EPA and Corps plan to seize control of all water

May 30, 2011
by ppjg

A full scale attack by EPA and the Army Corps of Engineers to take control of all water from any source whatsoever is under way. What these agencies are attempting is an end run around water and land rights. These agencies are constructing regulations and fictional jurisdictional control. We cannot depend on our courts or the federal government to reign in and control these agencies as they are both privately owned corporations that masquerade as public service agencies. While congress may express their concerns about the police state actions being constructed, they have no authority or power to dictate what these agencies do under private contract law.

While these agencies may be empowered unlawfully on the federal level, it is YOUR GOVERNOR who opens the door and allows them access inside your state. It is YOUR GOVERNOR who decides which privately owned corporate state agency will contract with these agencies allowing them access. Without this agency to agency corporate contracting…..the EPA, FDA, USDA, and the Army Corps of Engineers have no authority inside the geographical boundaries of your state. After you write to your federal representatives who most likely will ignore your comments, pay a visit to your governor and demand that he or she deny the EPA and the Corps access to your state.

We can stop them right at our state lines but it will require you to get up and do something!

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Deadline For Comments July 1. Mailing Deadline Friday, June 17th. #4

EPA and Corps Clean Water Act Regulations Guidance Comments For The Record
To the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of the Army, Corps of Engineers

[EPA-HQ-OW-2011-0409; FRL-9300-6]: Info: EPA (206) 553-0163 ALRA (360) 687-3087

To Whom It May Concern Regarding: EPA and Army Corps of Engineers Guidance Federal Register publication Regarding Identification of Waters Protected by the Clean Water Act.

I believe the EPA and Corps of Engineers are moving to seize control of all U.S. waters. Since he who controls the water controls the land, these new slight-of-hand regulations would largely give the EPA and Corps substantial controls over all private and Federal land as well as nearly all waters. The guidance plan will, once finalized, give EPA broader authority to regulate bodies of water that had been the responsibility of state managers.

The EPA’s push for greater reach over Clean Water Act (CWA) jurisdiction amounts to the agency rewriting “two U.S. Supreme Court cases,â€