News

September 8, 2010
Newspaper Article

According to a recent Washignton Post article, a new study released on Tuesday, September 7th, shows that the Potomac River is cleaner now than it has been since the mid twentieth century. Much of the improvement in the river's health has been attributed to large scale upgrades at the Blue Plains sewage treatment plant which handles waste from the District and parts of Montgomery, Prince George's Fairfax, Loudon and Arlington counties.

September 3, 2010
Member News

Every year, CWN member organization American Rivers generates a list of America's Most Endangered Rivers™. Ten rivers are selected each year for inclusion in the list, not because they are the most polluted, but rather because they are facing a turning point in the coming year that could negatively impact the river into the future.

August 23, 2010
Newspaper Article

Two Iowa egg producers have been forced to recall more than half a billion eggs following a salmonella outbreak that has sickened close to 1,000 people. According to FDA Commissioner Margaret Hamburg, the companies involved fell short of safety standards at their farms. On Sunday, Hamburg told CNN, "there's no question these farms involved in the recall were not operating with the standards of practice we consider responsible." The salmonella outbreak has been traced back to two Iowa egg farms, Hillandale farms and Wright County Egg.

August 20, 2010
Policy

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Aug. 20, 2010

EPA Releases Draft Strategy for Clean Water

WASHINGTON - The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is inviting the public to comment on the agency's draft strategy to protect and restore our nation's lakes, streams and coastal waters. The strategy, "Coming Together for Clean Water: EPA's Strategy for Achieving Clean Water," is designed to chart EPA's path in furthering EPA Administrator Lisa P. Jackson's key priority of protecting America's waters.

August 12, 2010
Member News

On Tuesday, lawyers for the state of Vermont urged a federal judge to throw out a lawsuit brought by the Conservation Law Foundation that says the state of Vermont and the federal government aren't doing enough to protect Lake Champlain from phosphorous pollution. The suite, which was filed in 2008, names the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency as a defendant and says the phosphorous pollution limits set in 2002 for Vermont were not stringent enough and did not take into account any effects of global climate change. The suit seeks to force EPA to reconsider the limits they approved 8 years ago.

 

August 10, 2010
Member News

Yesterday the Clean Water Network, along with a number of individual groups within the Network, submitted comments to the Army Corps of Engineers on the Draft Feasibility Report and Environmental Impact Statement on the Fargo-Moorehead Metropolitan Area Flood Risk Management Project on the Red River of the North. The comments call for the Corps to depart from the traditional structural approach diversion canal favored in the draft EIS, and instead fully-evaluate and implement a more modern restoration solution. These modern solutions can solve the flooding issues in these communities at a fraction of the cost, while generating ancillary social, economic, environmental and public health benefits.

Click HERE to read the full comments submitted.

August 10, 2010
Member News

On Monday, August 9th, the Healing Our Waters-Great lakes Coalition and the Sierra Club released a new report "Turning the Tide: Investing in Wastewater Infrastructure to Create Jobs and Solve the Sewage Crisis in the Great Lakes." The report highlights the increasing wastewater infrastructure gap occurring in this country due to insufficient federal investments, how local communities are responding to this problem with innovative green solutions and what economic benefits can be derived from wastewater infrastructure investments. Below is the official press release from August 9th.

August 6, 2010
Policy

The US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) will hold two public listening session on potential changes to the water quality standards regulation before proposing a national rule.

July 26, 2010
Member News

Progress on the two relief wells being drilled in the Gulf of Mexico has restarted today in the wake of Tropical Storm Bonnie that shut down activity on the wells last week. The relief wells, long viewed as the ultimate permanent solution to stopping the gusher in the Gulf, are still on progress to be completed by early August. The wells will take several days of preparation before they are fully restarted. Workers need to reconnect with existing equipment under the water and take a number of other necessary steps to resume the drilling operation.