html.
For more information on the Clean Water Act, please visit: http://water.epa.gov/action/cleanwater40c/.
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