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07/30/2008 08:33 AM     print story email story  

EPA In More Trouble Over Everglades

SustainableBusiness.com News

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, which has been blasted by politicians, environmentalists and the press in recent months for failing to use its authority to address global warming, also failed to protect Florida's Everglades, according to a ruling made by a federal judge Tuesday.

U.S. District Judge Alan Gold ruled in a law suit filed against the EPA in 2004 that the agency failed to adhere to the rules of the Clean Water Act, and instead turned a "blind eye" as Florida delayed its committment to clean up the vast wetlands area. 

Gold said the EPA acted "arbitrarily and capriciously," in allowing Florida to avoid pollution compiance deadlines in 2003, when state legislators amended the 1994 Everglades Forever Act. The amendment pushed back a deadline for reducing phosphorous pollution from 2006 to 2016. The deadline had already been extended once from 2002.

The phosphorous pollution is largely due to fertilizer runoff from farms and development in the region.

The suit was brought agains the EPA by the Miccosukee Indians, who live in the Everglades and Friends of the Everglades. 

Read more coverage by the Associated Press.

In releated news, Four Democratic senators on Tuesday called for the resignation of Stephen Johnson, administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency and asked Attorney General Michael Mukasey to investigate whether Johnson lied in testimony to a Senate committee. 



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