HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Lawyers representing farm groups and
home builders asked a judge to block a federal plan to clean up the
Chesapeake Bay, arguing that it tramples on state's rights and uses
erroneous data to set pollution limits.
The American Farm Bureau
Federation and the National Association of Home Builders were among the
groups in federal court Thursday fighting against the bay's "pollution
diet," which is designed to improve water quality and wildlife habitat.
Attorneys
for the Environmental Protection Agency contended that without strong
federal oversight and threat of sanctions, states had repeatedly missed
their pollution-reduction goals over the past 30 years.
The sides
sparred for more than four hours in court in Harrisburg, according to
The Baltimore Sun. District Judge Sylvia H.
Rambo did not say when she would rule.
The case could determine
how water cleanup efforts proceed elsewhere nationwide, as federal
officials have said they're considering similar plans for other degraded
waterways.
Richard E. Schwartz, one of the industry groups'
lawyers, said the EPA's Chesapeake plan generates an unprecedented
amount of regulation for "intensely local and expensive decisions" that
are best left to local communities.
"It will affect urban growth; it affects how agriculture land will be used," Schwartz said.
But
Chesapeake Bay Foundation vice president Kim Coble said she feared that
throwing out the plan "would set us back many decades" in trying to
revive the body's water quality.
Clair Esbenshade, who raises
crops and livestock on about 200 acres in central Pennsylvania, attended
the hearing because he said it would affect livelihoods for generations
to come.
Growers aren't getting proper credit for what they've
already done to keep fertilizer and animal manure from washing into
nearby streams and, ultimately, the bay, said Esbenshade.
"I don't see there's much more we can do," he added, "other than get out of business."