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For Immediate Release
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Contact:
Lori Brown, Executive Director Office: 860.236.5442 Cell: 860.214.0345 lori.brown@ctlcv.org
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2009 Legislative Session:
What Happened to Energy and Water Protection?
Hartford, CT - June 4, 2009 - When the Connecticut General Assembly ended its
2009 session at midnight on June 3rd, environmental leaders were dismayed
by devastating losses in two areas-energy and water -but grateful for promises that the upcoming
budget will have at least some funds for dairy farms, open space, and other
environmental causes. There were also modest
gains relating to toxins in consumer products, pesticides, recycling, land-use
planning, and "smart growth" (policies designed to halt and roll back sprawling
development).
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Low Points: No Senate Vote on Solar; Water Quality
Ignored
The
General Assembly's failure to adopt comprehensive policies on energy marks one
of the lowest points of the 2009 session.
A major bill to develop a solar energy industry in Connecticut (HB6635)
passed in the House by a vote of 145-0. The
bill would have helped Connecticut
businesses compete and thrive as the world begins the inevitable shift to an
alternative energy economy. But the
Senate did not bring the bill to a vote.
"The state desperately needs leadership and comprehensive reform of
energy planning and administration," said Lori Brown, CTLCV Executive Director. "But inertia and the famously strained
relations between the Senate Chair of the Energy and Technology Committee and
the last two House Chairs have blocked progress."
Almost as disappointing, a bill to protect inland wetlands and water
courses (SB569) died in the last hour of the House session after passing the
Senate unanimously. A companion bill to
save natural vegetation buffering the state's waters (HB5934) made it through
three committees but died in the House without coming to a vote.
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Attacks on Environmental Safeguards Foiled
At the start of
the year, it seemed that the economic recession might be used successfully as a
wedge to open the door to bills waiving, evading, and undermining basic
environmental laws. Advocates had to
defend the Clean Water Act against a bill exempting copper-laden wastewater
washed off boat hulls from regulation; the Connecticut Environmental Policy Act
from bills exempting an airport expansion and federally funded construction
projects from normal environmental review; and from bills overriding the
authority of the Department of Environmental Protection to regulate construction
in a floodplain and new hydropower construction on state-owned dams.
"Environmentalists
came together as a team to meet these challenges, and we were almost fully
successful," said CTLCV Board Member Margaret Miner. "But this entire session highlighted the
struggle to protect the state's remaining high-quality resources as good land
and good water diminish." |
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Wins
for the Environment: Recycling, Smart Growth, Complete Streets, Toxics Bans,
Dairy Farms Pro-environment bills passed in
Connecticut's 2009 legislative session include measures to:
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Add water bottles in the recycling deposit program
(PA 09-2)
- Ban Bisphenol-A from children's products sold in Connecticut (PA 09-103)
- Require environment-friendly cleaning products in
schools (PA 09-81)
- Keep limits on the use of pesticides at day-care
facilities and elementary schools (PA 09-20)
- Make streets and roads
safer for cyclists and pedestrians (SB735)
- Expand the Community
Investment Act to encompass dairy farms, open space and historic urban centers
(SB 891)
- Advance smart growth principles (HB6467)
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It's Not Over Until It's Over: The Budget
All of the laws and policies passed in the regular legislative session
are entirely or partly dependent on how shrinking state funds are allocated in
the state budget. Many of the bills
passed reflect intentions for future action rather than firm commitments. Legislators
are now poised to take on the all-important budget during a Special Session anticipated
to begin later this month. Environmental
advocates will be working to promote funding that helps the twin goals of a
sustainable environment and a prosperous economy.
For more information on any of these bills or upcoming environmental budget
priorities, please contact Lori Brown, Executive Director, at 860.236.5442 or lori.brown@ctlcv.org. For our complete 2009 watchlist, visit www.ctlcv.org/watchlist. |
About the Connecticut League of Conservation Voters
The Connecticut League of Conservation Voters (www.ctlcv.org) is a bipartisan environmental
advocacy group that focuses on getting smart, sustainable environmental
policies enacted in Connecticut. Its
affiliates include the CTLCV Education Fund (conservationeducation.org)
and the CTLCV PAC. |
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