WV Farm Bureau Magazine April 2015 | Page 17

waters and lands — taken together — could, perhaps, impact interstate navigable waters. As you know, most farms have ditches, ponds and streams. That means that, if this rule is finalized and enforced, farmers may soon find themselves faced with a federal government bureaucrat showing up on their doorstep and requiring them to obtain costly federal permits. Failure to obtain and comply with these federal permits could lead to massive federal fines and even criminal penalties. Help Us Fight EPA’s Water Power Grab Attorney General Patrick Morrisey Everywhere I travel across the State of West Virginia, I hear deep concerns from farmers and many other people about the Environmental Protection Agency’s proposed Waters of the United States rule. Last October, I submitted a comment letter on behalf of nine other States and six Governors, explaining that the proposed rule is illegal. The letter noted that the rule violates several decisions from the U.S. Supreme Court on the scope of EPA’s and the Corps’ authority, infringes upon States’ rights, and harms farmers and individual homeowners. All indications are that EPA and the Corps have ignored our warnings, as well as the conclusions of legal experts from across the political spectrum, and are planning to push forward with this rule. In fact, EPA has said that it plans to finalize and start enforcing the rule later this spring. All hope is not lost. We can still stop this overreach, but only with your help. We are building a coalition in West Virginia and across the country to fight this rule on all fronts: in the press, in Congress, and in the courts. To help with our efforts, we need farmers whose farms are impacted by this illegal power grab to step up and make their voices heard. Later this spring, we will be hosting a series of events throughout the State, where farmers Yes, it is just as bad as you have heard. Congress and other interested parties—from individual has given to EPA and its sister agency, the U.S. Army homeowners to consumers to business owners—will Corps of Engineers, power to protect interstate, discuss the impact of the rule on their farms, their navigable waters: think major bodies of waters like the businesses, and their lives. If you would like to Mississippi River or the Ohio River. These agencies take part in these discussions, please contact our now seek more authority over our water, even in Office at 304-558-2021, so that we can let you know situations where water is only present on rare occasion. when an event is coming to location near you. We The EPA and Corps assert that they have the power to will also be posting meeting times and dates on the control minor ditches, ponds, streams, and even large Attorney General’s website. swaths of sometimes dry land, on the theory that these West Virginia Farm Bureau News 17