New Water Withdrawal Law Goes into Effect
February 15, 2012
- DEC’s proposed scheduling for issuing permits to existing water withdrawals is unacceptable. The draft regulations would allow some existing water withdrawals to withdraw water for five years at existing levels before obtaining a permit. Riverkeeper has recommended an aggressive schedule, which would require all water withdrawers to submit permit applications in the next 15 months.
- DEC should impose permit fees and fees based on consumptive use. The draft regulations fail to propose any permit application fee or fees for water usage, despite the known need for funds to implement the program.
- DEC should impose a water conservation and efficiency program. The water withdrawal legislation mandates that DEC establish a conservation and efficiency program, but the regulations fail to do so. DEC should set statewide goals for water conservation and efficiency.
- DEC should mandate water conservation. The draft regulations require each permit applicant to submit a “water conservation plan,” but the regulations are unclear as to whether water withdrawers are then required to implement that plan.
- Monitoring records should be kept with DEC, not the water withdrawer, and made available to the public upon request. The draft regulations require the water withdrawer to self-monitor and retain records of all monitoring information. By failing to require that DEC maintain its own copy of records, the draft regulations render such documents publicly inaccessible. Water withdrawers should be required to submit all monitoring records on a monthly basis to DEC and DEC should make such records easily available to the public.
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