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Last year, the EPA shot down a request for new regulations for nutrients in the Mississippi River valley, saying it favored keeping the current system because it would be too time consuming and costly to undertake "an unprecedented and complex set of rulemakings." The federal government leaves it up to states to set limits on nutrients, but environmental groups say that approach has not worked. This week's suit was a response to the federal agency's decision to not establish new regulations. In New York, the groups are asking a judge to weigh in after the EPA failed to respond to a 2007 petition for new sewage treatment plant rules. Nutrient pollution isn't only a Gulf problem, said Glynnis Collins, the executive director of the Illinois-based Prairie Rivers Network, another group involved in the suits. She said nutrient-rich waters have led to toxic algae blooms in many places. "They can sicken people, pets and livestock," Collins said. "It's a worldwide story. We have to get a handle on it. It's crazy not to." Enesta Jones, an EPA spokeswoman, said the agency was reviewing the suits. Robin Craig, an environmental law expert at Florida State University College of Law, said nutrient pollution is "definitely on EPA's radar as the next step forward in implementing water quality protection." New rules will not be easy, she said. In the Mississippi valley, she said coming up with standards and an action plan for such a huge watershed "is a huge task." As for forcing sewage treatment plants to adopt new standards, she said that might prove politically difficult because of the additional costs municipalities would face.
[Associated
Press;
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