Providing for Congressional Disapproval of A Rule Submitted By the Corps of Engineers and the Environmental Protection Agency

Floor Speech

Date: Jan. 13, 2016
Location: Washington, DC

BREAK IN TRANSCRIPT

Mr. SMITH of Nebraska. Mr. Speaker, I thank Mr. Gibbs and certainly the entire committee, Chairman Shuster and others, for their work on this issue.

I rise today in strong support of this legislation. I certainly appreciate clean water.

However, the EPA's waters of the U.S. rule, or WOTUS, is one of the largest abuses of executive power in modern history and poses a significant threat to America's economy. Under the rule, the EPA and the Army Corps of Engineers will have the power to dictate land use decisions and farming practices of agricultural producers and businessowners all across the country.

To give you an idea of the scope of the overreach and to illustrate why my colleagues from urban districts should also be concerned about this rule, I want to share with you an example of EPA and the Army Corps' abuse in Douglas County, Nebraska, with a population of over 500,000, in my home State. The President also happens to be visiting this county today.

In 2005, the county began the process of submitting the proper environmental permit applications needed to extend a section of road about 1 mile. The project was designated as having the lowest level of environmental impact. However, construction is not slated to begin until at least 2019.

Why the delay? There is a small ditch which runs adjacent to the proposed project. Within the ditch, there is a small rut about 6 to 8 inches wide and no more than an inch deep. It has no ordinary high water mark, and there are no wetland plants growing in the ditch. However, the Corps declared this ditch a water of the United States, costing the county thousands of dollars and numerous years.

This was never the intent of Congress when the Clean Water Act was passed. The act clearly limits Federal jurisdiction to navigable waters. In fact, the term ``navigable'' appears more than 80 times in the Clean Water Act. There is no way one can tell me that an inch-deep ditch is a navigable water.

Congress has a responsibility to guard against these bureaucratic power grabs by executive agencies. This is why I introduced the companion bill to this legislation immediately after the rule was finalized. My resolution gained more than 70 cosponsors, with supporters from both sides of the aisle.

Thanks to the expedited procedures established under the Congressional Review Act, after we vote on this legislation the bill will proceed immediately to the President's desk. My hope is the President will listen to the American people and roll back this new rule.

BREAK IN TRANSCRIPT


Source
arrow_upward