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Wyoming welder faces $75,000 a day in EPA fines for building pond on his property

Bamby

New member
All Andy Johnson wanted to do was build a stock pond on his sprawling eight-acre Wyoming farm. He and his wife Katie spent hours constructing it, filling it with crystal-clear water, and bringing in brook and brown trout, ducks and geese. It was a place where his horses could drink and graze, and a private playground for his three children.

But instead of enjoying the fruits of his labor, the Wyoming welder says he was harangued by the federal government, stuck in what he calls a petty power play by the Environmental Protection Agency. He claims the agency is now threatening him with civil and criminal penalties – including the threat of a $75,000-a-day fine.

“I have not paid them a dime nor will I,” a defiant Johnson told FoxNews.com. “I will go bankrupt if I have to fighting it. My wife and I built [the pond] together. We put our blood, sweat and tears into it. It was our dream.”

But Johnson may be in for a rude awakening.

The government says he violated the Clean Water Act by building a dam on a creek without a permit from the Army Corps of Engineers. Further, the EPA claims that material from his pond is being discharged into other waterways. Johnson says he built a stock pond -- a man-made pond meant to attract wildlife -- which is exempt from Clean Water Act regulations.

The property owner says he followed the state rules for a stock pond when he built it in 2012 and has an April 4-dated letter from the Wyoming State Engineer’s Office to prove it.

“Said permit is in good standing and is entitled to be exercised exactly as permitted,” the state agency letter to Johnson said.

But the EPA isn’t backing down and argues they have final say over the issue. They also say Johnson needs to restore the land or face the fines.
Johnson plans to fight. “This goes a lot further than a pond,” he said. “It’s about a person’s rights. I have three little kids. I am not going to roll over and let [the government] tell me what I can do on my land. I followed the rules.”

Johnson says he was “bombarded by hopelessness” when he first received the administrative order from the EPA. He then turned to state lawmakers who fast-tracked his pleas to Wyoming’s two U.S. senators, John Barrasso and Mike Enzi, and Louisiana Sen. David Vitter.

The Republican lawmakers sent a March 12 letter to Nancy Stoner, the EPA’s acting assistant administration for water, saying they were “troubled” by Johnson’s case and demanding the EPA withdraw the compliance order.

“Rather than a sober administration of the Clean Water Act, the Compliance Order reads like a draconian edict of a heavy-handed bureaucracy,” the letter states.

The EPA order on Jan. 30 gave Johnson 30 days to hire a consultant and have him or her assess the impact of the supposed unauthorized discharges. The report was also supposed to include a restoration proposal to be approved by the EPA as well as contain a schedule requiring all work be completed within 60 days of the plan's approval.

If Johnson doesn’t comply -- and he hasn't so far -- he’s subject to $37,500 per day in civil penalties as well as another $37,500 per day in fines for statutory violations.

The senators' letter questioned the argument that Johnson built a dam and not a stock pond.

“Fairness and due process require the EPA base its compliance order on more than an assumption,” they wrote. “Instead of treating Mr. Johnson as guilty until he proves his innocence by demonstrating his entitlement to the Clean Water Act section 404 (f)(1)(C) stock pond exemption, EPA should make its case that a dam was built and that the Section 404 exemption does not apply.”

The EPA told FoxNews.com that it is reviewing the senators' letter. "We will carefully evaluate any additional information received, and all of the facts regarding this case," a spokeswoman for the agency said.

The authority of the EPA has recently been called into question over proposed rule changes that would redefine what bodies of water the government agency will oversee under the Clean Water Act.

The proposed changes would give the agency a say in ponds, lakes, wetlands and any stream -- natural or manmade -- that would have an effect on downstream navigable waters on both public land and private property. “If the compliance order stands as an example of how EPA intends to operate after completing its current ‘waters of the United States’ rulemaking, it should give pause to each and every landowner throughout the country,” the letter states.

For now, the matter remains unresolved. Johnson says he’s not budging and there’s been no indication from the EPA they will withdraw the compliance order.

Regardless of the outcome, Johnson says his legal fight with the government agency is a teachable moment for his kids “This is showing them that they shouldn’t back down,” Johnson said. “If you need to stand up and fight, you do it.”

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/201...s-fine-for-building-pond-on-his-own-property/

I am thankful that there are people like Mr. Johnson out there who are not willing to roll over to the demands of the regulation state. I wish him and his family success in their fight against the EPA and they may have many great fishing stories and memories from their sacrifice to have their very own pond.
 
Although not nearly on that scale, I ended up on court after I built a relatively small acre and a half pond on my property. I built it where the ground always stayed wet and water flowed downhill from there pretty well all year long. It was a natural spring and just a swampy area. It took me three years to build; having to pump water out of it constantly while digging it. To finish it, I rented a large excavator and three tri-axle dump trucks and drivers and dug to a maximum depth of 22' and gave the acre and half pond an average depth of 6'.

After the final 12 hour a day for 9 days rush with the large equipment, it took a full winter for the pond to fill. During that time, areas directly downhill from me dried out for the first time in memory. Once my pond was full, water again flowed from the overflow and water again flowed down hill again. Shockingly, I received a call from the property owners down hill from me demanding that I stop sending water on them. WTF?! I explained to them that I was NOT making water nor in any way diverting any additional water flow and that their 'dry period' only existed while it took a few million gallons of water to fill my pond.

Still, they filed a law suit against me which forced me to hire an attorney and a hydrologist to defend me in court. Obviously when all information was presented to the judge, he saw no need for any trial and ruled in my favor and ruled that it was a frivolous suit, making the plaintiffs pay for all my costs. Still, it wasted untold hours of my time for, to me, what was common sense. Now I have created a "wetland nature reserve" and would have to seek government permission if I ever decided to fill in the pond! This REALLY goads me because I spent my time, my money, my equipment and dug the pond on my land where it was useless because of an existing natural spring. I think the government should f-off when it comes to this simple use of my land that I pay them almost $10k a year in property taxes to use!!

To me, this only further illustrates the fact that NOBODY in the United States is allowed to actually own any land; which, to me, violates the very foundation upon which our country was founded. At best, we are able to "rent" land from the government and use it according to their rules and have no say whatsoever in how much "rent" (property taxes) they decide to charge us for using the land most people mistakenly think they 'bought'. If you don't believe me when I say that nobody reading this actually owns any land, just stop paying your never ending rent (property taxes) and see what happens. Better yet, just build something on "your" land without first asking the government for permission and paying them to decide (obtaining a building permit) and see what happens.
 
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