Environmentalists challenged the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and won.
Becky Hammer writes on behalf of the National Resources Defense Council to report that earlier this month, "a federal district court in Maryland ruled that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) wrongfully denied our petition to regulate harmful runoff pollution from commercial, industrial, and institutional sites in Baltimore’s Back River watershed."
"When EPA denied the petition in 2016, the agency refused to consider whether stormwater pollution from the sites is contributing to violations of water quality standards, as the Clean Water Act requires. Now a court has ruled that EPA’s decision was unlawful," adds Hammer.
The NRDC, along with American Rivers and Blue Water Baltimore, filed the petition in 2015, pushing the EPA to regulate runoff in the watershed under powers granted by the Clean Water Act.
Now the EPA must reconsider the petition, and could potentially decide to begin regulating pollution sources in the watershed, which drains Baltimore city and county. The river is already legally designated as "impaired" due to high levels of nitrogen, phosphorus, and sediment pollution.
FULL STORY: NRDC Wins Court Victory on Stormwater Pollution in Baltimore

Rethinking Redlining
For decades we have blamed 100-year-old maps for the patterns of spatial racial inequity that persist in American cities today. An esteemed researcher says: we’ve got it all wrong.

Planetizen Federal Action Tracker
A weekly monitor of how Trump’s orders and actions are impacting planners and planning in America.

Walmart Announces Nationwide EV Charging Network
The company plans to install electric car chargers at most of its stores by 2030.

Philadelphia Launches ‘Speed Slots’ Traffic Calming Pilot
The project focuses on a 1.4-mile stretch of Lincoln Drive where cars frequently drive above the posted speed limit.

NYC Delivery ‘Microhubs’ Aim to Cut Down on Truck Pollution
The hubs are designed to provide parking for large delivery trucks, which can pass on their cargo to bikes or other zero-emission vehicles.

New State Study Suggests Homelessness Far Undercounted in New Mexico
An analysis of hospital visit records provided a more accurate count than the annual point-in-time count used by most agencies.
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