The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has announced its final decision under the Clean Water Act (CWA) to prohibit construction of the proposed Yazoo Pumps Project in the Mississippi Delta. The EPA is taking this action following an extensive evaluation of the environmental impacts the project poses to tens of thousands of acres of wetlands and other water resources.
"Together with our state and federal partners, we can improve flood protection and ensure environmental protection," said Assistant Administrator for Water Benjamin H. Grumbles. "We're helping to identify a better project that reduces flooding, protects the environment and saves taxpayer dollars."
The EPA continues to support the goal of providing improved flood protection for the residents of the Mississippi Delta while safeguarding the area's valuable natural resources. The cost of the Yazoo Pumps Project would be more than $220 million for construction, with an annual operational cost of more than $2 million. The EPA is committed to working with other federal and state agencies and the public to identify an alternative project for providing improved flood protection.
The Yazoo Backwater Project is a federally funded U.S. Army Corps of Engineers proposal first authorized in 1941, designed to reduce flooding in an area in the state of Mississippi between the Mississippi and Yazoo rivers. The primary component is a 14,000-cu-ft-per-second pumping station that would pump rainwater out of the South Delta during high water events on the Mississippi River. The Yazoo Backwater Area contains some of the richest wetland and aquatic resources in the nation and serves as critical fish and wildlife habitat. The EPA concluded that the proposed project would result in unacceptable damage to these valuable resources that are used for wildlife, economic and recreational purposes.
Under the CWA, the EPA can prohibit, restrict or deny using waters of the U.S. as a disposal site for fill material when it determines it will have an unacceptable effect on municipal water supplies, shellfish beds and fishery areas, wildlife or recreational areas. The EPA has used this CWA authority only 11 times since the law was passed in 1972.
For more information about the decision, visit www.epa.gov/404c.
Source: U.S. EPA