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Significant rollback of Kentucky's regulation of water pollution becomes law
Significant rollback of Kentucky's regulation of water pollution becomes law

Yahoo

time28-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Significant rollback of Kentucky's regulation of water pollution becomes law

Opponents of Senate Bill 89 gather by the Kentucky River to voice their concerns, March 4, 2025. (Kentucky Lantern photo by Liam Niemeyer) A controversial bill that would significantly roll back Kentucky's ability to regulate water pollution will become law after the GOP-controlled legislature on Thursday overrode its veto by Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear. Senate Bill 89, sponsored by Sen. Scott Madon, R-Pineville, would considerably narrow the definition of state waters that are regulated by the Kentucky Energy and Environment Cabinet. Madon, with the backing of the Kentucky Coal Association, has touted the bill as a move to relieve industries from housing construction to coal mining of bureaucratic barriers. Environmental groups have lambasted the bill as potentially opening the state's water resources to pollution, threatening the groundwater of hundreds of thousands of Kentuckians who rely on rural public water utilities and private wells. Rebecca Goodman, the secretary of the Energy and Environment Cabinet, had previously said she had 'grave concerns' with the bill. Beshear in his veto message wrote SB 89 by 'failing to protect all water sources' would result in 'pollution, sickness and more dangerous flooding.' Sen. Stephen West, R-Paris, on the Senate floor said he believed changes to the bill made as it advanced through the legislature, after hearing concerns about groundwater pollution, helped improve the legislation. 'We protected our (coal) operators from overreach of the agency, and after listening to constituents, after listening to comments on this floor, provisions to protect groundwater were put back in,' West said. Environmental groups and the cabinet have said the changes made to SB 89 don't go nearly far enough to protect groundwater resources across the state. Democrats opposing the bill referenced a letter from Goodman, the cabinet secretary, who wrote Kentucky would be the only state in the country to cede its authority to regulate water to the federal government. Sen. Robin Webb, D-Grayson, who voted against overriding the veto, said the 'compromise' made to change the bill did not 'go far enough.' 'The origination of this measure arose from agency overreach, but the pendulum now has swung far to the other end,' said Sen. Robin Webb, D-Grayson, who voted. 'I have utilities in my district that rely on groundwater sources. I represent sportsmen and women across this country in the state that have reached out.' Kentucky Waterways Alliance executive director Michael Washburn — in a statement also representing leaders from the Kentucky chapter of the Sierra Club, the Kentucky Resources Council and the Kentucky Conservation Committee — said the legislature sided 'with polluters over Kentucky's people and the industries that rely on clean, safe water.' 'This decision gives coal companies greater freedom to pollute our headwater streams, at the expense of the tens of thousands of homes, farms and businesses that depend on groundwater from private wells in rural Kentucky,' Washburn said. 'To the polluters who championed this bill: we are watching. We have built a resilient, determined coalition — and we are ready to act.'

Public water supplies gain protection but opponents say bill still puts wells, wetlands at risk
Public water supplies gain protection but opponents say bill still puts wells, wetlands at risk

Yahoo

time12-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Public water supplies gain protection but opponents say bill still puts wells, wetlands at risk

Sen. Scott Madon, R-Pineville, left, tells a House committee he worked with the Louisville Water Co. on amending Senate Bill 89. Clay Larkin, an attorney with the Kentucky Coal Association, sits next to him. (Kentucky Lantern photo by Liam Niemeyer) FRANKFORT — A bill that would limit state regulation of water pollution in Kentucky picked up an amendment in a House committee Tuesday morning, but opponents say the changes don't do enough to protect against groundwater contamination while small streams and wetlands would still be stripped of state environmental protections. Audrey Ernstberger, an attorney and lobbyist for the Kentucky Resources Council, told the House Natural Resources and Energy Committee on Wednesday the amended SB 89 'exposes rural communities to pollution risks that could devastate local economies and health.' Senate Bill 89 sponsor, Sen. Scott Madon, R-Pineville, and Rep. Jim Gooch, R-Providence, the chair of the House Natural Resources and Energy Committee, said they worked with various groups to add an amendment to SB 89 after fielding concerns the legislation didn't adequately protect against groundwater pollution, leaving private water wells vulnerable in particular. Madon, speaking before the House committee next to a lawyer representing the Kentucky Coal Association, reiterated his reasoning for SB 89 arguing that industries from farming to manufacturing to coal mining would benefit from a limited definition of what waters the Kentucky Energy and Environment Cabinet can regulate. ​​'The more I learned, the more I realized this isn't just a coal industry issue. These issues are affecting a wide variety of businesses and job creators across the Commonwealth,' Madon said. The amended bill is expected to come up for a House vote Wednesday afternoon. Madon pushed back on criticisms that the bill would threaten groundwater, saying he worked with the drinking water utility Louisville Water Company on changes to the bill. Vince Guenthner, a senior utilities consultant for the Louisville utility, told the Lantern he worked with Senate President Robert Stivers, Gooch, Madon and Kentucky House leadership on changes to SB 89. Guenthner said he believed the changes protected Louisville's water supply along with 'a vast majority' of public drinking water supplies in the state. He said his conversations with lawmakers did not discuss private drinking water wells. The amended SB 89 passed the House committee with all Republicans except one voting in favor of the bill. Democrats opposed the bill, citing concerns from environmental groups that the bill could harm the private drinking water sources of rural Kentuckians. Gooch said he met with the Energy and Environment Cabinet on changes to the bill but that it was his understanding the cabinet believed the changes did not go 'far enough' with water protections. The secretary of the Energy and Environment Cabinet expressed 'grave concerns' about the original version of the legislation. A cabinet spokesperson did not immediately provide a comment on the amended version of SB 89. Gooch said he expects the full House to vote on SB 89 on Wednesday. If approved, it would go back to the Kentucky Senate to accept or reject the changes. When asked about concerns from environmental groups about the amended bill still not adequately protecting groundwater, Gooch told the Lantern lawmakers would be willing to revisit the issue if 'a well is not being protected, especially private wells.' 'Too many people in the state depend on those, and we'll be looking at that,' Gooch said. 'It might be in a couple years we may have to come back and tweak something.' Gooch characterized one environmental lobbyist's testimony as 'hyperbole' during the Wednesday committee hearing. Environmental groups and a representative of a Letcher County nonprofit law firm in Eastern Kentucky in testimony honed in on strong concerns they still had about the bill's impacts on groundwater and the state's water resources at large, asserting the changes didn't go far enough to protect Kentuckians from potential water pollution. The amended version of SB 89, like the original, still changes the definition of 'waters of the commonwealth' by removing 'all rivers, streams, creeks, lakes, ponds, impounding reservoirs, springs, wells, marshes, and all other bodies of surface or underground water, natural or artificial.' The state definition is changed to instead mirror the federal definition of 'navigable waters.' The bill also still sets bonding requirements for coal companies seeking permits for long-term treatment of water leaving mine sites. A U.S. Supreme Court ruling in 2023 that drastically cut the federal government's ability to regulate bodies of water and wetlands led to the Biden administration weakening federal rules on water pollution. Litigation over how expansive protections are under the Clean Water Act has continued over decades as various federal administrations have tried to define 'waters of the United States' in more broad, or restrictive, terms. The bill's amendment expands the definition of regulated state waters beyond the weakened federal standard in specific, limited cases, though not in ways that alleviate concerns from environmental groups. The amendment would add to the state definition sinkholes with 'open throat drains;' naturally occurring 'artesian or phreatic springs' and other springs used as water supply sources; and wellhead protection areas, which are surface and subsurface areas surrounding a water well or wellfield supplying a public drinking water system. Ernstberger in an interview with the Lantern said the specific examples included in the bill's amendment don't account for the variety of geological features involving groundwater such as karst aquifers. In testimony before the committee she said tens of thousands of agricultural wells along with private drinking water wells in rural Kentucky remain vulnerable to pollution. 'SB 89 also excludes off-stream ponds, reservoirs and headwaters. To say that none of these water resources require the same level of protection as our rivers and lakes is not just irresponsible. This is dangerous,' Ernstberger said. Nick Hart, a water policy director for the Kentucky Waterways Alliance, in testimony called on the legislature to preserve the existing definition of regulated state waters and instead take time to study the economic and statutory impacts of SB 89. Rebecca Shelton, the director of policy at the Letcher County-based Appalachian Citizens' Law Center, told lawmakers about how she uses a filter for a water well on her Eastern Kentucky property because the water contains heavy metals and bacteria. She said she's paid thousands of dollars to install the filter and maintain it and worries how SB 89 could impact other private well owners. 'I'm fortunate to have had these choices and the ability to pay for them. Yet I know there are still areas of Letcher County that do not, where households do not even have the option of hooking up to the public water system because the lines don't run to their house,' Shelton said. Rep. Bobby McCool, R-Van Lear, the only Republican to vote against the modified bill passing the committee, cited concerns about private water wells and impacts on utilities for his opposition. McCool represents Martin County that has for years dealt with infrastructure woes with its public drinking water utility. 'I certainly appreciate the efforts in trying to help with the coal industry,' McCool said. 'I just cannot take the risk of hurting the water system.' He said he wasn't confident concerns about private wells were 'taken care of.' Rep. Suzanne Miles, R-Owensboro, who voted in favor of the bill advancing, said the amendment came about from multiple people working on the changes. 'I think it's very important for all of us to recognize we all want clean water, and that is the intent of amending and just reassuring that we've protected the water,' Miles said.

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