Letters from an American - December 15, 2024
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December 15, 2024.
Tomorrow, December 16, is the 50th anniversary of the Safe Drinking Water Act, signed into
law on December 16, 1974 by President Gerald R. Ford, a Republican.
The measure required the Environmental Protection Agency to set maximum contaminant levels for
drinking water and required states to comply with them.
It protected the underground sources of drinking water and called for emergency measures to
protect public health if a dangerous contaminant either was in or was likely to enter a public
water system.
To conduct research on clean drinking water
and provide grants to states to clean up their systems,
Congress authorized appropriations of $15 million in 1975,
$25 million in 1976, and $35 million in 1977.
The Safe Drinking Water Act was one of the many laws passed in the 1970s after the environmental
movement sparked after Rachel Carson's 1962 book Silent Spring explored the effect of
toxic chemicals on living organisms had made Americans aware of the dangers of pollution
in the environment.
That awareness had turned to anger by 1969,
when in January, a massive oil spill
off Santa Barbara, California,
poured between 80,000 and 100,000 barrels of oil
into the Pacific,
fouling 35 miles of California beaches
and killing seabirds, dolphins, sea lions,
and elephant seals.
Then, in June, the chemical
contaminants that had been dumped into Cleveland's Cuyahoga River caught fire.
The nation had dipped its toes into water regulation during the progressive
era at the beginning of the 20th century, after germ theory became widely
understood in the 1880s. Cleaning up cities first meant installing sewer systems,
then meant trying to stop diseases
from spreading through water systems.
In 1912, Congress passed the US Public Health Service Act,
which established a national agency
for protecting public health
and called for getting rid of waterborne illnesses,
including the life-threatening illness typhoid, by treating water with chlorine. It was a
start, but a new focus on science and technology after World War II pointed
toward updating the system. The U.S. Public Health Service investigated the
nation's water supply in the 1960s and discovered more than 46,000 cases of waterborne illness.
In the 1970s, it found that about 90 percent of the drinking water systems it surveyed
exceeded acceptable levels of microbes. In February 1970, Republican President Richard
M. Nixon sent to Congress a special message on environmental quality.
We have too casually and too long abused our natural environment, he wrote. The
time has come when we can wait no longer to repair the damage already done and to
establish new criteria to guide us in the future. He called for fundamentally new philosophies of land, air, and water use,
for stricter regulation, for expanded government action, for greater citizen involvement, and
for new programs to ensure that government, industry, and individuals are all called on
to do their share of the job and to pay their share of the cost. Later that
year Congress passed a measure establishing the Environmental Protection
Agency and Nixon signed it into law. Widespread calls to protect drinking
water ran up against lobbyists for oil companies and members of Congress from
oil districts. They complained that the science of what substances were dangerous was uncertain and that how
they would be measured and regulated was unclear.
They complained that the EPA was inefficient and expensive and was staffed with inexperienced
officials.
Then in 1972, an EPA study discovered that waters downstream from 60 industries discharging
waste from Baton Rouge to the Mississippi River's mouth in New Orleans had high concentrations
of 66 chemicals and toxic metals.
Chemical companies had sprung up after World War II along the 85 miles between Baton Rouge
and New Orleans, potentially polluting the water,
while the lower end of the Mississippi River
collected all the runoff from the river itself.
Two years later, an analysis of drinking water
and cancer death rates among white men
in that same area of Louisiana suggested
that carcinogens in the water
might be linked to higher cancer rates.
Louisiana Representative Lindy Boggs, a Democrat, told Congress that
it is really vitally important to our region that we have controls enforced on the toxic organic compounds
that come into the river from the industrial and municipal discharges,
from runoffs from agricultural regions, from accidents on the river, and
from chemical spills on the river.
Concerns about the area of Louisiana that later came to be known as Cancer Alley were
upper most, but there were chemical companies across the country, and Congress set out to
safeguard the lives of Americans from toxins released by corporations into the nation's
water supply.
The Safe Drinking Water Act, the first law designed to create a comprehensive standard
for the nation's drinking water, was Congress's answer.
The new law dramatically improved the quality of drinking water in the U.S., making it some
of the safest in the world.
Over the years, the EPA has expanded the list
of contaminants it regulates,
limiting both new man-made chemicals and new pathogens.
But the system is under strain.
Not only have scientific advances discovered
that some contaminants are dangerous
at much lower concentrations
than scientists previously thought,
but also a lack of funding for the EPA means that oversight can be lax.
Even when it's not, a lack of funding for towns and cities
means they can't always afford to upgrade their systems.
By 2015, almost 77 million Americans lived in regions
whose water systems did not meet the safety standards of the Safe Drinking Water Act. In addition, more than two million
Americans did not have running water and many more rely on wells or small
systems not covered by the Safe Drinking Water Act. The Biden administration
began to address the problem with an investment of about $22 billion to
upgrade the nation's
water systems.
The money removed lead pipes, upgraded wastewater and sewage systems, and addressed the removal
of so-called forever chemicals and proposed a new standard for acceptable measures of
them.
What this will mean in the future is unclear.
President-elect Donald Trump has vowed to increase production
of oil and gas, although it is currently at an all-time high, and such projects are often
slowed by environmental regulations. On Tuesday, December 10th, he posted on social media,
any person or company investing $1 billion or more in the United States of America will receive fully expedited approvals
and permits, including, but in no way limited to, all environmental approvals. Get ready to rock.
By ignoring environmental costs, we have given an economic advantage to the careless polluter
over his more conscientious rival," Trump's Republican
predecessor Nixon told the nation in 1970.
"'While adopting laws prohibiting injury to person or property, we have freely allowed
injury to our shared surroundings.'"
When he signed the Safe Drinking Water Act in 1974, President Ford added simply,
nothing is more essential to the life of every single American
than clean air, pure food, and safe drinking water.
Letters from an American was produced at Soundscape Productions, Dedham, Massachusetts.
Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.