This article originally appeared on StateImpact Pennsylvania.
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A measure to loosen reporting requirements for possible water contamination is heading to the state House floor.
The Department of Environmental Protection opposes it, saying the bill basically lets companies decide if a spill is pollution and should be reported.
The DEP interprets the Clean Streams Law to require companies to report all unauthorized spills, regardless of size.
Under the legislation, dischargers would only have to report spills that may cause a violation of water quality criteria under DEP regulation or that are reportable under federal requirements. Accidental discharges that do not cause a violation of numeric water quality criteria would not be considered pollution.
“The purpose of The Clean Streams Law is to regulate and control potentially harmful discharges,” the bill’s sponsor Sen. Gene Yaw (R-Lycoming) said in a sponsorship memo, “not to impose an impractical and unnecessary requirement on every business and individual in the Commonwealth to report every drop spilled at their facilities or homes.”
Opponents argue a lot of pollutants, such as the group of chemicals known as PFAS, don’t have a numeric water quality standard. That does not make them less harmful. They also said it would be difficult to know at the moment of a spill if it will endanger a waterway or groundwater.