© 2024 KRCU Public Radio
90.9 Cape Girardeau | 88.9-HD Ste. Genevieve | 88.7 Poplar Bluff
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Blunt Threatens To Block EPA Director Appointment Over St. Johns Bayou

US Army Corps of Engineers
/
Wikimedia Commons

Missouri Senator Roy Blunt and Claire McCaskill want the federal government make a move on the St. Johns Bayou levee project.

The project was proposed during the Eisenhower Administration but has been delayed and blocked ever since.

The $160 million project would plug a quarter mile hole in the Mississippi River levee near New Madrid and install a series of pumps. Farmers say it would protect them from floods, but environmentalists claim it would destroy wetlands that are vital for fish and wildlife. 

Senators Blunt and McCaskill were supposed to meet with leaders from the Army Corps of Engineers, the EPA and U.S. Fish and Wildlife on Wednesday, but that meeting was cancelled.

EPA administrator Lisa Jackson is stepping down from that position. Blunt says he is considering putting a hold on her successor’s appointment until this issue is solved.

“The EPA has been outrageous in the way they have dealt with this floodway,” Blunt said. “They’ve been holding the environmental impact study so that nobody gets to see it. Every indication is that’s because, once again, the environmental impact study says that no, we should go ahead and complete this project.”

Southern Illinois leaders oppose the levee because they fear it would increase the risk of flooding across the river.

Related Content
  • The Army Corps of Engineers will begin blasting Mississippi River rock outcrops near Thebes, Illinois on Tuesday. The rocks could impede barge traffic as…
  • The Army Corps of Engineers is working hard to deepen the Mississippi River's shipping channel. With water levels forecast to remain high enough only through January to float loaded barges, some say the only way to keep the river open next month will be to release water from the Missouri River.