Having trouble with images or links? Try adding us (in...@peer.org) to your address book or go to: http://www.peer.org/news/news_id.php?row_id=1577
For Immediate Release: Thursday, May
10, 2012
Contact: Kyla Bennett (508) 230-9933; Kirsten Stade (202)
265-7337
LOVE THAT DIRTY WATER: ROMNEY WATER POLLUTION
RECORD
Hundreds of Corporate Waivers to Dump Toxics into Massachusetts Water
Supply
Boston — As Massachusetts Governor, Mitt
Romney gave industrial wastewater dischargers free rein to discharge chemicals
into municipal treatment systems unable to filter them out of the Commonwealth’s
waters, according to documents obtained by Public Employees for Environmental
Responsibility (PEER).
Industries with high quotients of toxics in their
wastewater, such as manufacturers, carpet cleaners and laboratories, did not
even have to monitor chemicals deposited in their wastewater.
Under
Romney and his two Republican predecessors, the state Department of
Environmental Protection (DEP) allowed industries to discharge 1.4 million
gallons of wastewater per day into municipal sewage plants without monitoring or
permitting. In 2006, PEER obtained copies of 278 “forbearance” letters
from DEP telling companies that they need not even apply for sewer
permits.
When PEER revealed the fact that this forbearance practice
violated the Clean Water Act Regulations, the Romney administration abruptly
proposed regulatory changes to formally exempt 90% of industrial sewer
dischargers without even determining the amount of toxic chemicals in their
wastewater. Only after the threat of a lawsuit, the Romney administration
finally agreed to a number of new rules that would require dischargers to report
toxics to DEP and the sewage treatment plants.
The Romney team, however,
left it to the incoming Patrick Administration to establish the precise rules
for industrial toxics discharge reporting. A number of other key problems,
such as allowing large new subdivisions to hook up to failing sewer systems,
were also left to the next governor to sort out.
“When it came to
protecting our drinking water supplies, Mitt Romney was missing in inaction,”
stated New England PEER Director Kyla Bennett, a lawyer and biologist formerly
with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). “His posture was
first to pretend to ignore pollution, then propose to legalize it, and, finally,
when he had no other option, punt to his successor.”
Ironically,
Massachusetts defers to the EPA to administer its Clean Water Act programs,
leaving a minor state role in overseeing public wastewater treatment. With no
action on the issue, Massachusetts continued to suffer from poor water
quality. Thus, during Romney’s tenure only 9 percent of its rivers and
streams were known to be safe for all their intended uses, such as fishing and
swimming, compared with a national average of nearly 60 percent.
Similarly, only a fifth of the Commonwealth’s lakes were safe for fishing or
swimming.
“Clean water is increasingly becoming a scarce resource in
America, presenting a leadership challenge for the next president,” Bennett
added, noting that this report is part of a set of in-depth analyses that PEER
is preparing of Romney actions on air pollution, environmental enforcement,
toxic clean-ups, land use and transparency, among other topics.
“Unfortunately, the Romney track record does not inspire the least bit of
confidence that with him occupying the Oval Office we will see water quality
improvements.”
###
Look
at Romney dirty water forbearance letters
Trace
Romney sewerage flip-flops
View
the state of waters under Romney tenure
See
how the environment fared under Romney