NW Arkansas Council Submittal ocr 1 |
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100 W. Center, SlIttc 300 Fayt"nevillr:, AH 72 iOJ I -1795822100 479 582 1919 Mr. Phillip Moershel Water Quality Standards Section Oklahoma Water Resources Board 3800 N. Classen Boulevard Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73118 Dear Mr. Moershel, JUly 29, 2011 The Northwest Arkansas Council is a non-profit group of key regional business and civic leaders. Representatives from area small businesses, institutions of higher education, area Chambers of Commerce and the region's largest employers are active members of the Council. Our primary goal is to ensure that Northwest Arkansas remains a vibrant and attractive community for businesses, residents, families and retirees for decades to come. Northwest Arkansas has a direct and sUbstantial interest in the ongoing review of the Scenic Rivers phosphorus standard by the Oklahoma Water Resources Board. A clean environment and healthy streams are important to Northwest Arkansas. The Council supports environmental regulations that are scientifically based, reasonable and necessary to protect and preserve natural resources. However, we oppose regulations that are unreasonable, lack a legitimate scientific basis or are more restrictive than necessary to protect and preserve natural resources. We are pleased that Oklahoma has started the process of re-evaluating the Scenic Rivers Phosphorus standard. As you know, Oklahoma'S 2002 mandate that phosphorus concentrations of 0.037 mg/L be met at the Arkansas/Oklahoma state line by July 1, 2012 in each of the six designated scenic rivers has been a source of much controversy and many strained relationships between the two states over the past decade. Despite the consensus view that this standard was unsound, unreasonable and unattainable, Arkansas agreed in the Statement of Joint Principles and Actions not to challenge the standard through litigation for ten years and to instead devote substantial resources to lowering phosphorus levels to the extent practicable provided that Oklahoma would "re-evaluate" 0.037 mg/L before 2012 "based upon the best scientific information available and with the full and timely participation of Arkansas officials." Northwest Arkansas has spent hundreds of millions of dollars on phosphorus removal projects and water quality protection since 2003 in an effort to forge a positive 1
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Title | NW Arkansas Council Submittal ocr 1 |
Full text | 100 W. Center, SlIttc 300 Fayt"nevillr:, AH 72 iOJ I -1795822100 479 582 1919 Mr. Phillip Moershel Water Quality Standards Section Oklahoma Water Resources Board 3800 N. Classen Boulevard Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73118 Dear Mr. Moershel, JUly 29, 2011 The Northwest Arkansas Council is a non-profit group of key regional business and civic leaders. Representatives from area small businesses, institutions of higher education, area Chambers of Commerce and the region's largest employers are active members of the Council. Our primary goal is to ensure that Northwest Arkansas remains a vibrant and attractive community for businesses, residents, families and retirees for decades to come. Northwest Arkansas has a direct and sUbstantial interest in the ongoing review of the Scenic Rivers phosphorus standard by the Oklahoma Water Resources Board. A clean environment and healthy streams are important to Northwest Arkansas. The Council supports environmental regulations that are scientifically based, reasonable and necessary to protect and preserve natural resources. However, we oppose regulations that are unreasonable, lack a legitimate scientific basis or are more restrictive than necessary to protect and preserve natural resources. We are pleased that Oklahoma has started the process of re-evaluating the Scenic Rivers Phosphorus standard. As you know, Oklahoma'S 2002 mandate that phosphorus concentrations of 0.037 mg/L be met at the Arkansas/Oklahoma state line by July 1, 2012 in each of the six designated scenic rivers has been a source of much controversy and many strained relationships between the two states over the past decade. Despite the consensus view that this standard was unsound, unreasonable and unattainable, Arkansas agreed in the Statement of Joint Principles and Actions not to challenge the standard through litigation for ten years and to instead devote substantial resources to lowering phosphorus levels to the extent practicable provided that Oklahoma would "re-evaluate" 0.037 mg/L before 2012 "based upon the best scientific information available and with the full and timely participation of Arkansas officials." Northwest Arkansas has spent hundreds of millions of dollars on phosphorus removal projects and water quality protection since 2003 in an effort to forge a positive 1 |
Date created | 2013-03-19 |
Date modified | 2013-03-19 |