> Subject: CORRECTED RELEASE: Governor Culver and some Iowa legislators say "yes" to new clean water rules > > > For Immediate Release > February 8, 2010 > > Contact: Lynn Laws, Iowa Environmental Council > 515-244-1194, ext 210 > 515-490-1428 (cell) > > > Governor Culver and some Iowa legislators say “yes” to new clean water rules > Monday’s Decision Caps Years of Work to Protect Iowa Waters > > Iowa—After decades of meetings, letters, delays, and public hearings, clean water advocates gathered at the statehouse in Des Moines this morning to witness the final step in adopting clean water “anti-degradation” rules for Iowa. This morning, the Administrative Rules Review Committee (ARRC) of the Iowa Legislature heard testimony from the Iowa Department of Natural Resources and the public. Senator Merlin Bartz (District 6) moved to object to the rules, but could not garner the six votes needed to stop them. > > “It's time we heard some good news about water pollution in Iowa," said Brad Klein of the Environmental Law & Policy Center, in a press conference prior to the ARRC decision. > > Advocates at the press conference said the rules will provide additional protections for Iowa’s few remaining high-quality waters, for example West Lake Okoboji and several trout streams in Northeast Iowa. > > “Protecting lakes and streams from further degradation is important to our state's natural heritage as well as our tourism and recreation industries. An estimated 11,479 jobs, $242.9 million of income and $424.9 million of gross state product are associated with the spending by visitors to Iowa lakes alone,” said Wally Taylor, legal counsel for the Sierra Club Iowa Chapter. > > Taylor and others said the Iowa rules are long overdue and that they have worked for years to get Antidegradation Rules written and passed in Iowa. > > With the passage of the federal Clean Water Act in 1972 states were required to enact Antidegradation rules to prevent the further pollution of lakes, rivers and streams in the nation by 1985. Iowa adopted rules but the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency informed Iowa that its rules violated federal law as early as 1997. Repeated delays in rewriting the rules led a coalition of environmental organizations – Iowa Environmental Council, Hawkeye Fly Fishing Association, the Iowa Chapter of the Sierra Club and the Environmental Law & Policy Center – to file a Petition for Rulemaking with the Iowa Department of Natural Resources in 2007 requesting that the State act immediately to adopt antidegradation implementation rules. This action initiated a rule-making process that included several opportunities for public comment and a hearing before the Iowa Environmental Protection Commission, which approved the revised rules in December of last year. Monday’s meeting of the legislative Administrative Rules and Review Committee marked what the final step in the decades-long process. > > Advocates who testified at the hearing stressed that the rules will allow Iowa to grow sensibly and sustainably. > > “These rules will stem the tide of declining water quality in Iowa, protect the outstanding jewels that remain, and serve as an economic engine for those communities with the foresight to protect and leverage the potential of these remarkable waters,” said Shannan Garretson, water program legal analyst for the non-profit Iowa Environmental Council. > > Jim LaRue, with Governor Culver’s office was at the hearing to express the Governor’s support of the rules. > > “Iowans care about water quality… Maybe now with these rules water quality in Iowa can start reversing that trend [of declining water quality],” said LaRue. > > --end-- > > > > > > Lynn Laws > Communications Director > Iowa Environmental Council > 515-244-1194, ext 210 > www.iaenvironment.org > > > From: [log in to unmask] [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Phil Petersen > Sent: Friday, February 05, 2010 6:26 PM > To: 'Anitra Wolf'; 'Barbara Tagami'; 'Bill Northey'; 'c Barb Mendenhall'; 'c Brad & Sheryl Jones'; 'Darryl Halling'; Deidre Rosenboom; 'Dick Ramsay'; 'Donna Buell'; 'Duane Moser'; 'Eric Hoien'; 'Greg Drees'; 'Gretchen Graff'; 'Hank Miguel'; 'Jane Shuttleworth'; 'Jimx Keck'; 'Joe Wilson'; 'Michael. Hawkins'; 'Mike Hood'; 'Pam Jordan'; 'Phil Petersen'; 'Ron Walker'; 'Steven R Anderson SFC NG NG NGB'; 'Sue Richter'; Liz Kamp; Anitra Wolf; 'Bill VanOrsdel'; 'Bob Sewell'; 'c Darrell Mergen'; 'c Hank & Jan Grant'; 'c Jason Carlstrom'; 'c Jim Prochaska'; c Kirsty Moen; c Steve Rose; 'c Ted & Kathy Stuart'; 'c Vera Schmitt'; 'Carroll Oskvig'; 'Charles Vigdal'; 'Cheryl & Peter Noyes'; 'Chris Murphy'; 'Don and Paula Brown'; 'Emily Schaefer'; 'Gayle Teskey'; 'Jane Lieb'; 'Jen Johnson'; 'Jim Wahl'; 'Jo Martin'; Joan Gronstal; 'John Wills'; Kathryn/ Fahy; 'Kyle Kannenberg'; Marcy Kelly; 'Mary Ann Montgomery'; Mary Jean Montgomery; 'Mona Knudson'; 'Natalie Hinn'; 'Paula Henry'; 'Penny Nordstrom'; 'Peterx van der Linden'; 'Richard Meyer'; 'Sandra Ladegaard'; 'Sandy McCleary'; 'Smitty Schuneman'; 'Stacy Rosemore'; 'Thomas Gengerke'; 'Tom Parks' > Cc: Igl-Ecology > Subject: [igl-ecology] Protecting Iowa Waters - Millers Bay > > > Des Moines Register Letter to the Editor on Friday, February 5th………………………. > > Yes, indeed, we must protect Iowa's waters > February 5, 2010 > > · > In her Jan. 3 guest column about safeguarding Iowa's most treasured waters, "Protect Iowa's Liquid Gems," Marian Riggs Gelb wrote that we should thank the Iowa Department of Natural Resources for promising to draw the line on "pollution that would harm our few remaining unspoiled lakes, rivers and streams." > > One of the bodies of water she mentioned was Lake Okoboji in northwest Iowa. > > This comes as welcome news to residents of Miller's Bay on West Lake Okoboji, who for the past several years have watched helplessly during the summer as boaters tie up by the hundreds for group partying each weekend, often dumping beer cans, cigarette butts and other trash into the lake - trash that eventually washes ashore where our children swim and play. Not to mention what else is drifting ashore from boaters who are eating and drinking with no handy place to go to the bathroom. > > We can only hope the DNR will follow through on its promise to protect our treasured waters, take a stand and eliminate the practice of massive boat tie-up parties that are breaking the hearts of Miller's Bay residents who want to see the lake protected and preserved for future generations. > > - Dave Cotton, Spencer > > __._,_.___ > Reply to sender | Reply to group > Messages in this topic (1) > RECENT ACTIVITY: > Visit Your Group Start a New Topic > > Switch to: Text-Only, Daily Digest • Unsubscribe • Terms of Use > . > > __,_._,___ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - To unsubscribe from the IOWA-TOPICS list, send any message to: [log in to unmask] Check out our Listserv Lists support site for more information: http://www.sierraclub.org/lists/faq.asp To view the Sierra Club List Terms & Conditions, see: http://www.sierraclub.org/lists/terms.asp