Need for Greater EPA Leadership in Controlling Nonpoint Source Pollution

Gao ID: T-RCED-91-60 June 5, 1991

GAO discussed the problems inhibiting state and local efforts to control non-point-source pollution. GAO noted that the major barriers impeding state and local government efforts to control non-point-source pollution included: (1) insufficient monitoring data on the scope and impact of the problem and on the effectiveness of potential solutions; (2) insufficient technical information available to the states to set water quality standards for non-point-source pollution; (3) inherent conflicts between some federal agencies' policies and states' water quality goals; (4) limited resources available to state and local governments in comparison with the magnitude of the problem; and (5) the political sensitivities involved in controlling local land uses that indirectly cause water pollution. GAO also noted that: (1) resource constraints made it difficult for the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to strengthen its efforts and take a leading role in coping with non-point-source pollution; (2) limited resources allocated to EPA non-point-source control activities reflected an inappropriate emphasis on its point-source pollution control program at the expense of its non-point-source programs; and (3) the proposed EPA budget for fiscal year 1992 would increase the funding imbalance between its point- and non-point-source programs.



The Justia Government Accountability Office site republishes public reports retrieved from the U.S. GAO These reports should not be considered official, and do not necessarily reflect the views of Justia.