Clean Water Action

Clean Water Action
Clean Water Action
Logo-cw-text.png
Founded 1972
Location Washington, D.C. & 19 Offices Nationwide [1]
Area served United States
Members 1 million
Motto Fighting for healthy communities and clean safe water from watershed to water tap.
Website cleanwateraction.org

Clean Water Action, an organization of 1 million members, organizes grassroots groups and coalitions to protect America's waters, build healthy communities and support environmental legislation and political candidates.[2] Created in 1972, Clean Water Action focuses on canvassing and gaining support for political issues and candidates. It is a 501(c)(4) charitable organization. Its counterpart, the Clean Water Fund is dedicated to research and education and is a 501(c)(3) organization.[3]

Contents

Approach

Clean Water Action works directly with citizens of the United States, encouraging individuals to become involved in local, state and national political and environmental issues through:

  • National Leadership – Clean Water Action drafts, supports and defends national and state-level water and environmental laws.[4]
  • Community Organization – State-based offices address local and regional environmental problems and identify solutions from the community level.[5]
  • Individual Outreach – Individual and collective action through community organizing and public education through canvassing makes a difference locally, regionally and nationally.[6]
  • Lobbying- canvassers go out and get signatures to petition the government and educate citizens about which candidates they should support, activate people to write letter to their representatives expressing concern for specific environmental issues and urging them to support or not support specific bills.[7]

Clean Water Representatives strengthened by Clean Water Action members directly lobby public representatives at the State House and Federal Senate.

  • Fund raising- dedicated canvassers go out to organize the community, challenging supporters to make an annual donation.[8]

Founder

David Zwick was a young law school student when Ralph Nader recruited him to a task force researching water pollution problems. After a two-year tour of America's most polluted waters, Zwick authored Water Wasteland and then founded Clean Water Action to address the issues outlined in his book.[9] Zwick transformed Clean Water Action into a grassroots organization while continuing to drive the lobbying work forward in Washington, where he was influential in the clean water debates. He contributed to key sections of the Clean Water Act, including the citizen suit provision, which allows members of the public to enforce the law when the government fails to.[2]

History

During the late 1960s water pollution was spreading in many parts of the country, with a burning Cuyahoga River in northeast Ohio and biologically dead Lake Erie among the visible examples of much wider problems.[10]

1969 - David Zwick joins Ralph Nader's water pollution task force.[2]

1971 - Water Wasteland is published. David Zwick joined forces with Ralph Nader to publish Water Wasteland in 1971. The result of a two-year study into water quality issues in the United States, Water Wasteland concluded that spreading water pollution was directly linked with the increasing political strength of industrial polluters.[2]

1972 - Clean Water Action is launched. The fledgling organization's goal was to enact many of Water Wasteland's platforms of recommended changes into law. To reach this goal, Zwick outlined a grassroots strategy of door-to-door canvassing and public education.[2]

1972 - Clean Water Act becomes law.[11] In October 1972, a bipartisan majority of the U.S. Congress passed the Clean Water Act over a veto by President Richard M. Nixon.

1974 - Safe Drinking Water Act is passed.

1980 - Superfund established. Superfund -- the environmental program established to address abandoned hazardous waste sites—is established by the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act of 1980. This law allows the EPA to clean up toxic sites and to compel responsible parties to perform cleanups or reimburse the government for EPA-lead cleanups.[12]

1986 - Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act (SARA) passed. Clean Water Action, the United States Public Interest Research Group and the National Campaign Against Toxic Hazards published a report claiming the Environmental Protection Agency was failing to properly enforce the federal Superfund toxic waste cleanup program.[13] As a result, SARA was passed into law on October 17, 1986.[14]

2008 - Northeast states hold first carbon auction. In the first auction of its kind,[15] the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative auctioned off more than 12 million CO2 emission allowances to 59 participating power plants on September 25, 2008.[16] In its first auction, RGGI collected $3.07 for each emission allowance, netting $38,575,783 in proceeds.[17]

Current projects

Protecting the Clean Water Act
In 2003, the Bush EPA proposed to amend the Act in a manner that would have significantly reduced its effectiveness to protect the United States' waters.[18] Clean Water Action and allies generated over 100,000 letters and calls, forcing EPA to withdraw the proposed rule changes.[19]

Then, in 2006, the United States Supreme Court ruled in Rapanos v. United States that water deserves protection only if regulators can prove a "significant nexus" to a body of navigable water.[20] Intended as a compromise between two differing opinions, this ruling has stalled the regulatory process.[21] As a result, the federal Environmental Protection Agency has dropped or delayed more than 400 cases of suspected environmental violations.[22] In response, Clean Water Action supports the passage of the Clean Water Restoration Act.[23]

The Clean Water Restoration Act (CWRA)
The passage of the Clean Water Restoration Act will return environmental protections to currently unprotected bodies of water.[22] The bill was introduced into the House on May 22, 2007 with 158 co-sponsors as H.R. 2421.[24] Two months later, the Senate introduced the bill as S. 1870[25] on July 25, 2007.

See also

Bibliography

  • David Zwick, Water Wasteland: Ralph Nader's study group report on water pollution, (Bantam Books, 1972).

References

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужен реферат?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Clean Ocean Action — Type Non profit, Interest group Founded 1984 Location Sandy Hook, New Jersey Key people Cindy Zipf, Executive Director …   Wikipedia

  • Clean Water Act — (CWA) USA The federal statute that created national goals of reducing releases of toxic materials into US waters and achieving surface water standards (33 U.S.C. §§ 1251 1387). The CWA covers all waters that have a significant nexus to navigable… …   Law dictionary

  • Clean Water Act — For Clean Water Act of Ontario, Canada, see Clean Water Act (Ontario). Clean Water Act Full title Federal Water Pollution Control Amendments of 1972 Acronym CWA / Clean Water Act Enacted by the 92nd United …   Wikipedia

  • Clean Water Act (Ontario) — The Clean Water Act (S.O. 2006, Chapter 22) is a law enacted by the Legislative Assembly of Ontario, Canada. The purpose of this Act is to protect existing and future sources of drinking water. The Clean Water Act, 2006 (Bill 43) is a major part… …   Wikipedia

  • Clean Air Act — se réfère, dans le monde anglophone, à une réglementation en matière de protection de l air, de diminution du smog et de la pollution de l air en général. Sommaire 1 Royaume Uni 2 États Unis 3 Action en justice …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Action Against Hunger — (known internationally as Action Contre la Faim, or ACF) is an international relief and development organization committed to saving the lives of malnourished children and families while seeking long term, sustainable solutions to hunger.… …   Wikipedia

  • Water politics — Water politics, sometimes called hydropolitics, is politics affected by water and water resources.The first use of the term, hydropolitics, came in the book by John Waterbury, entitled Hydropolitics of the Nile Valley, Syracuse University Press,… …   Wikipedia

  • Water conservation — refers to reducing the use of water.The goals of water conservation efforts include: * Sustainability To ensure availability for future generations, the withdrawal of fresh water from an ecosystem should not exceed its natural replacement rate. * …   Wikipedia

  • Water quality — A rosette sampler is used to collect samples in deep water, such as the Great Lakes or oceans, for water quality testing. Water quality is the physical, chemical and biological characteristics of water.[1] It is a measure of the condition of… …   Wikipedia

  • Water — This article is about general aspects of water. For a detailed discussion of its properties, see Properties of water. For other uses, see Water (disambiguation) …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”