Court Restores Clean Water Protections in Southern California

August 30, 2008

Bookmark and Share
Order blocking government enforcement of water quality standards reversed

LOS ANGELES(RUSHPRNEWS) 08/30/2008- - Ruling on a post-trial motion by environmental groups, an Orange County Superior Court yesterday reversed the part of a July 2, 2008 judgment that blocked the Los Angeles Regional Water Quality Control Board from enforcing many water quality standards that control Southern California's worst source of water pollution, storm water runoff.

The Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), on behalf of itself, Heal the Bay, and Santa Monica Baykeeper, intervened in the case earlier this year after Judge Thierry Patrick Colaw ruled the water board did not follow the proper procedure when it applied water quality standards for Los Angeles and Ventura County waterways to control polluted runoff. The July 2 ruling suspended the water board's ability to enforce many water quality standards to control storm water runoff pending further review of standards by the board. Water quality standards play a pivotal rule in pollution control because they serve as legal limits on the amount of dangerous pollutants, such as bacteria and toxic chemicals, that can be discharged to local waterways.

In post-trial motions and objections filed this summer, NRDC, Heal the Bay, and Baykeeper argued that preventing the water board from enforcing the standards, even temporarily, would be harmful to the environment and public health. In yesterday's decision, Judge Colaw agreed that halting enforcement or application of the water quality standards pending review by the water boards could have "unintended consequences which cannot be predicted."

The environmental groups are reviewing aspects of the July 2 judgment left in place by the Court finding that the water board failed to abide by proper procedure when it applied water quality standards to storm water.

Following is a statement by David Beckman, lead counsel and co-director of NRDC's Water Program:

"Today's decision means that California can get back to enforcing indispensable clean water standards that protect people from getting sick at local beaches and wildlife from toxicity in local waterways. These standards protect drinking water supplies, people at the beach, and fish in our rivers, so this is great news for everyone in Southern California."

Following is a statement by Mark Gold, president of Heal the Bay:

"Although we respectfully disagree with the court's ruling that the water board violated the law, Heal the Bay is ecstatic with the decision yesterday which restores the water quality standards that we need to protect public health and aquatic life from storm water pollution."

Following is a statement by Tom Ford, executive director of Santa Monica Baykeeper:

"We welcome this decision and call on the building groups and anti-environmental coalition of cities who filed this case to stop spending public money to make local waters dirtier. This case is an attempt to hold the interests of the public at large hostage to the anti-regulatory politics of the few, and it's a shameful perversion of sound public policy."

Background/Timeline:

On December 9, 2005, a coalition of 21 cities in Los Angeles County, as well as the Building Industry Legal Defense Foundation, brought a lawsuit against the State Water Resources Control Board and Los Angeles Regional Quality Control Board (Cities of Arcadia et al. v. State Water Resources Control Board et al.), alleging that water quality standards in the Los Angeles Basin Plan were not developed and applied to storm water in accordance with California law. The cities and the Building Industry sought to prevent the water boards from applying the water quality standards to storm water, an outcome that would be extremely detrimental to the water boards' efforts to regulate polluted runoff that fouls Los Angeles waterways.

On March 13, 2008, Orange County Superior Court Judge Thierry Patrick Colaw issued a preliminary decision after a one-day trial, finding in favor of the cities and the Building Industry.

On April 2, 2008, the NRDC, on behalf of itself, Heal the Bay, and Santa Monica Baykeeper, filed an emergency motion in court to intervene in the case. On May 1, 2008, the court granted the motion to intervene.

On May 27, 2008, NRDC filed extensive objections to the court's proposed writ and judgment, on grounds including that the decision to prevent the Regional Water Board from implementing water quality standards, even temporarily, would be detrimental to the environment and public health.

On July 2, 2008, over NRDC's objections, the judge issued a writ and judgment blocking the Los Angeles water board from applying water quality standards in the Los Angeles Basin Plan to polluted runoff.

On July 18 and July 28, 2008, NRDC filed a motion to vacate the court's judgment and a motion for a new trial. In the two motions and in court hearings on August 8 and 15, NRDC argued that the decision improperly constrained the state from following the federal Clean Water Act; was based on a misinterpretation of the California Water Code; and failed to follow a controlling California Supreme Court decision.

A recent NRDC report on the status of California's beaches confirmed storm water as the largest pollution source for the state, particularly in Southern California. Closing and advisory days in 2007 in Los Angeles (94%), Orange (92%), and Ventura Counties (100%) were primarily caused by elevated bacteria levels.
The Natural Resources Defense Council is a national, nonprofit organization of scientists, lawyers and environmental specialists dedicated to protecting public health and the environment. Founded in 1970, NRDC has 1.2 million members and online activists, served from offices in New York, Washington, Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Beijing.
Santa Monica Baykeeper is a non-profit corporation with 3,000 members who live and/or recreate in and around the Santa Monica Bay area. Baykeeper is dedicated to the preservation, protection, and defense of the environment, the wildlife, and the natural resources of the Santa Monica Bay watershed and San Pedro Bay watershed receiving waters. To further these goals, Baykeeper actively seeks federal and state agency implementation of the CWA and, when necessary, directly initiates enforcement actions on behalf of itself and its members.

Heal the Bay is a nonprofit environmental organization dedicated to making Southern California coastal waters and watersheds, including Santa Monica Bay, safe, healthy and clean. We use research, education, community action and advocacy to pursue our mission.
Press contact: Jessica Lass at 310/434-2300 (main), 202/468-6718 (cell), jlass@nrdc.org

If you are not a member of the press, please write to us at nrdcinfo@nrdc.org or see our contact page

Click here to see all news from this author/company
Bookmark and Share
About the author:

RushPRnews.com. Newswire. Read. Write. Publish. It's Your News.

Filed Under: Health and Fitness, ENVIRONMENT, PRESS RELEASE, COURT NEWS

RUSH PR NEWS newswire and press release services at rushprnews.com / Anne Howard annehowardpublicist.com

Content- Legal Responsibility - All material is copyrighted - You may repost but you MUST link back to the original post on your page and acknowledge Rush PR News as the news source. Rush PR News is not legally and/or morally responsible for content of press releases, opinions expressed or fact-checking.

Rush PR News cannot be held legally responsible for material published and distributed through its newswire service or published in its press-room and therefore cannot be sued for published material. Third-party must be contacted directly to dispute content.

Rush PR News is not the contact for material published.

Comments


Got something to say?

Name:

E-mail:

Website (optional):

Comments:

RSSFeed PRESS & SOCIAL MEDIA RELEASES

SEO Professionals Still Overlooking Niche and Long Tail Traffic, Says Punch

LONDON, UK 09/02/10 · Many search professionals and indeed general marketers continue...

Brand engagement through Facebook is crucial in the UK, says Sony Ericsson

LONDON, UK 09/02/10 · The opportunity for brands to engage with Facebook...

Diligence International Group Unveils New Name, New Headquarters

Addison, TX 09/01/10 · Specialist in Anti-Fraud Field Investigations Poised for Continued...

Sundance Institute Announces 2011 Theatre Lab to be Held at the Banff Centre

LOS ANGELES, CA 09/01/10 · Call for Entries September 1 with Submissions Deadline...

Yahoo! en EspaƱol Puts People at the Center of Their Web Experiences

SUNNYVALE, Calif. 09/01/10 · New Homepage Connects U.S. Hispanic Consumers to What...

Harness the Power of Employee Engagement on Social Media Networks

LONDON, UK 09/01/10 · Happy Employees Make for Positive Engagement at Work...

Now THAT'S What I Call a Great Idea!

Atlanta, GA 09/01/10 · Be it in science or in marketing, a...

Check in on Twitter Through Facebook Places and SocialToo

San Francisco, Calif. 08/31/10 · Recently Facebook launched the ability for users to...

Email overload? Try Priority Inbox with Gmail

Mountain View, Calif. 08/31/10 · People tell us all that time that they’re...

US Disaster Relief Officials Look to Harness Power of Social Media

Washington, DC 08/31/10 · The massive earthquake that devastated Haiti earlier this...

iLoop Mobile, Inc. Appoints Steven Gray as Chief Operating Officer

San Jose, CA 08/31/10 · With more than 20 years of sales, marketing...

President Obama Thanking Soldiers in Irak

WHITE HOUSE 08/30/10 · BROADCAST August 31, at 8 p.m. EDT --------- Good evening, Tomorrow...

Decorate your Suspended Ceiling with Design

MONTREAL, Quebec 08/30/10 · The Montreal based company, Elegant Ceiling Inc, unveils...