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EPA has ridiculous notions about its power

Like a child caught with his hand in the cookie jar, Environmental Protection Agency officials are admitting they made some mistakes with their “waters of the United States rule.”

But pay close attention:?”I want to tell you up front that I wish we had done a better job of rolling out our clean water rule,”?EPA?Administrator Gina McCarthy told the National Farmers Union in March.

In other words, she and other EPA officials view the problem as a public relations challenge. Many U.S. senators, both Democrats and Republicans, see the situation differently. They understand the EPA plan is one more attempt by the agency to force draconian new rules on Americans.

Take the case of an Alaska company that planned to apply for a water use permit from the EPA. Agency officials began work on rejecting it before it was filed – before they even had a plan to consider.

Or consider Lois Ault, the West Virginian who took the EPA to court after it threatened to fine her out of business because of storm water runoff from her chicken farm. She won.

Then there is the saga of Michael and Chantell Sackett, who wanted to build a new home in Idaho. The EPA told them they had broken the law by placing fill on their lot – and had no right to appeal the agency’s ruling. The Supreme Court disagreed.

Now, bills in both the Senate and House of Representatives would limit the agency’s ability to decide – sometimes without evidence – a water pollution problem exists and must be prevented or rectified.

Indeed, the EPA erred – in making its Big Brotherism too obvious.

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