Americans Are Worried about Water Pollution (And They Should Be)

Apparently the Trump administration hasn’t heard about the latest Gallup poll, which puts Americans’ concerns about water pollution and drinking water at their highest levels since 2001.
And while recent and ongoing crises like the one in Flint have highlighted urban drinking water problems, it is also true that rural communities—whose voters helped put President Trump in office—have plenty to worry about.
Gallup’s annual Environment Poll found that 63 percent of Americans worried “a great deal” about pollution of drinking water, and 57 percent have a similar level of concern about pollution of rivers, lakes and reservoirs.
The Trump administration is trashing clean water protections Against this backdrop of Americans’ rising water worries, President Trump is taking actions that will actually make the nation’s waters dirtier.
As the Washington Post reported last Friday, a leaked EPA memo sheds new light on the budget cuts previewed a few weeks earlier.
By my tally, the cuts to EPA Office of Water programs total more than $1 billion.
Water worries are rising in farm country It’s not just urban or industrial communities that will suffer from the Trump administration’s budget cutting.
The USDA has estimated the cost of removing agricultural nitrates from public water supplies at about $1.7 billion per year, and the total cost of environmental damage from agricultural nitrogen use has been estimated at $157 billion annually.
Last summer, UCS documented the potential benefits to farmers, taxpayers, and businesses from an innovative farming system integrating strips of perennial native prairie plants with annual row crops.
Smart farm policy can deliver clean water and rural prosperity This is timely, because Congress is already at work on the 2018 farm bill, that massive piece of legislation that comes around every five years and shapes the nation’s food and farming system.

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