WETLANDS PROTECTION
A.7133 (Sweeney, et al.)
S.3835 (Marcellino, et al.)
Summary
This
bill would amend the Environmental Conservation Law to provide the
Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) with regulatory authority
over the state’s freshwater wetlands of an acre or more, regardless of
whether that wetland had previously been mapped by the DEC.
Explanation
This
bill – known as the Clean Water Protection and Flood Prevention Act – is
a necessary step forward in protecting New York’s water resources,
protecting wildlife habitat, and the prevention of flooding.
Wetlands filter sediment, nutrients, and other pollutants from runoff,
protecting the quality of the state’s waters, and providing filtration
for drinking water supplies. Wetlands hold a myriad of virtues,
including storm water control and flood prevention, recharge areas for
groundwater, wildlife habitat areas for hunting and birdwatching, and
natural open space antidotes to urban and suburban sprawl. They are
clearly seen as filters and purifiers, indispensable for the continued
health of other water bodies, including those used for safe drinking
water, recreation, and as key components of a sustainable economy.
Federal and state laws and regulations have not kept up with this
expanding understanding, as these vital treasures continue to disappear
at an alarming rate: 159 acres of wetlands vanish in the U.S. every day.
Federal wetland protections suffered a major blow in 2001 when the U.S.
Supreme Court issued a ruling involving the Solid Waste Agency of
Northern Cook County (SWANCC) that restricted the jurisdiction of the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the U.S. EPA in certain specific
circumstances. That case has been interpreted by administration
officials as removing so-called "isolated wetlands" from the
jurisdiction of the federal Clean Water Act, a move that puts 20 million
acres of wetlands at risk. New York’s wetlands are particularly
vulnerable, as the state long ago ceded jurisdiction for regulating
activities in wetlands of 12.4 acres or less in size to the federal
government.
This bill would strengthen New York’s wetland protections by putting
wetlands of one acre or more under state regulatory authority.
Furthermore this bill would apply to all wetlands of one or more acres
in size, regardless of whether they appear on the state’s freshwater
wetlands map — a measure that would make wetland protection more
consistent statewide, since one acre is currently the conservation
threshold within the Adirondack Park.
Environmental Advocates of New York strongly supports this bill.