Two-thirds of Missouri's streams at risk

Right now, two-thirds of our streams and hundreds of acres of wetlands are vulnerable to pollution and development. Polluters can dump garbage into streams, developers can pave over wetlands to build strip malls, and the cops on the environmental beat can’t do a thing about it. And it’s not just small streams and wetlands that will suffer — these waterways are the same ones that feed the Meramec, the Current and all of our beloved rivers and help to keep them clean.

Polluters poke holes in Clean Water Act

For nearly 40 years, the Clean Water Act has helped Missouri — and states across the nation — care for and clean up our waterways. Thanks in large part to this groundbreaking law, rivers are no longer so polluted that they catch fire, as Ohio’s Cuyahoga famously did in 1969. Still, much work remains to be done. We need to do more to protect our waters — not less.

Unfortunately, over the past decade, polluters and irresponsible developers have used the courts to put Clean Water Act protections in legal limbo, arguing that the law doesn’t cover the smaller streams and wetlands that feed and clean the Meramec, Mississippi and all Missouri's rivers. They want to throw out nearly 40 years of Clean Water Act protection, leaving polluting industries free to dump into our streams and pave over our wetlands without asking for permission.

The EPA can protect our rivers — but Congress threatens to stand in the way

Since 2006, we have been urging Congress to protect our rivers by simply declaring that the Clean Water Act applies to all of Missouri's — and America’s — waters. But, stymied at every turn by industry lobbyists and powerful special interests, we turned instead to the EPA for action.

Last spring, we joined our national allies in submitting more than 20,000 petitions to Administrator Lisa Jackson, urging her to restore protections to all of our waters. In April, she announced a plan to do just that. But polluters’ allies in Congress won’t give up — and now they’re threatening to stop the EPA from doing its job.

At the same time, powerful corporate interests are preparing for battle: ExxonMobil threatened “legal warfare” if the EPA moves forward with its plan to restore Clean Water Act protections.

Our plan to defend Missouri's rivers

We refuse to let polluters and their allies in Congress open our precious waterways to more dumping and development. We’re bringing together Missourians from all walks of life to protect the Meramec, the Mississippi, and all of our rivers. From anglers to white-water enthusiasts, clergy to scientists, local officials to ordinary families, we all have a stake in keeping our water clean.

With 2.4 million Missourians relying on surface waters for drinking water, it’s no wonder so many people are standing up for clean water. But if we’re going to push past ExxonMobil and other powerful polluters, we’re going to need everyone who cares about Missouri's waters to get involved.

Join our campaign by sending the EPA a message today.


Clean water updates

Headline

Where Are the Clean Water Rules?

The New York Times editorializes in favor of the Obama administration's EPA finalizing the clean water plan that we've been pushing.

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Headline

Water-polluter-friendly actions taken

Environment Missouri Advocate Ted Mathys makes the case for supporting the EPA's new clean water plan in this letter to the editor of the Springfield News-Leader.

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Headline

Mississippi River is awash in toxins, report finds

Environment Missouri's new report found that more than 12.7 million pounds of toxic chemicals were dumped into the Mississippi River in 2010, making it the second-worst river in the country in terms of toxic discharges.

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News Release | Environment Missouri

2 Million Pounds of Toxic Chemicals Dumped into Missouri’s Waterways

This morning, Environment Missouri Research and Policy Center released Wasting Our Waterways, a new report which shows that facilities discharged over 2 million pounds of toxic chemicals into Missouri’s waterways in 2010. Many of these chemicals have been linked to cancer, and developmental and reproductive disorders. In 2010, the Mississippi River was the second worst waterway in the nation. The Meramec River watershed was the twelfth worst watershed in the nation in terms of reproductive toxins in 2010. Enviroment Missouri urges the Obama Administration to act quickly to restore Clean Water Act protections to our streams and to turn the tide against toxic pollution of our waterways.

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Report | Environment Missouri Research and Policy Center

Wasting Our Waterways Report Factsheet

This factsheet summarizes key points and findings from Wasting our Waterways 2012 report, which uses Toxic Release Inventory (TRI) data from the EPA to look at how much toxic chemicals are dumped into our waters.

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