Thursday, February 26, 2015

EPA Attacks Constitutional Right to Own Propety : Individual Freedom to Chose

As we have mentioned on previous occasions, the EPA is the most destructive agency in the country, bar none. There powers to totally control all aspects of our lives is unlimited.

With absolute power to do what ever they deem necessary to achieve their collective goal of total control of all things necessary for survival of average citizens, and with a progressive socialist White House that is in total control of the agency, little wonder the attack on personal freedom and prosperity is so frightening and catastrophic to our country.

This is what Mr Obama was promising when he said he will "transform" America. And the people cheered!

That congress that has Constitutional powers to stop this nightmare agency, but is doing nothing at all to stop them, is probably the most frightening. And maybe even worse, if that's possible, they don't seem to care as well.

The EPA Wants to Control All Waters of the United States
Source: Bonner R. Cohen, "EPA Presses Forward with Controversial WOTUS Rulemaking," Heartland Institute, February 23, 2015.

February 25, 2015

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) wants to regulate all "waters of the United States (WOTUS)." Should the WOTUS proposal withstand legislative and legal challenges, the EPA's reach will affect farms, ranches, orchards, mines and timber industries, having jurisdiction over millions of acres of private property. Seen as an attempt to establish a federal zoning system, the newly acquired authority could require land owners to request permits to conduct routine tasks.

According to the Clean Water Act (CWA), the EPA's current jurisdiction extends only to navigable waters. Those waters include rivers, bays and shipping channels but now they want to regulate ditches, stock ponds and areas that are periodically wet due to rain and snow.

While EPA supporters insist the proposal is a necessary step to resolve questions over which waters are covered in the Clean Water Act, the American Farm Bureau, the National Home Builders Association and the National Mining Association see it as nothing more than federal overreach.

Congress could prevent the EPA's power grab by passing the Waters of the United States Regulatory Overreach Protection Act, which blocks the EPA from reinterpreting the limitations defined in the Clean Water Act. Congress could take further action by passing a spending bill that would withhold funding from WOTUS.
 

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